Culture Keepers
In all of the talk related to culture, I came across something that struck me as fresh.
The idea of “culture keepers.”
We know of culture changers, culture makers, culture adapters, culture… well, culture just about everything.
But “culture keepers”?
The idea is significant. There are aspects of culture – a nation’s culture, a church’s culture, a family’s culture – that must be “kept.” If they’re not, then they are not simply lost, they are replaced by something else. Culture is not a vacuum. It’s a sieve. It will draw in whatever is most readily presented.
A “culture keeper” is one who, in the words of Jim Collins, preserves the core but stimulates progress. Vanguard leaders often get the progress part, but less so the core.
As churches grow, and in our day expand to multiple sites, the dynamics of “culture keeping” are becoming more critical than ever.
There are many ways to keep your culture intact:
hire from within;
develop and implement a membership process that includes an introduction to your church’s cultural distinctives;
reinforce cultural distinctives through weekend teaching and small group leader training.
But perhaps the most important of all is to know what it is you are trying to keep. At Meck, we have 10 aspects of our culture that we work hard to preserve and protect. They are non-negotiable.
These are the hills we would die on:
The Bible is true and is the ultimate catalyst for life-change.
Lost people matter to God, and therefore they ought to matter to us.
We should be culturally relevant while remaining doctrinally pure.
It is normal for Christ followers to manifest authenticity and grow in their spiritual maturity.
The church should operate as a unified community of servants stewarding their spiritual gifts.
Loving relationships should permeate every aspect of church life.
We need other people to help with life-change.
Excellence honors God and inspires people.
Churches should be led by those with leadership gifts, and structured according to the nature and mission of the church.
Full devotion to Christ and His cause is normal for every believer.
Do you know your top 10 “keep” list?
If not, there’s no way to protect your culture… because you don’t have one to protect.
James Emery White
Sources
“Culture Keepers,” Kevin Roberts, December 3, 2012, read the blog online.
On the 10 values, see James Emery White, What They Didn’t Teach You in Seminary (Baker). Our values are not wholly original to us. One or more of these 10, and even some aspects of the phrasing, can be found in other churches that came into existence long before our own.