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Early Adopters: Key To Renewal
Rev. Thomas F. Fischer, M.Div., M.S.A.
Number 41
Of course, each category is represented by specific attitudes, attitudes which are found in organizations including churches. While Innovators are venturesome, Early Adopters are considered respectable risk takers. Early Majorities are slow and deliberate in the consideration of new ideas while the latter two groups, Late Majority and Laggards, tend to be skeptical, traditional, and anti-innovation.
However, understanding these dynamics can also lead to an understanding of many of the reasons pastors may experience disappointment in some congregations. Among other things, understanding the impact of adopter behaviors may also explain why some churches never change and will continue to resist pastoral ministry over and over again. In such congregations, it seems that no matter what a pastor might do--apart from the "miraculous" working of God--some organizations never gain momentum.
Finally, an understanding of adopter behavior may also shed insight as to which churches are more able to healthily endure/survive conflict and which are most able to rebuild and renew their ministry after the conflict is resolved.
Characterisics of Earlier and Later Adopters
Variables |
Laggards/Late Adopters | Innovators/Early Adopters |
Age | Not A Factor |
|
Education | Less Educated | More Highly Educated |
Literate | Less Literate | More Literate |
Social Status | Lower | Higher |
Social Mobility | Stable/Stagnant | Upwardly Mobile |
Size of Enterprise | Small/"Mom and Pop" | Corporate |
Measure of Success | Sustenance | Commercial Profit Levels |
Attitudes Toward Credit | Avoid Use of Credit | Borrow Extensively |
Work Tasks | Less specialized | More specialized |
Dogmatism/Closed Beliefs | Strongly Held | Less dogmatic |
Empathy Levels | Lower | Greater |
Life Philosophy | Fatalistic | Individualistic |
Some observations one might make based on the above are...
Other Observations
6. Just because there is no overt resistance does not mean that laggards aren't very influential in a congregation. Laggards can say "no" in may ways--even by saying "Yes". Lyle Schaller is right. There are many ways to say "yes" and still mean "no." Such indirectness may deceive the leaders into thinking that the change has been accepted when, in fact, it has been rejected. The laggard's response has simply been repressed or delayed. At an appropriate time, the laggards will respond with behavior appropriate to protect their needs and promote their goals.
7. Though laggard congregations may be more tenacious in meeting bare sustenance needs, vigorous ministry renewal is not a high likelihood. Whatever attitudes that sustain them now will be the same that brought them where theyre at. Without intervention, those same attitudes will likely prevail and dominate the church long into the foreseeable future.
8. Those congregations predominated by a leadership base of innovators/early adopters will more quickly and more energetically recover from major conflict.
9. The likelihood for a pastor to bring renewal to a congregation dominated by laggards may be very low while the likelihood for a pastor to lead renewal in a congregation dominated by early adopters may be much higher.
10. Much of what a pastors leadership is able to affect may not depend so much on his own abilities, talents and creativity so much as the relative prevalence and distribution of adopter behaviors in that congregation which will support--or stifle--pastoral leadership..
11. Trying to change the skewed-ness of the distribution of adopter behaviors in the church can be a various precarious task; indeed it it not without its difficulties. However, humanly speaking, it is likely one of the most significant things necessary for congregational renewal.
12. Sometimes the greatest challenges in ministry are when a minority of laggards leads and overpowers a congregation with an otherwise normal distribution. In such churches antagonistic activity may be at constantly high levels as the small number of antagonists recognize the smallness of their numbers...and the precariousness of their position. In such cases, antagonists can be quite fearful, hypersensitive, and vocal.
13. Last, but most important, only God can make a congregation healthy through the gracious, efficacious operation of the Holy Spirit working through Word and Sacrament.
New Wine In Old Wineskins?
For further information See Rogers, Diffusion of Innovations, pp. 252 ff.
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