Mission is Constant but Methods Must Change

Leaders need to be ready to deal with change. But it’s important to recognize the difference between the church’s mission, which is unchanging, and methods, which must often be updated to serve the age-old mission.

Change doesn’t have manners and rarely knocks. Instead, it comes barreling in, giving us little time to react. And if we stand in its path long enough trying to decide what to do, we are run over by the wheels of change. Leaders need to be ready to deal with change.

The church’s mission is unchanging

There is a huge difference between mission and methods. The mission of the church doesn’t change. In fact, we can’t change the mission of the church because it’s not our church. It’s God’s. And God’s mission, communicated through the life of Jesus, is fully contained in two summary statement we label as the Great Commandment (love God and love your neighbor) and the Great Commission (make disciples) to keep us on task. The church must always be faithful to the Great Commandment and the Great Commission. We can’t vote on it. We don’t need a meeting to revise it. The mission is set.

The church’s methods must change

But methods are different. Methods need to change. In fact, they must change in order to carry out the mission among new generations. Methods don’t have the same status as mission. New methods — new ways to do things — are similar to new technologies and new strategies.

If the church doesn’t see the need to adapt its methods, doesn’t know how to adapt its methods, or refuses to adapt its methods, then a chasm will appear between a church and its culture, and it will be run over by change. It will become ineffective in completing its mission.

How do you handle change?

Are you open to new ideas, new methods, and new technology? Danger is imminent when leaders migrate to one of two extremes about change because either can throw a church out of balance. Some leaders tend to chase whatever new fad comes along. If social media is touting it, and other churches are trying it, they jump on board. On the other end of the spectrum, some leaders would rather die than change anything. In their view, to change seems like disloyalty to people who came before them and to systems or traditions that they feel called to preserve. Both extremes are out of balance.

Even as you remain faithful to God’s mission for the church, it is possible for change to overwhelm your vision and stamina. Find a healthy balance and pace. Don’t fear change. But don’t chase too hard after it either.

It is foolish to conclude that “old = bad” and “new = good.” That polarization is just not the case with tradition or innovation. Sometimes the old ways are better. But the old methods often must be updated to keep moving toward the age-old mission.


Jim Cowart is the founding pastor of Harvest Church, a United Methodist congregation in Warner Robbins, Georgia, and author of Leading from Horseback: Lost Lessons Every Church Leader Needs (Abingdon Press, 2018), available at Cokesbury and Amazon.