would you die for your vision statement?

Busi­nesses need a vision state­ment. They need it clearly artic­u­lated. With­out it, a busi­ness can eas­ily chase after so many dif­fer­ent things. A vision state­ment keeps every­one focused (that is, if it’s a good vision state­ment). Good lead­ers are the ones who can keep every­one hap­pily focused on bring the vision state­ment to reality.

but do churches need that?

You will be amazed what peo­ple will do for Jesus that they will not do for your vision state­ment.” ~Neil Cole~

Church vision state­ment: Jesus.

Sin­gu­larly focused on Jesus. Every­thing else is secondary.

Some will rebut­tal: “You’ve got to be more clear. Do you mean fol­low­ing or shar­ing or know­ing or lov­ing Jesus? Do you mean wor­ship­ing or study­ing about Jesus? Do you mean ser­mons or songs or small groups or feed­ing the poor?”

My response: “I don’t know. Focus on Jesus and fig­ure it out.”

All through­out scrip­ture, those who were focused on Jesus did remark­able things. They didn’t need to sit in a sem­i­nar. They didn’t need a ser­mon. They didn’t need a mantra. They needed to see Jesus as clearly as pos­si­ble. They needed to under­stand what Jesus was really say­ing and doing.

God, make us sin­gu­larly focused on Jesus.

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One Response to “would you die for your vision statement?”

  1. 212 says:

    Beau­ti­fully put and simple…why do we suck at it? Maybe because in the last 20 years churches have been trained to fol­low a busi­ness model instead of a “Jesus model”…because the peo­ple who do the major­ity of the train­ing have found “suc­cess” in fol­low­ing a busi­ness model…therefor it must work in all times, all places and for all peoples…

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