You know, “A competent community is not one that consumes services…” really nails the shift from passive consumer to active creator. It’s about building capacity from within, not just outsourcing our problems.
Share Image Quote:The core message is that real community strength comes from empowering its members to solve their own problems, not from passively consuming services provided by outside institutions.
Let me break this down for you. For years, we’ve been sold this idea that a “good” community is one with great parks departments, fantastic social services, you name it. But what McKnight and Block are arguing—and I’ve seen this play out in neighborhoods I’ve worked with—is that this turns us into consumers of community, not creators of it. The magic, the real resilience, happens when we stop asking “what service can I get?” and start asking “what capacity do we have?” It’s the difference between hiring a lawn company and organizing a neighborhood garden. One is a transaction. The other builds skills, relationships, and a sense of collective pride that you just can’t buy.
| Context | Attributes |
|---|---|
| Original Language | English (3669) |
| Category | Community (61) |
| Topics | empowerment (22), growth (413) |
| Literary Style | analytical (121), concise (408) |
| Emotion / Mood | determined (116), inspiring (392) |
| Overall Quote Score | 75 (124) |
This quote comes straight from John McKnight and Peter Block’s 2010 book, “The Abundant Community: Awakening the Power of Families and Neighborhoods.” It was published in the United States. You sometimes see the sentiment echoed in other community development circles, but this is the original, precise phrasing from them.
| Context | Attributes |
|---|---|
| Author | John McKnight (51) |
| Source Type | Book (4032) |
| Source/Book Name | The Abundant Community: Awakening the Power of Families and Neighborhoods (51) |
| Origin Timeperiod | 21st Century (1892) |
| Original Language | English (3669) |
| Authenticity | Verified (4032) |
John McKnight, Professor Emeritus at Northwestern University had spent decades of his life helping people rediscover the power of relationships. Being, co-founder of the ABCD Institute, his core idea revolves around communities that grows by identifying and connecting their assets. You’ll find the John McKnight book list here which are anchored by Building Communities from the Inside Out, The Careless Society, The Abundant Community, and The Connected Community.
| Official Website
| Quotation | A competent community is not one that consumes services but one that creates the capacities of its members |
| Book Details | Publication Year/Date: 2010; ISBN/Unique Identifier: 9781605095844; Last edition: 2012; Number of pages: 192. |
| Where is it? | Chapter: Competence and Care, Approximate page from 2012 edition: 61 |
In the book, this idea is a direct challenge to what they call the “consumer society,” where our default setting is to look for a professional or a system to solve our problems for us. They position the “abundant community” as the antidote, a place where the focus is on the gifts, skills, and knowledge that already exist within the neighborhood itself.
Here’s how you might actually use this idea:
| Context | Attributes |
|---|---|
| Theme | Principle (838) |
| Audiences | community organizers (5), educators (295), policy analysts (50), students (3112), urban planners (7) |
| Usage Context/Scenario | development seminars (1), education workshops (20), leadership training (259), public policy debates (1), social innovation forums (1), urban renewal programs (1) |
Question: Does this mean we should get rid of all professional services?
Answer: Not at all. It’s not an either/or. It’s about balance and sequence. The goal is to rely on our own capacities first and see professional systems as a last resort, not the first and only option. Think of services as a supplement, not the main course.
Question: This sounds idealistic. How do you start in a disconnected neighborhood?
Answer: You start small. You don’t need a grand plan. It begins with one person connecting with another. Host a simple potluck. Ask one neighbor about their skills. It’s about creating small, visible wins that build momentum and show people what’s possible.
Question: What’s the biggest obstacle to building this kind of community?
Answer: Honestly? The mindset of consumerism. We’re so conditioned to be passive recipients that the muscle of initiative has atrophied. The first step is always the hardest—shifting our own internal narrative from “someone should fix that” to “I wonder who around here might want to fix that with me.”
Institutions deliver services, but communities build belonging. It’s a powerful distinction that changes how we think about solving problems and creating real, lasting change in our neighborhoods. Table of Contents…
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