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Are You Content With Good Enough?

Sometimes, when I look back at my time in the parish, I feel for my congregation members. My parents raised me with the idea that “good enough” was unacceptable.

Complacency is “as soon as you are comfortable with where you are, you are heading in the wrong direction.”

The Signs of Complacency.

Are You Content With Good Enough? &Raquo; File 11

1) Satisfaction with things as they are.

15 I know your work. You are neither cold nor hot. I wish that you were either cold or hot. 16 So because you are lukewarm and neither hot nor cold, I’m about to spit you out of my mouth. Revelations 3:15-16

Complacency is a spiritual condition. John describes it in Revelation with the Laodiceans. This church was in a spiritually lukewarm state. Their situation was warmer than those with a relationship with the Savior, Jesus Christ. Neither were they hot, fervently living out their calling as the people of God. No, the Laodiceans were in this comfortable middle, a state of Lukewarmness; they were complacent. One commentator describes it this way. “The lukewarm state, if it is the transitional stage to a warmer, is a desirable state (for a little religion, if real, is better than none); but most fatal when, as here, an abiding condition, for it is mistaken for a safe state[1]” He describes along with John the danger of settling for “good enough.”

2) The rejection of things as they might be.

How did the Church and Christianity get here? There are many factors. It is a rejection of Growth, personal, spiritual, and organizational. It is a rejection of an Innovation. We will define this term later, so hang in. The enemies of change are lack of vision, embracing the status quo, and too many rules and regulations.

Disruptive Innovation

Are You Content With Good Enough? &Raquo; File 12

When many church people hear business terms, they recoil immediately and reject them without ever taking the time to consider them. Let me start this section by defining Innovation: “Innovation can be defined as the process of implementing new ideas to create value for an organization. This may mean creating a new service, system, or process or enhancing existing ones. Innovation can also take the form of discontinuing an inefficient or out-of-date service, system, or process. [2]”

What the church needs to hear from this is simple. I am not asking or promoting we throw out our faith, our doctrine, and our beliefs, but I am asking you to throw out the programs, the ministries, the practices that are not working, have not worked since 1954, and try to update your way of doing ministry.

The world around you is changing; it is adopting; it is ignoring the church. The world sees the church as out of touch. I am sharing this because we have a message the world desperately needs to hear. I feel like Jeremiah. Keeping the word of God to myself would be easy. Just preach to whatever people show up, but it is too critical to keep it contained in my building, in the ears of my tribe alone. There is an intense fire trapped in my heart, burning in my bones, demanding the word of God be shared. We have the message right; let’s get the delivery methods straight. You must refrain from basing new ideas on old paradigms.

9I thought, I’ll forget him;

I’ll no longer speak in his name.

But there’s an intense fire in my heart,

trapped in my bones.

I’m drained trying to contain it;

I’m unable to do it. Jeremiah 20:9

[1]Jamieson, R., Fausset, A. R., & Brown, D. (1997). Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible(Vol. 2, p. 562). Oak Harbor, WA: Logos Research Systems, Inc.

[2]https://its.yale.edu/about/innovation-its/what-innovation

Originally Published on https://www.becomingbridgebuilders.org/blog

Rev. Dr. Byrene Haney is a dedicated and experienced pastor with over 31 years of service in multi-ethnic urban congregations. He holds a Bachelor of Science Degree in Computer Science from Southern University, Baton Rouge, LA, and a Master of Divinity from Concordia Seminary, St. Louis, MO. And a Doctorate of Education from Concordia Univerisity, Irvine, CA. Throughout his career, he has served in various roles, including Senior Pastor at Gospel Lutheran Church in Milwaukee, WI, and Mission Facilitator for the Northern Illinois District of the LCMS.

Currently, Rev. Dr. Haney serves as Assistant to the President in the Iowa District West, where he assists congregations with strategic planning, visioning, outreach, and fostering a culture of generosity and human care. His commitment to connecting faith with community needs and crises has significantly impacted the congregations he serves.

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