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April 2006 Issue
Sacred
Cows
by Charles Lowery
One of our neighbor's kids learned
how to ride the bike at an early age and that was great, but the
only problem was he didn't know how to stop. He was always in
a panic looking for a bush to crash into so he could stop. Life
is difficult when you can't stop. The end result is usually a
wreck, and you and many others could be injured severely. To be
successful in life it is just as crucial to be able to stop as
well as start. When is the last time you stopped doing something?
I can't even get out of my neighborhood without stopping twice.
Why is it so much more difficult to stop in life, or even in my
church, than it is in a car? Think about it: When is the last
time you or your church just stopped? Sometimes it is hard to
stop because we have had the inertia of success. Our strengths
can become our weaknesses. Remember Borden Milk and its beloved
Elsie the Cow? The founder of the company who invented condensed
milk even had his tomb built in the shape of a condensed milk
can (speaking of morbid traditions!). Borden saw no reason to
change its successful Wise Potato Chips when the new Frito-Lay
and Doritos came along. They also saw no need to update their
successful Lady Borden ice cream when new premium brands came
along like Hagan-Daas. Poor Elsie paid a heavy price to learn
a valuable lesson. We may not have any Elsie's in our church,
but we do have a lot of sacred cows.
As a psychologist I know that half of the battle in overcoming
a dysfunction is to identify it. You have to face it to fix it.
Every company or church has sacred cows. These things prevent
us from doing something or changing something that would allow
us to be more effective. Sometimes it is a group of people with
more control than they should have or simply a habitual tradition
that now continues without a biblical purpose.
Traditions are easy to start but hard to stop. The seventh
inning stretch was started by President Taft, unintentionally.
He stood up to take the kinks out of his knees during a game in
Washington, D.C. Thinking that he was leaving, the fans respectfully
rose with him and emptied the stadium. Taft sat back down, but
the tradition endured.
I consulted with a church in which the ushers wore red roses
on their lapels. Newcomers were put off by the tradition and even
said they thought they were going to a funeral. I consulted with
the ushers and suggested they discontinue the rose tradition,
and the next few weeks were mass hysteria. You would have thought
I had suggested we relocate the church. We discovered why this
was so difficult. A member of the church was making a tidy profit
on the selling of the roses each Sunday. If you have trouble stopping
a sacred cow, you might want to check the price of hamburger.
One church in which I consulted had the tradition of holding
hands and singing at the end of each service. Church people loved
it, especially the singles that could sit by the right person
and get to hold their hand. The pastor obtained feedback that
some wives were unable to get unchurched husbands to stay because
of the hand holding part of the service. To them holding hands
with people you don't know and singing just didn't seem normal.
The pastor stopped what was now a sacred tradition. The wives
of the unchurched husbands told him that they were proud to be
a part of a church that would change traditions so their husbands
would hear the truth. The pastor is no longer at the church. (Helpful
hint: The longer the tradition has been held, the shorter the
time to plan an exit strategy.)
Why is stopping so important? Because many times you have to
stop one thing before you start another. If you want to be a morning
person, let me give some good advice. Stop being a night person.
Do you know how a child becomes a walker? He stops crawling. He
doesn't crawl faster to become a walker. They just get tired of
crawling and decide to walk.
I learned how to swim late in life. The reason I became a swimmer
is I got sick and tired of wading. The reason I want you to stop
something that is ineffective is to start something that is effective.
We all get into ruts. We eat at the same restaurants and go home
the same way. Let's stop something. I'll keep it simple this week
stop going home from church the same old way. Don't do
it. Now you are forced to go home a new way. It may be better
or it may not, but you are now on your way to discovering the
best way home. In our zeal to become conservative, we have become
preservative. We have done a good job of holding onto the truth,
but a bad job at letting go of tradition.
You have to know when to hold them and when to fold them. That
is not in Proverbs. The great theologian Kenny Rogers sang that
song. It is one of the keys to life. What are you holding that
you need to fold? This week, go out there and stop something.
It's Easter. We celebrate that Jesus stopped death. Surely, you
or your church can stop something that is slowly killing you.
You might just experience some resurrection power in the process.
Charles Lowery is founder and president
of LIFE, Inc. and is in a fulltime speaking ministry. You may
contact LIFE, Inc. at 903-881-9422 or www.charleslowery.com.
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© 2009 Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee
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