S2E8. Innovation Theory and How City Mission Societies Became City Missions
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This episode continues our series on the five historical eras of city and rescue missions. It moves from the wide-ranging experiments of the City Mission society to the next wave: the sustainable, replicable City Mission. It begins by telling the story of David Nasmith, the tactical genius who founded the world’s first city mission in Glasgow in 1826 to combat the crushing poverty of the Industrial Revolution. We’ll analyze the five key innovations he engineered—including interdenominationalism, paid lay leadership, and a dual focus on evangelism and practical help—that became the DNA for the entire movement. Then, using Everett Rogers’ Diffusion of Innovations theory, we’ll explore why this model was so successful and spread so rapidly. In conclusion, we’ll see how later City Missions faced risks from mission drift tied to funding and governance, setting the stage for the next wave of the movement.
This podcast episode was generated by NotebookLM and reviewed by CVU for accuracy. Read the companion article for this podcast including links to research notes here.
This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit rescuemissions.cityvision.edu