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Home/Churches and Ministries/Doing More vs. Doing Better

Doing More vs. Doing Better

Let’s also look for ways to improve our shared life so that more outreach can happen – not by doing more – but by doing better.

Written by Joe Barnard | Tuesday, April 30, 2024

If we are going to make the effort of organizing a day of food and games, why not be creative to think of ways of inviting the wider community to take part in the fun? We need to remember that much of our salt and light is the shared life that we enjoy together. The more we can get ourselves out of the building and out into the wider community, the more the basket will be lifted and our light seen.

 

Here is a question that I hope everyone cares about: How can we do more mission together as a congregation?

Now, there are two ways to answer the question. The first and more obvious answer is simply to do more stuff. More activities equal more mission. Therefore, if we want more mission, we just need to add events to the calendar. The logic is clear here – but so is the cost. Doing more requires asking more of people. If this method is effective, it is also taxing. A church that is intent to always do more will be a church whose members are often flagging.

Fortunately, there is a second way of answering the question. This is not to do more, but rather to do better. Here the objective is to take what is already happening and to continually improve it. Often, this might mean not adding new missional events to the calendar, but adding a missional element to something already scheduled. For example, a youth event can simply be an in-house event for teenagers already attending HEC, or a banner can be printed and a wider invitation offered so that the scheduled event becomes a missional outreach.

The great benefits of this second method are ease and simplicity. By focusing on doing better (instead of doing more) we conserve the limited time and energy of our members. We ensure that people are not so tied up with church activities that they lose their freedom for the other frontlines that God has given them i.e. work, family, friends, and additional service opportunities.

Keeping the latter model in mind, we will soon be adding a missional element to two regular events that happen in the life of HEC.

Read More

Related Posts:

  • Salt and Light—Not Honey and Shade
  • Salty Sacrifices
  • Light of the World
  • Hope for a World In Ruins
  • Life and Light

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