_Ministries_ () |Fri,  Sep. 10 2010 06:13 AM EDT
Christians Challenged to Stop Ignoring Innovators, Early Adopters
By _Audrey Barrick_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/columnist/audrey-barrick/) |Christian Post 

 
Author and speaker Erwin McManus believes that all the innovators and early 
 adopters have been filtered out of church _leadership_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/leadership) .
 
In the meantime, the church has been led by late adopters and nostalgics, 
he  pointed out on Thursday. 
And though early adopters make up a small percentage of the population,  
McManus is convinced that churches will not be able to shape the future of any 
 _culture_ (http://www.christianpost.com/topics/culture)  if they don't 
reach what he sees as "the top 12  percent." 
"Even if you have the majority, you do not have the defining influence of  
where culture is going unless you reach the top 2.2 and 12.4 [percent] of  
culture," he said as he addressed seminary students and _pastors_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/pastors)  at The National Leadership 
Forum, held 
at  Southeastern University in Lakeland, Fla. 
"But most of the decisions we make cater toward the majority and the  
nostalgics and entirely ignore those who shape and create culture." 
McManus, an innovator, recently made the transition from full-time pastor 
at  the influential Mosaic church in Southern California to starting a 
company that  would engage the world of art and culture. It was a dream he has 
had 
but never  tended to, he said. 
In the last couple of years, he and his wife took out millions of dollars 
in  investment loans to forge forward with what he felt his soul was saying 
to do.  He felt called to create community, tell a story and bring meaning 
and beauty to  the world on a different platform. 
Meaning, story, beauty and community are the four things he is convinced  
every organization, church and business needs to focus on if they are going 
to  develop the healthiest and most vibrant people. 
There are many unhealthy Christians out there, he lamented, along with an  
incredible number of unhealthy companies that are influenced by Christians. 
The 51-year-old speaker said he meets a lot of people who have a 
relationship  with Christ and yet are still searching for answers to their life 
"One of the things you'll discover ... as you listen to your own soul is 
that  you spend a great amount of your life trying to bring meaning to your 
own life.  And, by the way, most people are not going to church so the place 
they're  actually trying to find meaning in their life is at work," he noted. 
"And if  their job seems meaningless, if it seems as if it's just a waste 
of their life,  they just go in and clock in but check out, you will never 
get the best of  people." 
"How many people just get up on Monday and do the same thing they've done  
every single Monday – go to work and just turn on route automatic and no 
longer  have any meaning in their life?" he laid out. 
When he started his new company, which includes a filmmaking component,  
McManus wanted to make sure that he does things that are meaningful in every  
way. He was inspired by the Old Testament figure Solomon who found 
everything  "utterly meaningless" after experiencing wealth, power and success. 
"We want to help everyone find meaning in their life and help translate the 
 story that each person actually matters in the world," he said. 
He rejected the business model that former General Electric CEO Jack Welch  
had famously employed – finding "A" people, tolerating "B" people and 
getting  rid of "C" people, as McManus summarized it. 
McManus believes there is greatness in everyone and leaders need to help 
pull  that out of everyone. 
"The reality is that every human being is placed on this planet and one of  
the things that drives humans is their need for meaning and if you can make 
 every job meaningful then you will guarantee that every job will be done 
to its  highest level of excellence," he said. 
The innovator recently employed a young designer who creates bags out of  
materials that are tossed, particularly military pieces from World War II. 
"Steve (the designer of Temple bags) had a metaphor ... to take everything  
that's trash, [that] no one cares about ... and redesign them so that 
people can  realize that their life, though it may seem worthless and ragged 
and 
no longer  of any value, if they'll just allow God to reshape and repurpose 
their life, He  can create something beautiful because we're really the 
temples," McManus  highlighted. 
Christians are called not only to bring meaning to people's lives but also 
to  bring beauty, he emphasized. 
But he has found that churches have brushed off the importance of beauty. 
Early this year, Mosaic church produced a Doritos commercial that was among 
 the three chosen by the American public to air during the 2010 Super Bowl. 
 McManus was criticized by Christian leaders for not placing the Gospel 
message  in the commercial. 
To such criticism, he responded, "We actually believe that if we do 
something  better than anyone else in the world, we will earn the right to be 
heard." 
"Part of what has happened is that we have lost our conviction that beauty 
is  actually important in carrying the Gospel to the world," he said. 
In the church, McManus feels there is an "arrogant misconception" that  
Christians hold – that because they are people of the book or people of truth,  
they're healthy. 
"The truth of the matter is, even if you're right in your beliefs, right in 
 your doctrine, you may be actually wrong in your execution," he pointed 
out. 
"We can keep trying to preach at people, demand that they listen to us 
rather  than tell a story so compelling they can't help but hear us," he told 
Forum  participants. "[But] if we're going to reach these innovators, early 
adopters,  pioneers, explorers, artisans, cultural creators ... we better stop 
acting as if  we've already earned the right to be heard and trying to cram 
the most beautiful  story that has ever been told down people's throats." 
"We need to start doing things that are astonishing and beautiful, that are 
 compelling and reach inside of the human spirit and make people long for 
the God  who created them," he challenged Christians. 
"The wonderful thing about the opportunity that we have is that we can take 
 the broken wreckage of our life, the worn out pieces, the stuff that we 
thought  God could never use and through the honest, transparent expression of 
who we are  sharing what God has done, we can tell a story that will pack 
them  in."

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