Stetzer: how do you avoid mission drift?
Greetings all,
We’re really looking forward to having Ed Stetzer as our speaker at our Multiply conference on February 23. Over the past weeks he’s been taking us through what his research has revealed are the seven top issues for church planters. Today he tackles number 5, the essential tasks of casting vision and avoiding mission drift:
One recurring theme was around the church plant losing sight of their direction. Respondents expressed vision casting and avoiding mission drift in several different ways. Eliminating pressure from “churched” people; navigating distractions from “good ideas”; making decisions consistent with mission; defining priorities for growth; and balancing evangelism and discipleship (Issue #6) were challenges leaders confronted to avoid mission drift.
Here are four key considerations:
Clarity—The concept of “drift” implies leaving a clearly defined and understood standard. Planters should not assume that because their expectations are clear and compelling in their minds that they are clearly understood by the rest of the team.
Core Values—Most planters have a strong sense of mission and vision that drives them. These same planters often have less clarity about their core values that shape what they do and how they do it (the compass that guides their north direction). Will Mancini described the task of what he called “High Definition Leadership” as “constantly bringing the most important things to light.” [Will Mancini, Church Unique: How Missional Leaders Cast Vision, Capture Culture, and Create Movement, San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2008, p. 52]
Mission, Vision, and Values—The pre and post launch phases are vital to establishing core values that create a strong foundation. Although not explicitly articulated in their responses, it appears planters tend to confuse or interchange what most people refer to as the concepts of vision (dream of preferred future state), mission (corresponding activity) and values (non-negotiable principles). The result is a lack of personal clarity internally before the external challenges that cause mission drift begin.
Ministry Philosophy—Mission, vision, values and leadership culture form the foundational elements of a plant’s philosophy of ministry. Ideally, a planter’s ministry philosophy is clearly defined before starting. However, for many planters, it is a work in progress. As a consequence, the philosophy of ministry can be more influenced by negative shaping factors such as scarcity culture, “church people” on the team, and peer comparisons. In Planting Missional Churches, I call this danger “vision hijacking.”
Non-Negotiables—Most planters do not have the capacity, financial resources or team needed to develop a comprehensive strategy. Instead they narrow their focus to 3 to 5 “table banging” priorities they will be “mean” about in the early days of the church. The limited number of priorities becomes the filter for saying “yes and no” to ministry initiatives and is vital for avoiding drift.
Although I have not been prescriptive in these blogs I do recommend taking a look at Will Mancini’s free Clarity Quiz to help you continue to assess your work. Accountability through networking is vital to address every issue planters face. Sadly too many planters try to make it alone reading books and websites. My next blog will address issue #6: Balancing Evangelism and Discipleship.
February 23 is less than three weeks away so make sure you’ve got your tickets booked for Multiply. Ed’s church planting wisdom is well worth the effort!
See you there,
- Ed.
Editor
The Geneva Push is a grass-roots network dedicated to raising up church planters for Australia. Keep an eye on this blog for upcoming training, ministry and staff opportunities.






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