Is Vision Casting A Waste Of Time?
Pastors chiefly rely on inspiration and encouragement to move people to advance the church’s agenda. One of the main ways to do this is vision casting. Vision casting is meant to motivate the church toward a preferable future and one cannot attend a pastor’s conference without someone speaking on vision. Mega-church pastor Andy Stanley, Visioneering, writes, “Vision evokes emotion. There is no such thing as emotionless vision. . . . Vision provides motivation. . . . Vision-driven people are motivated people.” So we cast the vision in hope that the church will catch it, grow and advance the Kingdom of God.
However, Jim Collins in Good to Great, writes, “Doesn’t motivation flow chiefly from a compelling vision? The answer, surprisingly, is, ‘No.’ Not because vision is unimportant, but because expending energy trying to motivate people is largely a waste of time. One of the dominant themes that runs throughout this book is that if you successfully implement its findings, you will not need to spend the energy “motivating” people. If you have the right people on the bus, they will be self-motivated.” For Collins, having the “right people on the bus” means having the right people in the key leadership positions of your organization (see more below, “Small Church”).
Admittedly, Jim Collins is writing for the business community not the church, and we recognize pastors are not CEOs. But where does that leave us? Is vision casting still “largely a waste of time.” Vision doesn’t last precisely because it is based on emotion. Even Andy Stanley has a chapter on how to maintain the vision because he knows vision dissipates.
Maybe the bigger question is why Christians are not self-motivated toward advancing the Kingdom of God through their church?
What has been your experience with vision casting? Is it largely a waste of time? Is there anything better a pastor can do?

3 Comments:
Vision casting is only a waste of time when it is done without proper preparation. A good life coach starts with things like core values, needs, passions, etc. When these are approached properly, people become motivated by the mission and vision. See www.novalifecoaching.com.
5:08 AM
Vision casting is for a group.
What Jim Collins talk about is for individual. An inside-out approach... which makes perfect sense.
However, if a group of people with vision for their own life get together for a common purpose but without a common vision, the group will dissipate.
What the church lack at time, is teach the people to find God's vision for their own life. And then see how their own vision fits into the bigger vision of the church.
Both author make very good points.
4:59 PM
Vision casting can really be a waste of time when being done but it later impacts on the motivation and focus of the organisation, because Ownership of a vision gives less work and allows more creative ideas emerege from the Led to actualize the vision casted!
4:38 AM
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
Links to this post:
Create a Link
<< Home