A breakthrough occurred when I learned a seemingly simple truth: Service is most effective when it meets a felt need. Felt needs are discovered through listening and within a relationship.
The first step to listening to ones community is to form relationships with people in the community. That is often done by volunteering. Schools, non-profits, chamber of commerce, and other civic organizations are a great place to start.
Go. Volunteer. Look. Listen. What needs do you see repeated from person to person or place to place? What needs to you hear expressed in the conversations that happen around you? What assets (strengths) exist in the community that might be unknown or underutilized?
PS - This thought has been repeated time and again in many different sessions and will shape much of what "Community Impact" looks like. The basic, simple truth is that the community knows what it needs, and if I will do the work of listening... I can actually design projects that meet those needs, rather than merely bringing my "good" ideas to the table.
Other ideas from today that will become later posts:
- Vision requires clarity and consistency. Someone must create it and measures for it.
- Another value that we often state and rarely measure... healthy leaders.
- Missional Problem (yea it was very cool having Alan Hirsch come and ask if the seat next to me was empty... um, Yes, yes it is!) - "How do we communicate the good news to people who have heard our message and rejected it?"
- Everyone needs an apprentice. This is something you will get sick of hearing, and I will rejoice on that day because hopefully you will then be close to understanding and believing it.
- Church leader in India on "casual" Christ followers - "Why would you lose everything for something that you only casually believe?" Quick answer? We don't really lose all that much for our beliefs in America.