Wednesday 16 November 2016

THE DAY I WAS FOUND GUILTY

Autumn lends itself to reminiscence and, 30 years on, it is perhaps time now to disclose that I was once found guilty of corrupting the morals of the young.

This, of course, was the same charge on which Socrates the great Greek philosopher was convicted. Standing trial before a jury of 500 of his fellow Athenians, he too was found guilty and the sentence in his case was death. He remained on bail and had the chance to scarper – indeed everyone would have been glad if he had – but the father of Greek philosophy nobly declined to do so and, gathering his disciples around him, drank a goblet of hemlock in the local lock-up. 

Socrates’ most famous student Plato was absent but others, such as Apollodorus, disgraced themselves by openly weeping and sobbing. Being Greeks, of course, they were very emotional. “Oh do stop your caterwauling,” said the philosopher, whose legs began to feel heavy as the hemlock slowly took effect.  Eventually he spoke his last words and it is, perhaps, worth reminding ourselves of the final utterance of the great man: “Crito, we owe a cock to Asclepius.”

Well autre temps, autre moeurs (as we say in Essex). We shouldn’t be surprised that 2,400 years later different standards apply. In my case the sentence wasn’t death but a public shaming. Here’s how it came about.

In those days I was a ‘bright young thing’ working for Essex County Council.  I wore 3-piece suits and had hopes of rising high in public service. In my more private moments I even dared to hope that one day I might match the achievements of one of my father’s cousins and become a chief librarian somewhere (in her case it was Dulwich or Catford or some such on the South Circular). It’s good for a young man to have ambitions. My latest posting was in Promotion and Development and it was there that I was entrusted with a significant responsibility: to select six paintings from the huge Arts Council collection of high-value art housed in a bunker under the Hayward Gallery on London’s South Bank.  These were to be displayed in public buildings in the county, for the enjoyment and education of the public. My senior colleague gave me clear instructions:  listen to the advice of the curators but make my own decisions.

So I set off. Knowing nothing about art I thought I should at least be appropriately dressed and so wore a grey herringbone 3-piece tweed suit and a blue silk Paisley bow tie (be gentle in your judgment: this was the 80s and I was visiting Art). On arrival I was taken in turn to see many different paintings – each of them lifted out into the light by two attendants in their brown warehouse coats. In the heavily demarcated and unionised 80s, to have touched the frames of a painting without the protection of a brown warehouse coat and union card would have led to the modern equivalent of the goblet of hemlock.  Five of the six paintings were soon selected but, as each choice was made, the curator’s irritation became steadily more evident. Finally, she lost her temper with me, accusing me of selecting only ‘safe, candy-box’ pictures.  I retreated behind the sure defence of the Paisley bow tie but, to be frank, her point was valid. As a bright-young-thing, fearing to rock the boat lest that should also rock my career, I had indeed played too safe. So, in a gesture towards the challenge that all good art should provoke, I boldly said that she had a free hand to select the final painting, due to be displayed prominently in Buckhurst Hill Library in West Essex.

Given her pent-up anger, it is perhaps unsurprising that she then chose a painting the shock of which no amount of grey herringbone tweed could deflect.

It was a dark depiction by Maggi Hambling of her mentor, Arthur Lett-Haines. There is a milk bottle on the table. The light is harsh. Even today I suggest that it is a disturbing, ill-favoured image and one which, I was very sure, would be unpalatable to the people of Buckhurst Hill who would much rather enjoy a gentle pastoral scene. Yet, having committed Essex County Council to a course of action, there was nothing to do but smile and commend the expertise with which she had selected a painting all but guaranteed to end the career of this young executive. Business being concluded, I returned to base to work through the six weeks or so until the paintings were displayed in their new homes.

Well 30 years on, it is some comfort to me that my judgment of both the Hambling and the tastes of the burghers of Buckhurst Hill were both spot-on. So disturbed were local people at the placement of Ms Hambling’s work that they complained in large numbers to their local councillors; complaints amplified by the local papers. The clamour was so great, in fact, that in due course the Epping Forest District Council held a vote of censure in the belief that the public display of such art would tend to corrupt the morals of the young people of Buckhurst Hill. While the Liberal Democrats and Labour councillors bravely defended the public’s right to be offended, the Conservative majority carried the day. As the (mercifully unnamed) person responsible for the outrage I was found guilty by the people’s representatives and in the public press. 

Which goes some way to explain why, if you alight today at the station between Woodford and Loughton on the Central Line, upon leaving the station precinct you are immediately confronted with slack-jawed, feckless men and women now in their mid-forties, shuffling aimlessly between Waitrose and Starbucks, their eyes dilated and their brains addled through early exposure to degenerate art. It’s a fair cop. I did it. 


Tuesday 8 November 2016

25 YEARS ON....

It was a privilege this month to be guest speaker at the 25th anniversary of the creation of Redbridge Council for Voluntary Service at Redbridge Town Hall in Ilford, east London. Here is the text of my address:


I am grateful to RCVS for the opportunity to share a few recollections of the earliest days of the charity. 

It was a Wednesday in the late summer of 1989 when I saw an advertisement for the role of general secretary of the (then) Redbridge Voluntary Services Association, based at Fellowship House on the corner of Green Lane and Stanley Road in Ilford. I applied and was pleased to be shortlisted, being invited to a group interview with the trustees in the neighbouring Fellowship Hall.

Some of you will remember those buildings and indeed some of the most significant voluntary bodies in the borough began their lives in Fellowship House. Today those buildings have been replaced with sheltered housing but those with longer memories will recall that they were single-storey timber structures with corrugated iron roofs and panels made from asbestos board through which strands of ivy grew into the offices within. These were the headquarters of the Redbridge Voluntary Services Association.

It is now 25 years since RCVS gained charitable status - an important milestone. Yet we should acknowledge that there were four or so predecessor organisations to RCVS and a history of shared social endeavour going back to the early 1930s. In the sense of continuity, therefore, we might call this our 84th anniversary! 

I was fortunate to be offered the position but alongside the offer came a warning: the trustees strongly suspected that Redbridge Council planned shortly to withdraw 100% of its grant-aid for political reasons. Yet the trustees were reassured by owning the freehold of the Fellowship House site and felt that we had 12 months in which to broaden the base of our funding and re-launch as a much more independent advocate for the 600-700 voluntary bodies in the borough.

So I took post as the last general secretary of the RVSA in January 1990.  Sadly, one of my first tasks was to issue redundancy notices to my then colleagues who had so worked hard on behalf of the good causes in Redbridge over many years. I’d like to mention them by name: Jean Jones, Rita Park, Dorothy Howes and Eddie Coles.

As expected, the grant to the RVSA was withdrawn in January 1990 but the council then faced what, for sleepy Redbridge, was a sustained outcry across the local press at their decision. As a result, with the council’s agreement a small committee was formed, chaired by Jeff Shear (then Campaign Director of Jewish Care), with a view to creating a new Council for Voluntary Service in Redbridge. An interim grant was made to enable the committee to retain me and for 1990 my time was spent both bringing the affairs of the RVSA to a close and laying the foundations for the new RCVS.

Originally we worked out of an office in Cranbrook Road kindly donated by a friendly architectural firm before moving into Broadway Chambers in the spring / summer of 1991. I was quickly joined in a working partnership by an amazing team.  Michael Spinks facilitated the development of some truly significant community ventures.  Pat Richards supported us with audio typing and lots of filing. Soon after we were joined by the late Jane Clark, who took good care of our finances and advised local groups on bookkeeping, and by Liz Sewell our first community care planning officer.

We all felt we were privileged to be involved at the outset of this venture, with a serious commitment to delivering value for money in advice and guidance and new resources, as well as a strong voice within the council and other public bodies. It is hard to convey just how much fun we had doing that. The keynote of those first years of RCVS was joy. We worked long hours but we laughed such a lot together.

During the five years that followed, several colleagues came to work with us and to help move Redbridge forward as a place of care, community action and neighbourly concern. Qaisra Khan succeeded Liz. Kiri Narendran came to set up the Redbridge Refugee Forum (in those days Redbridge had the 6th highest concentration of asylum seekers in the country). Olive Young managed the Living Options in Practice project. Jennifer Simpson was the first Carers Worker, setting up the Redbridge Carers Support Service; succeeded by Lesley Harrison and her colleague Bridget. Not to forget Helen and Charlotte, our cleaners!

Well Fellowship House and Hall were sold but only managed to clear the RVSA’s residual debts and leave (if I recall correctly) around £1,800 to support the new CVS.  But drawing on the assets in 1990 gave us the springboard for our new beginning.

In 1991/92, the voluntary sector was invited to join with the London Borough of Redbridge, the (then) Redbridge Health Authority and the Family Health Services Authority in a ground-breaking Community Care Partnership. Redbridge was not then an authority naturally in love with co-operation and partnership: it was desperation to make its thin resources stretch as far as possible that led the Council to develop what became actually a sincerely collaborative effort to mend the health and social care divide.  The new CVS led the sector into the Community Care Partnership - a body which by its founding document required 4-way agreement to spend an annual revenue budget of £100m.  For the CVS, this was something of a change from having no income at all the previous year! RCVS also took on the hands-on management of the then Joint Finance fund of £1m, with our dear friend and retirement volunteer Brian Reed bringing the same eye to the management of this fund that he had brought as budget-holder for the construction of the Thames Barrier.

Rather more reluctantly, RCVS created the Redbridge Grants Managing Agency as a means to meet the then Council’s desire to avoid the unpleasantness of saying ‘No’ to numerous applicants for its very limited grant-aid budget. They outsourced this distasteful task to the RGMA while manipulating like mad behind the scenes. I am sure things are done very differently now...

RCVS led the voluntary sector into the then Redbridge Strategic Partnership, the Community Safety Partnership, the Redbridge Advocacy Project, Redbridge Respite Care Association and (I guess) 10+ other significant developments in those first 5 years. A major development was the arrival of lottery funding and over the years we were involved in many bids. I recall working with the League of British Muslims on the first ever round of Lottery funding (successfully, let me add!).

I could reminisce a lot longer – that’s always a danger when inviting an old boy back to an anniversary.  Wisely, Ross Diamond has asked me to keep it to just 10 minutes. So I would like to finish with a quotation from Margaret Mead that, for me, sums up what we were aiming for when this new CVS was created 25 years ago:

“Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.”

As a Christian minister, I might want to take issue with the final point.  But the broader sentiment I support wholeheartedly.  We wanted to be there for the thoughtful, committed citizens of Redbridge who wanted to make their community a better place for all. Neighbours who, sharing a desire to help and to serve, would then gather around kitchen tables to dream dreams, hatch plans and work to bring about change. 

25 years later, I am delighted that the same spirit of community service prevails.
 
Carry on the good work!

3 November 2016


Friday 4 November 2016

CORPORATE ACCELERATORS: HOW MIGHT A MODEL FROM THE BUSINESS WORLD SPEAK TO THE CHURCH?


Purpose                                                                                               

This paper is written firstly to explore in outline terms the Corporate Accelerator model now growing in importance in the business sector and which was the subject of a recent programme on BBC Radio 4.[i]   Then to ask how, if at all, such a model may speak to UK Baptists and Baptist churches.

Background

We live in a time of rapid change, not least in the business sector. Markets change very quickly and businesses that fail to develop new and differentiated products and services at some speed are increasingly at a disadvantage.[ii] Emerging technologies, for example 3D printing, are transforming the competitive capacity not only of small and medium-sized enterprises but increasingly of individuals. Indeed, the smaller the business unit, arguably the more agile in responding to emerging markets and opportunities.

Global connectivity is making access to knowledge – previously the province of the educated, of governments and large corporations - available to all. The sharing of access, ideas and wisdom can be seen in such examples as Ubuntu[iii], TED[iv] and Wikipedia[v]. Patients now visiting their GP’s surgery often have a far greater awareness of potential diagnoses through the dissemination of knowledge.

Changes to technology and knowledge and more open access mean that, while large organisations may struggle to achieve the flexibility to evolve, start-ups now tend to outflank their older and larger competitors in reinvention and differentiation. The scale of this outperformance is sometimes hard to overstate. While mature markets will often depend upon marginal returns, so-called “exponential organisations”[vi] can enjoy a substantially higher return on investment than that of their larger competitors and in far shorter timescales.

Exponential organisations – an illustration

The following example illustrates the rapid growth and impact of a well-known exponential organisation.[vii] The online hospitality marketplace AirBnB overtook the well-established global hotel chain Hilton in a matter of a few years.  It is hard to remember now that, although the brand name of Hilton has enjoyed widespread recognition for many years, no one had heard of AirBnB 8 years ago – it did not exist then.



AirBnB shares the following characteristics with many other exponential organisations:

1. The firm is guided by an overarching transformative purpose which captures the imagination both of its team and also potential partners and purchasers. AirBnB’s corporate vision is “Belong anywhere”. In other words, they have a bold vision of a changed future, to which they are wholly committed and which they pursue relentlessly, challenging any conventions that do not support their purpose.

2.  In the case of AirBnB, they have successfully challenged two long-accepted givens in the hotels market:
 a.        that you need to own the assets (hotel rooms)
 b.     that there is a high capital barrier – a minimum number of rooms       required to enter the market profitably
Instead, AirBnB has leveraged assets through countless temporary alliances with hundreds of thousands of owners. By engaging these partners and their contacts and by exploiting the democratisation of online markets, they can offer a huge diversity of accommodation at a speed and level of tailored service, and more cheaply, than any linear organisation such as Hilton could match.

The role of corporate accelerators

There are two main traditional growth strategies for businesses:  mergers and acquisitions or organic growth via business development, mostly in the form of creating new products for existing markets.  Corporate accelerators are typically larger firms that have accepted their lack of agility in developing new goods and services in a timely way and have evolved a new strategy.

Why they lack this agility is a good question and one that is hard to answer succinctly. It is likely that the larger the organisation and the longer it has existed, the more it is likely to think, plan and act in fixed, linear and isolated ways – focusing upon their past experience, unchallenged assumptions and being process-driven. An example would be LEGO whose corporate strategy for a long time assumed that children would always love to play with plastic bricks and that the firm’s focus should be on protecting their brand. Children (and not a few adults too) continue to love their products but their main client group is now offered a vast range of digital and online alternatives. LEGO took some time to engage with this rapid change in its environment but has now responded with hybrid products.

The most successful emerging products and services now tend to arrive through a process of ‘discontinuous innovation’.  Such an approach requires a wholesale reinvention of attitudes, skills and the willingness to network and collaborate with some unlikely partners. There is a worthwhile paper exploring these issues, ‘Finding, forming, and performing: Creating networks for discontinuous innovation’ [viii] particularly around networks and joint ventures, written by senior academics at London Business School, Imperial College and Cardiff University.

Corporate accelerators support early-stage innovation in a cost-effective, speedy and flexible way. They are an evolution of earlier models such as Lockheed’s so-called ‘Skunk Works’[ix]  A similar approach is taken by so-called business incubators; sometimes these terms are used interchangeably although there are some differences between the incubator and accelerator models[x]

By taking the initial risk on investing in promising entrepreneurs and their ideas, such as AirBnB, the accelerator enables early-stage ventures to make rapid progress towards the market and hoped-for profitability. 

The accelerator process is flexible but might be expected to include some or all of the following:

·           Mentoring and peer-mentoring
·           Brokering connections with potential investors
·           A fixed-term duration, to sharpen target-setting and drive achievement
·           Encourage the formation of collaboration through cohorts
·         Typically take a non-controlling equity stake in the start-up, so that there is a direct financial interest in the eventual profitability of the enterprise
·     The objectives they support have some link with the accelerator’s long-term business interests

Accelerators act as a bridge between innovation and the corporation. They are not philanthropic or disinterested:  they are looking for the next attractive products and services which are expected to provide the greatest return on investment. They provide an environment for new rules and a place to spot ideas on the edge of what is currently known.  When they work well, the accelerator creates an economic benefit which is wider than just the interests of its shareholders, while at the same time nurturing entrepreneurial spirit and culture.

We should not be surprised that the unconventionality of the model means that there are effective examples drawn from outside the business sector and from joint ventures and networks.  An academic example would be the Entrepreneurship Center of the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich. This collaborative venture has accelerated over 140 start-ups, with a market value of over half a billion Euros. [xi]

Discussion points for churches and mission, arising from the outline description of this model.

These are offered from a personal point of view and I would welcome critical discussion of them:

1.     How important is innovation to us as Baptists Together?

Why do we need innovation when we’ve been doing church for centuries?  Surely if we simply follow the Bible and the Spirit’s leading, we just need to remain faithful.  If this is so, then innovation drawing on lessons from the business sector may be just a fad.

It is beyond the scope of this paper to respond at length to this question. However, it seems to me that there are some powerful arguments commending a serious exploration of new attitudes and approaches:

·  Theologically – all we know, we know provisionally and partially. Scripture has to be reinterpreted by each generation under the Spirit’s guiding. Some theological and ecclesial ‘certainties’ from past centuries are now long since discarded and replaced with new insights.
·    Missionally – the importance of mission as contextual to the locality, culture, people-group rather than a single, universal paradigm.
·   Historical ecclesiology - the church has continually been subject to reinvention. Such emerging movements have limited life-cycles: they grow, mature, decline and are succeeded in turn.
·       Sociological / demographic – however well UK Baptists have maintained our numbers in comparison with other mainstream denominations, we too need to take urgent action to avoid an imminent sharp decline.[xii]

For now, I infer from the fact that this paper was written at the invitation of the General Secretary of the Baptist Union of Great Britain that innovation is a topic of interest at the strategic level. 

2. Is there room for a dialogue between the world of business and the household of faith?

We must be wary of uncritically importing what may be attractive but inappropriate models from the business sector and expecting them to be a good fit in the life of the church nationally or locally. For example, anecdotally there is much concern expressed by Baptist ministers about appraisal and performance measures imported by deacons with corporate experience and applied to the ministry. These often lack a theological understanding of the role of ministers, much of whose most valuable work cannot be measured using performance indicators alone.

However, we should not automatically disregard ideas from the business world when these may inform or challenge us, theologically and missionally, and help us to attend to the gospel in the context of the culture in which we live.

We sometimes hear church leaders speaking out against what they perceive to be unhelpful or unjust business practices, for example zero-hours contracts. Are there ways in which we may engage in a process of critical correlation[xiii], bringing insights from business into dialogue with the life and mission of the church? I am not aware of ways in which this is happening in our Baptist networks but I think this might be a useful area to explore. 

3.  How might the culture of exponential organisations speak to the local church?

We saw above that some of the marks of these new firms are:
·    They each have an overarching, transformative purpose – they think very big and some succeed in what they set out to do
·  They are wholehearted in pursuit of their aims and do not allow themselves to be distracted by minor issues
·        They embrace discontinuous innovation
·       They challenge all existing constraints and look to the edge to see what is coming
·     They network to gain access to resources and knowledge they do not need to own
·        They work in cohorts - collaboratively, with teams that share the same values
·       They accept that some ideas will fail and that successful products may have a short life-cycle, leading to a further reinvention.

We must not compare unequal things. The firms we have been thinking about exist for a very different motive and purpose than churches. The church is a collection of saints trying to live out their lives together, faithfully, as followers of Jesus Christ and joining in with his mission. We are witnesses to the work of God in our lives as well as in the wider world. 

Yet we should not deny that there are some important similarities. Hopefully, we remind ourselves at least weekly of the overarching transformative purpose for which Christ has brought us together.  We should be encouraged to see that God has a bigger agenda then we tend to admit, perhaps leading us to acknowledge some minor distractions that we ought to lay to rest. Increasingly, I hear much more said now about the importance of Baptists associating and networking – though I doubt that this can be facilitated best in future through process-driven, linear associations.

The real dangers we face are that we remain too easily satisfied with what we have known recently, too fearful to be serious about exploring alternatives or lacking the tools to engage in such an exploration. 

4.  What might we borrow or adapt from the accelerator model as we reflect upon nurturing entrepreneurial approaches to mission and church?

Here are some points for discussion:

a. Entrepreneurs are not comfortable people to be around. They worry people who long for a settled life. I believe we need a truly mixed economy of church, recognising complementary approaches. Alongside the steady, faithful witness of the whole church there is need for people who are able to move and shake and make things happen. How can we create opportunities for the nurturing of entrepreneurial Baptist Christians in mission, church-planting, wealth creation and so on? How do we hold and prize such people and retain them in relationship?

b. Do we understand why, if you are an innovator, you might remain or choose to associate with us Baptists? Perhaps through personal history, our theological distinctiveness or for reasons of loyalty; possibly not because we are celebrated for nurturing and resourcing truly radical innovation.

c.  Can we find ways to celebrate that, for want of more radical options, our theological colleges function sometimes as accelerators? They serve as places where new and sometimes wild ideas are welcomed, explored and tested in a supportive and non-judgmental environment; where people can dream some dreams and where informal cohorts form. Might we build on this with a dedicated and resourced pilot accelerator project?   

d.  The recent IGNITE report notes the trend towards bivocational ministry. Increasingly, university business schools have degree courses that offer new combinations of subject disciplines to suit the emerging needs of the world of work.[xiv] What new complementary combinations of ‘theology and…’ would aid effective ministry and mission in this new environment?

e. Do our training patterns release our pioneers or do they tend to domesticate them? I perceive a prevailing assumption that traditional models of ministry and mission will endure as the main future of the UK Baptist family of churches. Pioneers are encouraged to function within or alongside mainstream churches. A mixed economy of church is a fine concept but the resources available are almost entirely devoted to the more traditional model. Decisions about resourcing wild ideas are made by those from the centre of church rather than the edges. The assumption for Home Mission churches is that the desired end of most new church plants is to become like the majority of other churches.

f.  By their nature, true pioneers find solutions and make things happen regardless of the institutions to which they are nominally attached. However, I suspect there are lots of semi-pioneers who might be released, developed and become fruitful if there was a paradigm-shift away from resourcing maintenance towards innovation. Alongside the very welcoming emergence of the Pioneer Collective, how are we learning from the experience of the Church of England which, recognising that its long-term existence is in jeopardy, has created and resourced a pioneer stream?[xv].  

g.    How are we exploring how we facilitate the growth of social enterprise – so-called ‘business as mission’ - as a tool in Baptist mission? Here in Essex we are seeing the growth of our own Shared Space cio social enterprise. Next month we open our third centre and confidently expect a fourth to open before the year’s end.  We are priming these transformative projects with funds from the enterprise’s financial engine, not from external grants or Home Mission. This is an innovative approach to funding mission.

5.   How do we as a Baptist family of churches respond to risk?

Being willing to take a first risk is at the heart of the corporate accelerator model.

I contend that some level of risk is inherent in the exercise of faith by followers of Jesus.

Jesus told similar though not identical parables[xvi] about a master who puts his servants in charge of his goods while he is away on a trip. When he returns, the master takes account of the stewardship of his servants. Each is assessed according to how he invested the master’s goods to obtain a profit. It is clear that the master wishes to see the exercise of responsibility, engagement with his values and some profit from the servants’ activity. The master rewards his servants according to how each has fared as a steward. He sees that two servants have made a profit, describes them as having been faithful and gives them a reward. For the single unfaithful servant who played it safe, there is a less happy outcome. While these parables may be interpreted in several ways – and we should not reduce the parables to simple moral lessons – I suggest that both can speak to us about the active living out of faith.

My experience of working with (Baptist, Anglican, Methodist and other) churches is that they often tend to be highly risk-averse. Several reasons suggest themselves as to the cause of this but I believe that one of two reasons is likely to lie at the root of them all.  Firstly, there is a lack of belief in the capacity of God to replenish expended resources. We must hang on to what we have because we cannot expect more in future.  Secondly is the idea that it is better to remain stolidly with the known and safe rather than to speculate on something new which we may think has a risk of failure. Having served in two pastorates and as consultant to other churches, I find this is a commonplace view. Our churches are so often closer to being a Hilton than an AirBnB: asset-rich, cash-poor, highly conservative in deploying their resources, slow-moving, linear, incremental organisations. 

A similar assessment might also be made of aspects of our Baptist intermediary bodies: BUGB, BUC, associations and custodian trustees.[xvii]

I suggest that what matters is not the avoidance of risk but good risk management and a willingness to embrace acceptable levels of risk in seeking a ‘profit’ for the kingdom.

In saying this, I know of many very welcome examples of how Baptist churches are flourishing. I applaud and celebrate these but suggest that sometimes these happen in spite of our systems and structures not because of them.

Some might counter that being a ‘Hilton’ may be a true expression of faithfulness: why should we seek more AirBnBs? They are unlikely to endure. Those reading this paper must make up their own minds. As a passing comment, I find it interesting how often we judge the worth of Christian projects by their permanence. In a Baptist church I know well, they created a community restaurant which ran for 16 years.  Despite offering the gospel in relational ways to countless customers over that period, when the decision to close was made by the church, some members lamented that the original modest setting-up costs had evidently been wasted and queried whether, since it had closed, God had ever been in the venture at all. I hear the values underpinning such views expressed quite widely in my contacts with churches: projects are validated in part by their permanence.

As churches and intermediary bodies, I suggest we tend towards a custodial stance regarding God’s resources rather than a more entrepreneurial one. I find this difficult to reconcile with what Jesus teaches. In any conflict between charity law and a more radical response to the gospel, my experience leads me to believe that an excess of caution usually favours the former.

How can we lovingly but firmly push at the boundaries of our aversion to risk?

6.  How might adapting the accelerator model enable Baptists to test and promote wild, radical and left-field projects from the ‘edge’ for the sake of the kingdom of God? 

We may firstly point to Home Mission, which primes and supports pioneering work that is of benefit beyond its geographical location. The Essex church where I serve is one such beneficiary and we acknowledge this with sincere gratitude whenever the opportunity arises. Yet quite a proportion of Home Mission is spent on infrastructure. This is important: without some structure it is impossible for sustainable new developments to take place. But I wonder whether we have become so used to one way of doing things that alternatives are simply too threatening. We have moved back from scanning the horizon to focus on the safe and known, devoting funds to supporting an idea of church that we have inherited rather than nurturing innovation.

We also have a potentially dangerous over-reliance on this annual revenue source to sustain our Baptist structures.

We should acknowledge and celebrate the Pioneer Collective and perhaps suggest a dialogue with the enablers, mentors and pioneers in the Collective about how the accelerator model might speak to them.

Finally, we might boldly experiment with creating a pilot accelerator, adapting the corporate model to our Baptist values and purpose but being careful to avoid limiting creativity and risk-taking by imposing too rigid a framework about what the outcomes might be.

7.   Why are the issues raised in this paper timely? 

Our Baptist world will change dramatically over the next 10-20 years, with ageing congregations, deteriorating buildings and a reduced capacity of many churches to afford ministers in the traditional model. Brierley Consultancy has predicted a 9% decline within Baptist churches in the period 2013-2020.[xviii] Our ecclesiology means that action to attend to this falls, in the final analysis, to local congregations. They may find change is forced upon them more by external drivers than our prayerful response to the Spirit’s calling.

There remains a dogged assumption that more prayer will result in the kind of revival that will see our churches full once again.  That such a return to known and loved ways of discipleship and being church will vindicate an understanding of faithfulness that is chary of innovation.  I do not know what God will do but I do know that he will not be coerced into acting in line with our wishes. Many Old Testament characters had experience of remaining faithful to God in times of exile and I believe there is a strong possibility that we may face the same. This new environment will demand new missional and ecclesial responses.

In any dialogue between scripture and models from the business world, tested in prayer, how might we adapt aspects of the accelerator model to serve the kingdom of God in such times?

Summary

This discussion paper was written following the broadcast of a programme on corporate accelerators by BBC Radio 4, which was heard by a number of colleagues. We are evidently a Radio 4–friendly church! This discussion paper offers a definition and examples of accelerators and their work, which aim to support the development of so-called exponential organisations and discontinuous innovation.  It has reflected on some questions arising from this concept as they might relate to UK Baptist churches. 

This paper asks how our Baptist structures are promoting entrepreneurial thinking, with fluidity of thought, adequate resources and a willingness to engage with acceptable risk. Will we engage with discontinuous innovation or continue to focus at least as much upon maintenance? Are we willing to resource innovation at some risk?

Will Baptists Together be bold enough to move decisively in the direction of a more evenly mixed economy of church?


Ivan King BA MTh MBA
Co-pastor, Church from Scratch  - July 2016


I am grateful to two colleagues who commented critically on drafts of this paper, the contents of which reflect my personal opinions and not necessarily the views of Church from Scratch.






[i] "The Bottom Line: Old Dog, New Tricks. Broadcast on Thursday 9 Jun 2016 20:30." BBC Radio 4, 2016.
[ii] A good example would be Kodak. This was the market leader in the supply of photographic film, with worldwide brand recognition. Although early pioneering work took place within Kodak, the firm failed to recognise the potential of digital photography to threaten its survival. Failing to scan the horizon for emerging technology and ignoring the increasing culture of highly differentiated customer choice meant that Kodak did not accept that digital photography would replace its main products - a fatal mistake.  The contrast is with Fujifilm – a competitor which has successfully transitioned to digital.
[iii] Ubuntu is an open-source software platform that runs across smartphones, tablets and PCs.
[iv] TED is a nonpartisan nonprofit devoted to spreading ideas, usually in the form of short, powerful video talks. 
[v] Wikipedia is a free Internet encyclopedia that allows its users to edit almost any article accessible. Wikipedia is the largest and most popular general reference work on the Internet.
[vi] The term was first used in Ismail, S. (2014) Exponential organizations: Why new organizations are ten times better, faster, and cheaper than yours (and what to do about it). United States: Diversion Books.
[viii] Birkinshaw, J., Bessant, J. and Delbridge, R. (2007) ‘Finding, forming, and performing: Creating networks for discontinuous innovation’, California Management Review, 49(3), pp. 67–84    
[ix] Skunk Works is an official alias for Lockheed Martin's Advanced Development Programs (ADP), formerly called Lockheed Advanced Development Projects. Skunk Works is responsible for a number of famous aircraft designs, including the U-2.  The designation is widely used in business, engineering, and technical fields to describe a group within an organisation given a high degree of autonomy and unhampered by bureaucracy, tasked with working on advanced or secret projects. The concept was explored and widely promoted by management thinker Tom Peters in the 1980s and 90s.
[x]  Accelerators tend to invest financially in their start-ups whereas incubators may not. Accelerators support start-ups in mutually supportive and challenging cohorts; incubators usually work on a one-on-one basis
[xii]Where is the church going? (2010) Available at: http://www.brierleyconsultancy.com/where-is-the-church-going (Accessed: 24 July 2016)
[xiii] The critical correlation approach argues for a critical dialogue between interpretations of the Christian message and interpretations of contemporary cultural experiences and practices. The aim is to arrive at an understanding of why the church is as it is, in its context.
[xiv] When I studied for an MBA at Henley Business School 20+ years ago, the emphasis was on turning out rounded managers for large corporations. Earlier this year I joined the Management and HR Faculty of Coventry University London Campus as a part-time teaching fellow, to equip people to function as managers in portfolio careers where they have to bid to function in short-term roles. It is an entirely different approach, recognising the discontinuous change environment in which we now live.
[xv] http://www.pioneercollective.org.uk
[xvi] Matthew 25:14-30 and Luke 19:12-27
[xvii] In the past couple of years I have had discussions at association and custodian trustee level, in order to explore options for the reprovision of deteriorating church buildings in areas of great need of the gospel, where the local church is currently too poor to manage its own reinvention. At each stage I have heard that Baptist intermediary bodies, constrained by charity law, reluctantly may not lend money “at risk” – a position which has effectively ended the exploration. Our intermediary bodies have benefit of legal advice from those most skilled in charity law. Yet my 30 years’ experience in charity management, including as chief executive or chair of two national and several smaller charities, suggest that all new developments carry some risk. What matters is not the avoidance of risk but good risk management and a willingness to embrace acceptable levels of risk in seeking advancement for the kingdom.
[xviii] Where is the church going? (2010) Available at: http://www.brierleyconsultancy.com/where-is-the-church-going (Accessed: 24 July 2016)