- Authors
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- Name
- Eric Geiger
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In ministry, innovation can be a great thing when utilized to reach and serve people. But like all great things, innovation can become an idol—something that ministry leaders seek as an end in itself. When innovation becomes the goal, it has moved from tool for reaching people to an object of affection. How do we know the difference?
In Mark 2, we see four guys find a paralyzed man and bring him to Jesus. The paralytic was likely begging on the side of the road when these four unnamed men lifted him up and brought him to the house where Jesus was teaching. When they arrived at the house, they learned they could not get him through the front door. Too many people surrounded the house. The window, if there was one, was also blocked with a crowd of people attempting to get a glimpse of Jesus. So they innovated. They did something new, something unexpected. They tied ropes to the mat, climbed on the roof, broke through the thatch and dug a hole large enough to lower the man. Jesus healed the man both physically and spiritually as He declared his sins to be forgiven.
To keep innovation in its proper place, as a tool and not an idol, we can learn from these four guys. To follow the example of these men, innovation in ministry must be: