Scott Kline, a professional driver, managed to wreck a million-dollar prototype hybrid car when it was first being tested.  When asked to explain what happened, Kline reported,

I got so engrossed looking at all the dials and gauges and screens on the dashboard that I forgot to look where I was going.

There is an important cautionary word in this for our church — as “dashboards” to count and measure and track become the new toy we get all excited about in the church, we need to remember that collecting data and monitoring statistics has virtually nothing to do with making disciples of Jesus Christ.  You cannot evaluate quality by focusing on quantity.

Our new “Vital Congregations” emphasis has all the marks of steering us in the wrong direction.  While its leaders talk about “goal setting” and “missional objectives,” the underlying message is that numbers are the ultimate indicator of health and vitality.  Having high blood pressure, myself, I can attest to the fact that large numbers are not always to be desired.  Having MORE people, small groups, projects, pastors, ministries, and money seems, on the surface, to be a good thing.  However, there is an implicit given that must be taken into consideration, and that is a presumed quality.  The presumption that our future growth will all be high quality denies our current reality: if we’re not doing very well with what we already have, it is highly unlikely we will do better with more.  A few examples:

Professions of Faith — it has long been assumed that we are doing our evangelical job if we can get non-Christians to drop the “non-” and become Christians.  Good as far as it goes, but when I did my study of congregational vitality last decade, I found that the number of professions of faith is conditional on “sticking-power.”  Four churches from the south-central jurisdiction of The United Methodist Church reported these numbers for a three-year period.  Church A: 45 professions of faith; Church B: 49; Church C: 7; Church D: 9.  By our current standards, Church B is doing the best job — and, by golly, they were featured in magazines and on websites.  However, at the end of the three-year period, how many of the professions were still fully engaged and active in their congregation?  Church A: 9 (20%); Church B: 7 (14%); Church C: 7 (100%); Church D: 8 (89%).  If we focus on engagement and retention rate, then C is doing the best job with D dogging its heels.  Integrity topples size.  The number of professions is not as good an indicator as integration and staying power.

Number of Small Groups — once again, simply having lots of groups and staying busy is a poor indicator of health.  Some of the most toxic congregations in our denomination have some very strong small groups — that act independently and subversively and do more damage than good.  Also, the structure and focus of the groups is incredibly important.  One large church I visited had an active small group ministry, and in the few days I was there I went out to dinner with one group, went a movie with another, had “pizza and prayer” with a third, and sat and bitched about politics with a fourth.  The fellowship was fine at each, but spiritual formation and focus?  Not so much.  Yet, books have been written about this church’s approach to small group ministry.  In Oklahoma, I attended a very small church that only had about half its members in small groups.  However, each group met once a week for prayer, Bible study, “to discuss ‘and how is it with your soul,’ and to engage together in one act of missional service beyond the congregation.  Which church has the strongest small group ministry?

Worship Attendance — visiting a campus ministry, I was deeply impressed by the number of students engaged in leading worship.  Perhaps seventy people attended the worship service — and over fifty were involved in leading or participating in some part of it.  The level of engagement was spectacular.  It was obviously a meaningful experience for everyone involved.  There was nothing passive about the service, and no one came as a “consumer.”  Worship was treated as a verb, not a noun.  The “worshipping community” is not the same as those who “attend worship.”  Worship isn’t about the spectators, but the players; not about the audience but the performers.  To engage in worship is a very different phenomenon than merely observing it.  Getting more people to sit in the pews at a service is as healthy as gaining weight — it does little to promote health, and over time can cause more harm than good.  When passive worship becomes the norm, moving people to any kind of action becomes more difficult.  Christian worship is more than just showing up.

More Money for Mission — this one is a “yes, but…”  When I did my vital congregations study, I was struck by the number of churches that commit one-third to one-half of their total budget to missions.  In our day of difficult economic times and exorbitant infrastructure costs, it takes a huge commitment to give so much to missions.  Churches that give a lot do so because missions and service are a deep core value — where the treasure is, there the heart is found, also.  Too many of our churches struggle to give to missions because missions are defined as something to “give to,” rather than to “engage in.”  No church I found that gave sacrificially to missions did so without a significant portion of the congregation involved in “hands-on” mission.  Many of our churches that pride themselves on missions have a small handful of people doing mission work on behalf of the larger congregation.  Then, another segment throws money into the plate in support of the small group doing mission work, and the whole church takes pride in how “involved” it is.  Mission giving must be multivalent — measured not just in terms of money, but time, energy, presence, skills, and knowledge.

Number of Disciples Engaged in Ministry — this comes from the language of the Connectional Table and the Council of Bishops.  Once more, I would say that it is less about numbers and more about percentages (and I simply don’t think we have enough “disciples” to measure at the moment…)  Time after time, I visited churches of varying sizes where the larger was viewed as healthier than the smaller, yet the smaller congregations had a much larger percentage engaged in “hands-on” ministry.  In one town, a church of about 500 had 70 people engaged in active ministry on a weekly/daily basis (14%).  A few streets over, a church of approximately 40 had 35 members engaged in ministry seven days a week (88%).  The focus on numbers hides the fact that the smaller congregation is doing ministry together while the larger congregations enjoys a handful of people doing ministry in their name — a very different thing.

Tracking numbers is a way of doing something when you don’t know what else to do.  It allows you input to foster behavior modification, but not transformation.  Vision and relationships have the power to transform, not dashboards.  Selling our soul to statistics is futile at best, deeply sad at worst.  Being church is made secondary to being bigger.  Indeed, goal setting and planning are important to our vitality, but our objectives and plans should be developed to do the discerned will of God, not just get more people in our doors.  Through our best efforts, I believe we can get more people.  The questions I still have, however, is do we care what kind of people we will get, and do we have a clue what to do with them?

54 responses to “Finding What We Look For”

  1. Dave Avatar
    Dave

    The car analogy is a good point. In support of your argument, I don’t really think we need to use measurements too much, if ever. I can’t help but think about a subject fresh on my mind–early church history. Issues weren’t worked out using measurements. They were worked out using arguments (that usually addressed one issue at a time) and informal consensus (at least till formal “councils” came along, which spanned about 3 centuries). And there were many, many wildcards that no one could’ve anticipated. A hostile government, peculiar people with peculiar ideas, not to mention the varieties of Christian expression (could anyone have predicted the ways in which various Christians in various places worked out how to do church?). The point is that we’re going to get all manner of people who walk through our doors. Some of them will have peculiar ideas. Some will be as deep as a mud puddle. Some others will have visions and dream dreams. And the work of the church happens in messy fashion (much to the chagrin of our orderly Methodist sensibilities). Even Wesley can attest to that problem (as a veteran of getting kicked off street corners, wandering around in fields, watching people “fall over” in the Spirit, etc etc). Not to mention Luther, who incited a bit of a revolution among peasants. Or then there’s “Mr. Order” himself, John Calvin, who acknowledged the ugliness of church life in the pursuit of “all things done decently and in order.” Church is messy business. At the end of the day, all we can really be certain of is that if we are engaged to any degree, we will have at least a little mess on our hands. It’s the nature of who we are. But more importantly, God is directly involved in our mess. That’s what we should be paying attention to: looking at God in our mess rather than instruments that try to measure how effectively people do things. The conclusion will always be the same if we keep measuring that…people are messy, they screw things up, and they need a big, heaping dose of grace. Isn’t it about time we came up with some metrics, a research project, a formula, a book, a series, a seminar, a convention, a conference….that measured what God was up to, where God was working, and what was happening as a result?? Going back to the early church, how else do we explain the amazing growth of the church when the whole known secular world was literally conspiring against it? It really isn’t about us, is it? It’s about the work of an amazing, gracious God who shows up in the middle of our mess.

  2. Sky McCracken Avatar

    As one who has now gone to the “Dark Side” as a D.S., I would say in the opening example that a professional driver was misusing the dashboard if watching the road wasn’t the top priority – and he ought to know better. However, if you don’t occasionally look at the gauges and warning lights and run out of gas, overheat, or run out of oil, you only have yourself to blame. They aren’t the main thing, but they are important indicators.

    Discipleship certainly ISN’T all about numbers,and you’ll get no argument from me that we need to be about transformation and discipleship first. But those numbers – present or not – represent souls. You can’t make disciples from NOTHING.

    Good stuff as always, Dan. I’m still waiting for some good advice as a new D.S. from you!

    Sky+

    1. Dan R. Dick Avatar
      Dan R. Dick

      Ah, the dark side. Many people think it’s funny that I serve the institutional structure as I do and critique it so freely…

      The initial story is a cautionary tale not to get too enamored with the tools that you forget their purpose. And if you have had the opportunity to drive a hybrid, you know that most of the displays are very busy, providing both necessary and non-essential feedback. I think we have “taken our eyes off the road,” and there is very little good that will ultimately come of that. I reemphasize: I have never said we shouldn’t measure or monitor. But there is a big difference between the cruise control light and the oil light; the fuel gauge and the radio. Knowing what to monitor and why is fairly important — and just pushing buttons and twisting dials to see what happens isn’t getting us where we need to go. (Now I need to draw an analogy to a GPS…)

  3. Mark Avatar
    Mark

    Hi. Thanks for your comments. Do you have a source for the Scott Kline story? I’d like to read around it more.
    Thank you.

    1. Dan R. Dick Avatar
      Dan R. Dick

      I’ll see if I can dig it up. It is from a number of year’s ago (early in the hybrid development era) and the reason I remembered the guy’s name is that it is the same as someone I went to school with as a kid. I know I clipped the story, but I am not sure where it is filed. I’ll let you kinow if I can find it. Nothing comes up when I Google the name, but then it wasn’t much of a story…

  4. George H Donigian Avatar
    George H Donigian

    Thanks again, Dan, for seasoning the conversation with your particular saltiness.

  5. fish Avatar
    fish

    If we can just find the right metric, it will drive the right behavior and this ship will turn around!

    I have seen that movie too many times in the corporate world. It rarely, if ever, has a happy ending. Did the internet or industrial revolution grow because someone figured out measures of success and assigned accountability for making the numbers? Did the first church grow through that strategy?

    Numbers are one way for the folks who work at the corporate level of the denomination to feel like they are contributing; it gives them a basis for analyzing and reporting and powerpointing. I’m reminded of McNamara and the Pentagon’s scientific management approach to the Vietnam war.

  6. anon Avatar
    anon

    A cautionary note, and the favorite quote of some statisticians:

    “The government are very keen on amassing statistics. They collect them, add them, raise them to the nth power, take the cube root and prepare wonderful diagrams. But you must never forget that every one of these figures comes in the first instance from the chowky dar (village watchman in India), who just puts down what he d— pleases.” (Josiah Stamp, recounting a story from Harold Cox who quotes an anonymous English judge).

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Josiah_Stamp,_1st_Baron_Stamp

  7. John Meunier Avatar
    John Meunier

    We need to be careful not to let the fact that numbers can be misused stop us from using numbers. I think that is what Dan is calling for – using care and finding numbers that are meaningful rather than distorting or perverse in their incentives.

Leave a reply to Kent Melcher Cancel reply