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Questioning Forward: In This Together

ai collaborative

I’ve been making posts about Appreciative Inquiry, an effective method for studying an existing group of people and discerning how to implement positive change in a way that will be well-received and won’t blow the group apart. As the process was taught to me, it involves ten assumptions about what is necessary for this to happen. One important assumption is that in a change process, all steps should be collaborative.

The word collaboration took on a deeper meaning for me after I got to hear Dr. Randy Lowry, President of Lipscomb University and a conflict resolution expert, talk about what collaboration means in a workshop he conducted for the Doctor of Ministry program at Lipscomb. He described five possible responses to conflict.

The five approaches to conflict vary on a grid that involves two different scales. In conflict, you are either placing high or low value on the relationships involved, on whether you can practice mercy and overlook a wrongdoing, and on the interests of others. Likewise, you are either placing high or low value on achieving your own goals and interests, on the need for true justice in a situation, and on the issue itself, whether it really matters to you or not. The five categories that Lowry provides are:

Every person has their own default way of dealing with conflict. I tend to be the conflict avoider. I have sometimes made my life harder because I tried to pretend that something didn’t matter to me. Later, I realized I should have engaged more because it bothered me more than I thought it did. In a given conflict, it is appropriate to think through this grid and try to respond with the appropriate approach to the conflict. Even if you hate conflict, it may be important for you to engage because the people or the issue is important. Even if you love a good verbal sparring, you need to ask yourself whether it’s worth risking the relationships involved or if the issue is really that important to you.

Getting back to the issue of congregational change, the approach of collaboration is especially important. In smaller matters, we can take a variety of approaches, but when it comes to the future direction of our church, major initiatives, or huge shifts in our protocols, we need to be sure our process looks like collaboration, every step of the way

If the issue you are working through is large enough to warrant whole church involvement, be sure you are allowing for collaboration. Here are some questions you might ask:

Where collaboration has occurred, it means that issues have been taken seriously, problems have been faced with honesty, people’s needs have been thoughtfully considered and included, and all that is possible has been done to maintain relationships. In a change process, all steps should be collaborative.

Other Posts about Appreciative Inquiry You May Enjoy:

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