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by Dr. Brandon Pardekooper

Confessions of a Creativity Scrooge

Confessions of a Creativity Scrooge
by Dr. Brandon Pardekooper

Being innovative within church culture can be either highly rewarding or highly frustrating. Unfortunately, it is more often the latter rather than the former. In order for a church to be innovative, the culture has to be infused with a high degree of trust, and freedom to try things and fail. When a church is built on perfection, the idea that everything must be done with excellence, or a bottle-neck of decision-making, innovation is unable to thrive and people’s creativity is stifled. Creativity and innovation is a highly uncertain process and trust is its counterbalance (Szabo et al., 2013). For low-trust organizations, the energy of the people begins to focus more on defensive self-preservation, whereas high-trust organizations provide the cultural atmosphere that allows people to be creative, try new things, innovate in exciting ways, and take risks in their performance (Ceserani, 2014).
For a good portion of my ministry I have had the privilege to train young people for full- time ministry at the University level as well as in the early years of their first ministry positions. Though I have enjoyed success in training and mentoring young ministers, the area of fostering creativity has been an area I have faltered. Since I am a problem solver, I tend to see the challenges within a new idea before the idea is barely developed. For the young people who looked to me to champion their innovative ideas, I failed and created a culture of low-trust where ideas were not allowed to thrive and grow (Ceserani, 2014). I focused too much on efficiency and effectiveness, stifling creativity and a sense to take risks in challenges (Pitta et al., 2008). This was discouraging for many of those who I trained and developed, particularly those who were gifted in creativity.
References
Bachmann, R., & Zaheer, A. (Eds.). (2013). Handbook of advances in trust research. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.
Ceserani, J. (2014). Innovation and trust – the path to mastery. Industrial and Commercial Training, 46(6), 302–306. http://doi.org/10.1108/ICT-04-2014-0024
Szabo, S., Ferencz, V., & Pucihar, A. (2013). Trust, Innovation and Prosperity. Quality Innovation Prosperity, 17(2), 1–8. http://doi.org/10.12776/qip.v17i2.224

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