I wish you were more curious. I wish we were more curious. I wish I were more curious.
Right now, we desperately need churches, leaders and organizations that are curious.
We need to be asking questions and exploring new insights. We need to confess our ignorance. We need to be humble and admit we have much to learn.
To be curious is to acknowledge we don’t know what we don’t know.
Instead, we too often get leaders who are over-confident, smug, callous and disinterested in new information.
We get churches who are more afraid of new insights than they are curious. We get organizations that concretize around traditions and old-world thinking.
We get people who over-remember the past, only want the familiar and are paralyzed by the new.
Curiosity is a key ingredient in wisdom, insight and foresight. When people are curious, it implies they recognize they do not have all the answers or know everything there is to know or that they need to know.
Curiosity is a sign that the creative gene God implanted in every human being is active and alive.
For the Christian, curiosity implies God’s truth is far more expansive than our little corner of the truth.
Sadly, most of us simply aren’t curious. We have our minds made up and are detached from the wonder of the unknown.
Many Christians no longer think but settle for spouting sound bites and denouncing those who disagree with them.
Too often, our faith comes across to those around us as rigid, defensive, locked in and unmovable.
We more nearly resemble the religious professionals Jesus sparred with as he told parables designed to unlock their frozen curiosities.
Lately, I’ve been curious about how language experts define the opposite of being curious.
Some of the words that pop up as antonyms are bored, apathetic, unconcerned, disinterested, perfunctory, callous, smug, severe, passionless.
That, my friends, is the recipe for a dying church, a toxic culture and a wasted life.
The rise of the COVID-19 pandemic and the epidemic of racism that are polarizing and paralyzing our nation this month calls for more than the willful ignorance of a lazy mind.
If we expect to not only survive but also thrive in the new world before us, we will need a healthy dose of active curiosity to well up within us and smother our natural inclination toward defensiveness, indifference or both.
Here are seven things about which I hope we can be curious:
- What programs have we been doing as churches that aren’t really as important as we thought?
- What have we not been doing that is a great deal more important than we knew?
- Why is racism so pervasive and deep-rooted in our hearts and institutions?
- What will our church do differently as a result of what we have learned in the first six months of 2020?
- To whom do we need to pay more attention to? Less?
- What is God’s dream for our church’s relationship with all the people who live in our community?
- In what ways have we been reduced to conforming to our world rather than transforming it?
The list could go on and on. In fact, if you adopt a stance of curiosity rather than assuming you know all you need to know, you will find the possibilities that a curious mind opens to you to be endless.
I believe our current crises will only be transformed into avenues of blessing when we humbly adopt a commitment to cultivate a spirit of holy curiosity.
When we do, we will discover in our wondering the imaginative power and vision of the Holy Spirit.
It is in our curiosity that we will be inspired to dream dreams and see visions that are otherwise invisible to our closed minds.
Please pause this week and thoughtfully embrace holy curiosity before it is too late.
Our world needs you. Your church needs you.
Most important, God needs you to allow the Divine Dream for this world and its people to become your calling.
Editor’s note: A version of this article first appeared on the Center for Healthy Church’s blog. It is used with permission.
Bill Wilson is president of the Center for Healthy Churches (CHC) housed at Belmont University in Nashville, Tennessee.