"I tell you the truth," Jesus answered, "before Abraham was born, I am!" (John 8:58)

Behold The Man!

Then Pilate therefore took Jesus, and scourged him. And the soldiers platted a crown of thorns, and put it on his head, and they put on him a purple robe, And said, Hail, King of the Jews! and they smote him with their hands. Pilate therefore went forth again, and saith unto them, Behold, I bring him forth to you, that ye may know that I find no fault in him. Then came Jesus forth, wearing the crown of thorns, and the purple robe. And Pilate saith unto them, "Behold the man"! (John 19:1-5 KJV)

Krystal Meyers - The Beauty of Grace

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Joshua on Leadership
Who Me? A Leader?


Deuteronomy 34:9-12 (Monday)
“Now Joshua son of Nun was filled with the spirit of wisdom because Moses had laid his hands on him. So the Israelites listened to him and did what the LORD had commanded Moses. Since then, no prophet has risen in Israel like Moses, whom the LORD knew face to face, who did all those miraculous signs and wonders the LORD sent him to do in Egypt--to Pharaoh and to all his officials and to his whole land. For no one has ever shown the mighty power or performed the awesome deeds that Moses did in the sight of all Israel .” (NIV)
1) God is omniscient—all knowing! When He called Moses to lead the Israelites out of Egypt , He already knew Moses would not be the man to lead His people into the promise land. What circumstance forbade Moses from entering into the promise land (Numbers 20:1-13)?
a) Does this seem overly harsh or severe since Moses had been such a faithful servant of God, facing many obstacles and performing many miracles before God’s people Israel ? Oh, sweet child of the Father, remember, God’s word is rich with “word pictures” of the life and work of Jesus Christ! This is just such an instance!
2) Who was/is that Rock (1 Corinthians 10:1-4)?
a) The “picture” of the Rock being “smitten” was given in Exodus 17:-1-6 . Don’t miss this! Christ, who was that Rock, was smitten (Isaiah 53:4; Romans 6:9-10 ) by God for our transgressions as a just payment for the penalty of our sin (death)—a once and for all people occurrence! No further suffering, shame, or death is required save that of Jesus Christ (Hebrews 7:25-28)!
b) b) The second time the Israelites thirsted (Numbers 20:1-12), God told Moses to “speak” to the Rock. Instead, out of anger and frustration, Moses smote the rock twice! This act was grievous, yes, because Moses disobey a direct command of God, but also because the Rock had already been smitten bringing forth water! It did not need to be struck again, only spoken to for the waters to freely flow again!
c) c) Oh, dear one! Jesus Christ doesn’t need to get back up on that cross every time someone needs to be saved from their sins or when we slide back into sin! No, that was fully accomplished on the cross at Calvary ! Now, we speak to the Rock, wisely seeking forgiveness and salvation that only comes to us by Jesus’ once and for all death on the cross! Then, glory to God, Jesus gives to us freely of His Living Waters (His Holy Spirit)! Amen!
i) Oh, read Hebrews 6:3-6 . A serious warning for those who hear the truth and a refuse to go all the way with God—they crucify Christ afresh!
3) “…no prophet has risen in Israel like Moses, whom the LORD knew face to face…” Imagine yourself trying to step into a position of authority over a people had known, trusted and depended upon Moses’ spiritual leadership for over 40 years! So, when and how did God start preparing Joshua for such an awesome task?
a) A glimpse into Joshua’s background may give us better insight as to why Joshua was chosen above other Israelites and to his God-confidence in completing the task God set before him:
i) Joshua was an elder among the people and fought directly beside Moses (Exodus 17:5-16)
ii) When Joshua defeated the Amalekites with the sword, the Lord commanded Moses that the details of the battle be written down on a scroll as a remembrance and read in front of Joshua (Exodus 17:14)
iii) Joshua served as Moses’ aid and was not fearful in approaching the holy, fearfully awesome mountain of God (Exodus 24:13-18)
iv) Unlike Aaron, Joshua was faithful and obedient in waiting for Moses’ return from receiving the Ten Commandments, even though the wait turned out to be 40 days and 40 nights (Exodus 32:15-24)
v) While others stood outside their tents, watched and worshipped from afar as Moses entered the Tent of the Meeting, (by the way, anyone could approach and enter if they wish to inquire of the Lord vs. 7b), only Joshua remained (at or in the tent) even when Moses left the tent (Exodus 33:7-11)
vi) Though wrongly placed in this instance, Joshua had a righteous, jealous zeal for God’s chosen leader, Moses (Numbers 11:28)
vii) Joshua was among those who went in to spy out the promise land
viii) Joshua and young Caleb were the only ones to give a good report back to Moses—“We can possess the land…” (Joshua believed God) (Numbers 14:7-9)
ix) Of all the people who were delivered from Egypt by God, all those who had witnessed His mighty miracles—only Joshua and Caleb lived to enter the promise land! (Numbers 14:21-38)
(1) How could this fact prove to be vital in leading the people of Israel ?
x) Joshua followed the Lord wholeheartedly (Numbers 32:12)
xi) When the Israelites entered the promise land, Eleazar the priest and Joshua were given the responsibility to allot the inheritance of land to the various tribes (Numbers 34:17)
xii) Moses was told by God to encourage and strengthen Joshua for the task (Deuteronomy 1:38; 3:28; 31:7-8)
xiii) The LORD commissioned Joshua (Deuteronomy 31:14-15)
xiv) The LORD encouraged Joshua (Deuteronomy 31:23)
xv) The LORD promised never to leave or forsake Joshua and admonished Joshua 3 more times to be strong and very courageous (Joshua 1:5-10)
4) Os Hillman, in his Today God is First devotional of September 25, 2006 has another interesting take on the smiting of the rock by Moses:
Management by Force
Numbers 20:8"Take the staff, and you and your brother Aaron gather the assembly together. Speak to that rock before their eyes and it will pour out its water. You will bring water out of the rock for the community so they and their livestock can drink."

Moses and the people had been traveling for days without water. The people were thirsty. They were complaining and grumbling about their plight, and Moses became the object of their complaining. Moses sought the Lord for wisdom on how to handle the situation. The Lord instructed him to speak to the rock and water would flow. This would be a sign that God was still in control, that Moses was still the leader, and that God was their provider.

When it came time to speak to the rock, Moses' disgust with the people became so great that instead of speaking to the rock, he angrily addressed the people and then struck the rock twice. The water came out, in spite of Moses' disobedience. But the Lord was not pleased with Moses.

This was a time for Moses to operate at a higher level. No longer was he called to touch things with his staff to perform miracles; it was a time for him to speak to the problem. His very words would have changed the situation. Moses' staff represented two things-his physical work as a shepherd of sheep and his spiritual work as a shepherd of the people. God was calling him to move into a new dimension of using his staff. Up to now, Moses had always been commanded by God to touch something to perform the miracle. Now it was time to speak God's word to the problem.

However, Moses made the mistake many of us make. He used his instrument with force to accomplish something for God. He took something God wanted to be used in a righteous manner and used it in an unrighteous manner. He used force to solve the problem. This disobedience cost Moses his right to see the Promised Land.

Have you ever been tempted to use your power, skill, and ability to force a situation to happen, perhaps even out of anger? God is calling us to use prayer to move the face of mountains. The force of our ability is not satisfactory. God is calling each of us to a new dimension of walking with Him. Pray that God will give you the grace to wait on Him and not take matters into your own hands. Then you will not be in jeopardy of failing to move into the Promised Land in your life.”
5) Now, take the time to dwell on (better, write these things down) some of the major events in your life. Can you now look back and see how God might have used your circumstances, your struggles, your failures, your pain, perhaps even your triumphs—to prepare you for a particular position or a particular service?
6) Remember, last week we studied how during the Old Testament times, the Holy Spirit did not normally fall on a person with any permanency. What was one of the purposes for Moses laying hands on Joshua?
a) The first mention of laying hands on someone is found in Numbers 8:6-15 . In obedience to a direct command from God, all of Israel laid their hands upon the Israelite tribe of Levi as they were consecrated, commissioned (set apart) unto the Lord.
i) What was God’s purpose in calling out the Levite tribe from the other Israelites (Exodus 28:1; Numbers 3:5-10 and Deuteronomy 18:15 )?
ii) Under what conditions were the Levites initially called out by God (Exodus 32:1-35, especially verses 25-29)? Unusual way to receive God’s blessing! Remember, Aaron, who was a Levite, formed the idolatrous calf for the people to worship!
iii) Who were the most prominent leaders of the Levite clan (Exodus 2:1-10 and Exodus 4:1-17 )?
7) In Numbers 27:15-23 we get a little more detailed account of Joshua’s consecration to the Lord’s service.
a) In each of these instances God “set apart” His priests, the Levites who served the temple of God , and Joshua in front of the entire assembly of people. What do you think was His motivation in doing so?
8) No, God’s intent was not that Joshua be a prophet such as Moses, but rather, a shepherd or leader of His people. Still, in Deuteronomy 18:15-19 , Moses, and then God Himself told the Israelites another prophet would come and that the people were to listen to him. Who was/is that prophet?
Joshua 1:5 (Tuesday)
“After the death of Moses the servant of the LORD, the LORD said to Joshua son of Nun, Moses' aide: "Moses my servant is dead. Now then, you and all these people, get ready to cross the Jordan River into the land I am about to give to them--to the Israelites. I will give you every place where you set your foot, as I promised Moses. Your territory will extend from the desert to Lebanon , and from the great river, the Euphrates--all the Hittite country--to the Great Sea on the west. No one will be able to stand up against you all the days of your life. As I was with Moses, so I will be with you; I will never leave you nor forsake you.” (NIV)
1) Do you believe these words still echo down to God’s children today? “Every place you step your foot is yours—I will be with you—I will never leave you nor forsake you!” They do, beloved, they do!
a) God has promised that if we ask, it will be given; seek and it shall be found; knock and the door will be opened (Matthew 7:7; John 15:7 )
b) God gives us good gifts (Matthew 7:11; 1 Corinthians 12 ; Ephesians 4:1-13
c) God has given the secrets of the kingdom to us (Matthew 13:11; Mark 4:11 )
d) God has promised that if we faithfully and wisely use what He has given us, He will give us abundantly more (Matthew 25:14-29)
e) God has promised that as we learn to give, He will give back to us—pressed down, shaken together, overflowing (Luke 6:38)
f) God has given us authority to overcome our enemy—satan, (Luke 10:19)
g) God is pleased to give us His kingdom (Luke 12:32)
h) God gives believers light so that we may walk and not stumble in this dark and fallen world (Proverbs 4:10-12; John 1:9 )
i) God’s gives us of His Holy Spirit and eternal life (Luke 11:9-13; John 4:14 )
j) God has promised that where Jesus is, so shall we be (John 17:24)
k) God has promised that we will one day be honored for our service to His Son, Christ Jesus (John 12:26)
l) God has promised us peace (John 14:27) Oh, never more important than in our day and time!
m) God has prepared a place for us and is coming back for His own (John 14:1-3, 28)
n) God has chosen and appointed us to bear much fruit (John 15:16; Romans 8:29-30 )
o) God has given us His word (John 17:14)
p) God has given us glory (John 17:22; Romans 8:30 )
q) God has promised that we will do greater things (in quantity, not quality) than Jesus (John14:8-14)
r) God has called us to be Christ’s ambassadors, compelling others to be reconciled to God (2 Corinthians 5:14-20)
2) If you really believed, believed that God was with you in whatever you set out to accomplish—what would you dare to do?
3) What is the territory that God has given to you?
4) God has promised that no one will be able to stand against us. Oh, beloved, know that they will try! I think this is what causes most of us to stumble—we come face to face with our own personal Goliath and our natural instinct is to run! What Goliaths have you faced in your walk with Christ?
5) How do we overcome our Goliaths?
a) We arm ourselves for battle (Ephesians 6:11-18)
i) Who does verse 12 tell us we are battling against?
b) 1 John 2:13-14 tells us we have overcome the evil one. 1 John 4:1-5 says we have overcome the world. How? Oh, read 1 John 5:1-5 ! We are more than conquerors (Romans 8:26-37)!
6) Ever been forsaken? So was Jesus Christ (Matthew 27:46; Mark 15:34 )!
a) Hebrews 13:5 again promises that God will never leave or forsake us. So, how do we face our personal “losses”?
7) Whoa! We need to be careful, because we can be on the over end of this forsaking thing! What we must guard ourselves against according to Revelation 2:4 ? Dangerous! Very Dangerous! (I used to say this to my children when something was really bad for them!)
Joshua 1:6-9 (Wednesday)
“Be strong and courageous, because you will lead these people to inherit the land I swore to their forefathers to give them. Be strong and very courageous. Be careful to obey all the law my servant Moses gave you; do not turn from it to the right or to the left, that you may be successful wherever you go. Do not let this Book of the Law depart from your mouth; meditate on it day and night, so that you may be careful to do everything written in it. Then you will be prosperous and successful. Have I not commanded you? Be strong and courageous. Do not be terrified; do not be discouraged, for the LORD your God will be with you wherever you go.” (NIV)
1) God did not suggest that Joshua be strong and very courageous—no, God commanded Joshua to be so! What has God commanded you to be strong and very courageous in?
2) God gives Joshua a promise of success, but also a warning. What is it?
a) What is man’s idea of success?
b) According to these verses, what is God’s?
3) Why would God command Joshua to not be terrified? What was Joshua coming up against?
4) What have you come up against that has struck terror in you? Okay, terror is usually immediately and natural response! How were you, or were you able to overcome your fear(s)?
a) Take time to read over 2 Peter 1:3-8 . Oh, God has given us His divine power and great and precious promises to hold unto! How I pray we learn to mediate on those promises, so we faint not! Remember, we walk by faith in those promises—not be sight!
5) Discouragement comes to us all! I have a wonderful article by Bill Hybels on discouragement that I will pass out this week (also at the end of this lesson)!
6) Since we make up the body of Christ, we have a God-given responsibility to lift one another up! How I pray you are an encourager! It is wonderful to have brothers and sisters in the Lord to help us through life’s struggles, but to what truth (and promise) does God point Joshua? Oh, please read Psalms 121:1-18 ! There is no god like our God (Deuteronomy 3:24)! Amen!
Joshua 1:12:15 (Thursday)
“But to the Reubenites, the Gadites and the half-tribe of Manasseh, Joshua said, "Remember the command that Moses the servant of the LORD gave you: `The LORD your God is giving you rest and has granted you this land.' Your wives, your children and your livestock may stay in the land that Moses gave you east of the Jordan ,but all your fighting men, fully armed, must cross over ahead of your brothers. You are to help your brothers until the LORD gives them rest, as he has done for you, and until they too have taken possession of the land that the LORD your God is giving them. After that, you may go back and occupy your own land, which Moses the servant of the LORD gave you east of the Jordan toward the sunrise.” (NIV)
1) Hard to fathom, but not all the 12 tribes of Israel wanted to go into the promise land! Can you imagine! Three tribes had settled into fertile ground east of the Jordan and were very content right where they were (Numbers 32)! Are you settling, or falling short of God’s promise land for you? What keeps you from going all the way with God?
a) God granted these three tribes their request to live outside of Canaan —the land of promise. Oh, it was not without cost! Settling never is! Based on Numbers 32 , what was their responsibility to the rest of the tribes? What was God’s reasoning?
i) God had set aside the land of Canaan with the idea of the land being conquered and occupied by all 12 tribes! Since these tribes refused to enter, only nine tribes were left to fight against the giants in the land. What kind of burden would that place on the other nine tribes? What would losing the land allotted to them cost the three absent tribes of Israel ?
(1) Oh, God speaks this same message to His church today! How many faithful servants do you see fulfilling the same tasks Sunday after Sunday after Sunday? I know you also see other church members enjoying the fruit of these mighty warriors labor! Fair? No way! The church is compared to a body—the body of Christ! The body cannot function properly unless each part is fulfilling its necessary task! Who has to fill the body’s function if we decide we are comfortable resting where we are? Is this fair to others in the body?
b) Get this! To put a soothing balm on the Lord’s anger, The Reubenites, the Gadites and the half-tribe of Manasseh promised go in to Canaan first! I don’t know about you, but being on the frontline in any battle is not a good place to be!
c) Still, there are some of us who will enter our place of rest (on earth) before others. Or, we may just be in a place or time of peace in our lives. Do you know someone who is in the midst of a heated battle over their own promise land? Plow in ahead of him or her! It may be that you have already been through the very fire they are just entering—stand and fight together! A cord of three strands is not quickly broken (Ecclesiastes 4:12)!
2) I hope you didn’t miss the fact that God made the Reubenites, the Gadites and the half-tribe of Manasseh hold up to their vow! God does not take vows lightly and never should we! If we say we will do something, then God requires that thing of us (Numbers 30)!
a) This is why scripture tells us not to swear, period (James 5:12)!
Joshua 1:16-18 (Friday)
“Then they answered Joshua, "Whatever you have commanded us we will do, and wherever you send us we will go. Just as we fully obeyed Moses, so we will obey you. Only may the LORD your God be with you as he was with Moses. Whoever rebels against your word and does not obey your words, whatever you may command them, will be put to death. Only be strong and courageous!”
1) Can’t leave this lesson without encouraging you in your own area of godly service! A strong, faithful leader will rightly and justly guide his people. A leader is not afraid to forge ahead, preparing the way for others. A leader encourages others in their own gifts and talents, and will step aside if they can fulfill a need better than he. A leader is a re-builder and a restorer of brokenness—relationships—lives! Sounds like Joshua—sounds like Jesus Christ!
2) 1 Timothy 3:13 reads, “Those who have served well gain an excellent standing and great assurance in their faith in Christ Jesus.” What promises does this verse hold for you?

JoshuaonLeadership_WhoMeALeader_Deut34, Joshua1_090306

The Art of Self LeadershipYour toughest management challenge is always yourself. Bill Hybels Imagine a compass—north, south, east, and west. Almost every time the word leadership is mentioned, in what direction do leaders instinctively think?
South.
Say the word leadership and most leaders' minds migrate to the people who are under their care. At leadership conferences, people generally think, "I'm going to learn how to improve my ability to lead the people God has entrusted to me."
South. It's a leader's first instinct.
But many people don't realize that to lead well, you need to be able to lead in all directions—north, south, east and west.
For example, good leaders have to lead north—those who are over you. You can't just focus on those entrusted to your care. Through relationship and influence good leaders lead the people over them. Much of what I do at Willow Creek, through relationship, prayer, and careful envisioning, is to try to influence those over me—the board and the elders.
Effective leaders also learn how to lead east and west, laterally, in peer group settings. If you don't learn how to lead laterally, if you don't know how to create win-win situations with colleagues, the whole culture can deteriorate.
So a leader must lead down, up, and laterally. But perhaps the most overlooked leadership challenge is the one in the middle. Who is your toughest leadership challenge?
Yourself.
Consider 1 Samuel 30 . David, the future king of Israel , is a young emerging leader at the time. He is just learning to lead his troops into battle. He's green. But God is pouring his favor on David, and most of the time the battles go his way. One terrible day though, that pattern changes. After returning home from fighting yet another enemy, David and his men discover soldiers have attacked and destroyed their campsite, dragged off the women and children, and burned all their belongings.
This would define "bad day" for any leader! But it's not over. His soldiers are tired, angry, and worried sick about their families. They're miffed at God. A faction of his men spreads word that they've had it with David's leadership. They figure it's all David's fault, and they decide to stone him to death.
In this crisis David's leadership is severely tested. Suddenly, he has to decide who needs leadership the most. His soldiers? The officers? The faction?
His answer? None of the above.
In this critical moment he realizes a foundational truth: he has to lead himself before he can lead anybody else. Unless he is squared away internally he has nothing to offer his team. So "David strengthened himself in the Lord his God" (1 Samuel 30:6). Only then does he lead his team to rescue their families and what's left of their belongings.
David understood the importance of self-leadership. And although self-leadership isn't talked about much, make no mistake, it is a good part of the ballgame. How effectively can any of us lead others if our spirits are sagging, our courage is wavering, and our vision or commitment is weak?
Last summer I read an article that created some disequilibrium for me. The author, Dee Hock, challenged leaders to calculate how much time and energy they invest in each of these directions—people beneath them, over them, peers, and leading themselves. Since he's been thinking and writing about leadership for over 20 years and is a laureate in the Business Hall of Fame, I wanted his wisdom.
His recommendation: "We should invest 50 percent of our leadership amperage into the task of leading ourselves; and the remaining 50 percent should be divided into leading down, leading up, and leading laterally." His numbers bothered me so much I put the article away. But I let it simmer, which is my normal practice when someone messes with my mind.
While that was simmering, I read an article by Daniel Goleman, the author of the best-selling book, Emotional Intelligence. Since that book was released in 1997, Goleman has been spending his time analyzing why some leaders develop to their fullest potential and why most hit a plateau far from their full potential.
His conclusion? The difference is (you guessed it) self-leadership. He calls it "emotional self-control." What characterizes maximized leadership potential, according to Goleman? Tenaciously staying in leadership despite overwhelming opposition or discouragement. Staying in the leadership game and maintaining sober-mindedness during times of crisis. Keeping ego at bay. Staying focused on the mission instead of being distracted by someone else's agenda. All these indicate high levels of emotional self-control. Goleman says, "Exceptional leaders distinguish themselves because of superior self-leadership."
As I read his corroborating data, I thought, Maybe Dee Hock's percentages aren't all that absurd! Recall the first five chapters of Mark's Gospel. Remember Jesus' pattern of intense ministry quickly followed by time set aside for reflection, prayer, fasting, and solitude? That pattern is repeated throughout his ministry. Jesus was practicing the art of self-leadership. He would go to a quiet place and recalibrate. He would remind himself who he was and how much the Father loved him. Even Jesus needed to invest regularly in keeping his calling clear, avoiding mission drift, and keeping distraction and temptation at bay.
This is self-leadership. And nobody—I mean nobody—can do this work for you. You have to do this work yourself. Self-leadership is tough work—so tough, Dee Hock says, that most leaders avoid it. Instead, we would rather try to inspire or control our people than to do the rigorous work of reflection.
Some years ago a top Christian leader disqualified himself from ministry. A published article described his demise: "[He] sank like a rock, beat up, burned out, angry and depressed, no good to himself and no good to the people he loved."
When this pastor finally wrote publicly about his experience, he said, "Eventually I couldn't even sleep at night. Another wave of broken lives would come to shore at the church, and I found I didn't have enough compassion for them any more. And inside I became angry, angry, angry. Many people still wonder whatever happened to me. They think I had a crisis of faith. The fact is I simply collapsed on the inside."
He failed the self-leadership test. He should have regrouped, reflected, recalibrated. Maybe taken a sabbatical or received some Christian counseling. Goleman would say that this guy lost his emotional self-control. Now he's out of the game.
A little closer to home, I'll never forget when three wise people came to me on behalf of the church. They said, "Bill, there were two eras during the first 20 years of Willow Creek history when by your own admission you were not at your leadership best—once in the late seventies and again in the early nineties. The data shows Willow Creek paid dearly for your leadership fumble. It cost Willow more than you'll ever know when you were off—not hitting on all 8 cylinders."
Then they said words I'll never forget: "Bill, the best gift you can give the people you lead here at Willow is a healthy, energized, fully surrendered, focused self. And no one can do that for you. You've got to do that for yourself." And while they were talking, the Holy Spirit was saying, "They're right, Bill. They're right."
Because I know what's at stake, I ask myself several self-leadership questions on a regular basis.
Is my calling sure?On this matter, I'm from the old school. I really believe that if you bear the name of Jesus Christ, you have a calling, whether you're a pastor or a lay person. We all must surrender ourselves fully to make ourselves completely available to God. Ask, "What's my mission, God? Where do you want me to serve? What would you have me do in this grand kingdom drama?"
Remember what Paul said about his calling? "I no longer consider my life as dear unto myself. Only that I fulfill the mission or the calling given to me by God himself" (Acts 20:24).
What happens when you receive a call from the holy God? Your life takes on focus. Energy gets released. You're on a mission.
I have to keep my calling sure. So on a regular basis I ask, God, is your calling on my life still to be the pastor of Willow Creek and to help churches around the world? And when I receive reaffirmation of that, then I say, "Then let's go! Let's forget all the other distractions and the temptations. Burn the bridges!"
If you've been called to be a leader, it's your responsibility to keep your calling sure. Post it on your refrigerator. Frame it and put it on your desk. Keep it foremost in your mind.
Is my vision clear?How can I lead people into the future if my picture of the future is fuzzy? Every year we have a Vision Night at Willow Creek. You know who started Vision Night? I did. Guess who I mainly do it for? Me. Every year when Vision Night rolls around on the calendar it means that I have to have my vision clear.
Every leader needs a Vision Night on the calendar. On that night you say, "Here's the picture; this is what we're doing; here's why we're doing it; if things go right, here's what the picture will look like a year from now.
We prepare very diligently for Vision Night at Willow Creek. We have countless meetings to discuss the future. We spend many hours in prayer: "God, is this what you would have?" We search the Scriptures. By the time Vision Night rolls around, the vision is clear again. But it takes a lot of work to clarify the vision and to keep it clear. Nobody can do that work for you. It's the leader's job.
Is my passion hot?Jack Welch, the celebrated leader of General Electric, says, "People in leadership have to have so much energy and passion that they energize and impassion people around them."
I couldn't agree more. When I appoint leaders, I don't look for 25-watt light bulbs. I look for 100-watt bulbs because I want them to light up everything and everyone around them.
Whose responsibility is it to keep a leader's passion fired up? The leader's. That's self-leadership. Last year, at an elders' meeting, a couple of the elders asked me, "As busy as you are, why do you fly out on Friday nights to speak in some small out-of-the-way church to help them raise money or dedicate a new facility? Why do you do that?"
My answer: Because it keeps my passion hot.
Last year I helped a church in California dedicate their new building. One guy took me to the corner of the auditorium, peeled the carpet back, and showed me how everyone in the core of their church had inscribed the names of lost people in the concrete. Then they covered it over with carpet. In that auditorium they're praying fervently that the lost will be found.
It was a four-hour flight back to Chicago . I was buzzed the whole way. That church fired me up! I just love watching men and women throw themselves into the adventure of ministry. It inspires me. I know that my passion has to be white-hot if Willow is going to catch it. I can't become a 25-watt bulb—nor can you.
We do a lot of conferences through the Willow Creek Association. At times pastors of flourishing churches will pull me aside and say under their breath, "I have to come here once or twice a year just to keep my fires lit." They seem embarrassed about being here so often, as if it's a sign of weakness.
I tell them, "If you're a leader, it's your job to keep your passion hot. Do whatever you have to do, read whatever you have to read, go wherever you have to go. And don't apologize. That's a big part of your job."
Is my character submitted to Christ?Leadership requires moral authority. Followers have to see enough integrity in the leader's life that high levels of trust can be built. When surveys are taken about what it is that inspires a follower to throw his or her lot in with a particular leader over a long period of time, near the top of every list is integrity.
A leader doesn't have to be the sharpest pencil in the drawer or the one with the most charisma. But teammates will not follow a leader with character incongruities for very long. Every time you compromise character you compromise leadership.
Some time ago we had a staff member who was struggling in his leadership. I started poking around a little bit. "What's going on here?" I asked.
Then the real picture emerged. One person said, "For one thing, he sets meetings and then he doesn't even show. He rarely returns phone calls and often we don't know where he is."
I spoke to that guy and said, "Let's get it straight. When you give your word that you're going to be at a certain place at a certain time and you don't show up, that's a character issue. That erodes trust in followers. You clean that up, or we'll have to move you out." If character issues are compromised, it hurts the whole team and eventually impacts mission achievement.
I don't want to be a leader who demoralizes the troops and hurts the cause either. So on a regular basis, I sing Rory Noland's song in my times alone with God:
Holy Spirit, take control.Take my body, mind, and soul.Put a finger on anythingthat doesn't please you,Anything that grieves you.Holy Spirit, take control.
It's the leader's job to grow in character. No one can do that work except the leader.
Is my pride subdued? First Peter 5:5 says, "God opposes the proud. He gives grace to the humble." Do you know what Peter is saying? As a leader I have a choice. Do I want opposition from God in my leadership, or do I want grace and favor?
If you're a sailor, you know how hard it is to sail upwind. You also know how wonderful and relaxing it is to sail downwind. Peter is saying, "Which way do you want it? Do you want to sail upwind or downwind? If you're humble, the favor of God carries you. If you're proud, you're sailing into the wind. God opposes the proud."
Do you want to know the best way to find out if pride is affecting your leadership? Ask.
Ask your teammates. Ask the people in your small group. Ask your spouse. Ask your colleagues. Ask your friends, "Do you ever sense a prideful spirit in or around my leadership?" If you just couldn't ask a question like that, then you probably do have a pride issue!
It's a leader's job—with the Holy Spirit's help—to subdue pride.
Are my fears at bay?Fear is an immobilizing emotion. Sometimes I ask pastors, "Why haven't you introduced more change in your church when you know the church is crying out for it?"
I ask business leaders who are hesitating to launch a new product, "Why haven't you pulled the pin?" I ask political leaders why they haven't taken a stand on a particular issue, one I know they have strong personal convictions about.
So often the response is: "Because I am afraid." Fear immobilizes and neutralizes leaders. Believe me, I am not above this. I remember the morning in the year 2000 when it became clear to me that we needed to launch a $70 million building program. Our vision for the future was clear. The elders, the board, the management team signed off on it. The last step in the whole equation was for me to have the guts to pull the trigger. And you know what swirled around in my mind? The minute you go public with a $70 million campaign, there's no backing out. It's pass-fail. I realized that everything we had worked for over the past 25 years, all the credibility our congregation has established in our community and around the world was on the line. Fear kept building in my heart. Why expose Willow to that kind of risk? We're cruising along. We're growing and baptizing a thousand people a year. Why are we doing this?
I am not above letting fear mess with my decision making as a leader.
At a certain point, I just had to say, "I can no longer let fear sabotage my leadership." I reminded myself of that little verse, 1 John 4:4 , "Greater is he that is in me than he that is in the world." I asked myself: Has God spoken to me? Has he made his direction clear? Is the leadership core with us? Is he going to love me if I fail? Am I still going to heaven if this whole thing doesn't turn out right? I struggled but finally I found the courage to step out in faith. (The campaign was enormously blessed by God. Our church could have missed a great miracle had fear won the day.)
Are interior issues undermining my leadership?All of us have some wounds, some losses, and some disappointments in our past. All that stuff has helped shape or misshape us into the people we are today. I laugh at people who say, "My past has not affected me. My family of origin has not affected me."
Leaders who ignore their interior reality often make decisions that have grave consequences for the people they lead. Most of the time, they're unaware of what's driving their unwise decisions. Some pastors make grandiose decisions that enslave everybody in their churches to an agenda that's not God's. It's an agenda that comes out of their need to be bigger than, better than, grander than.
Other leaders are incurable people pleasers. Every week they want to take a poll to see where they stand in the Nielsen ratings.
Who's responsible for your interior issues getting processed and resolved? You are. I am. I've spent lots of time in a Christian counselor's office. I still am in contact with two Christian counselors. And whenever I think, Man, there's some stuff coming out of me that has nothing to do with the Holy Spirit, and I don't understand it, I call these counselors. I say, "I don't understand why I said what I said, why I did what I did. I know it's junk. Would you help me?" Effective leaders must get a handle on their "junk!"
Are my ears open to the Spirit's whisper?I estimate that 75 to 80 percent of the breakthrough ideas in my leadership over the years have come from promptings of the Holy Spirit, not through hard machinations of my mind. Some of the great sermon series or vision adjustments, value clarifications or strategy changes, some of the greatest people selections have not been due to my cleverness. It has been the Holy Spirit whispering to my spirit.
Leaders cannot afford to be deaf to heaven. Training, process, and strategy are all good. Developing your mind is essential. But ultimately, we walk by faith, not by sight. There is a supernatural dimension to leadership and it comes our way by keeping an ear open to heaven.
I ask myself regularly, Can I still hear God's voice? Is the ambient noise level of my life low enough that I can still hear God's voice when he speaks? And do I still have the guts to obey him even though I don't understand him all the time?
Is my pace sustainable?I came close to a total emotional meltdown in the early 1990s. Suffice it to say I didn't understand self-leadership. I didn't understand the principle of sustainability. I fried my emotions. I abused my spiritual gifts. I damaged my body. I neglected my family and friends. And I came within a whisker of becoming a statistic.
I remember sitting in a restaurant and writing: "The pace at which I've been doing the work of God is destroying God's work in me." Then I remember putting my head down on my spiral notebook in that restaurant and sobbing.
But I asked myself, Bill, who has a gun to your head? Who's forcing you to bite off more than you can chew? Who's intimidating you into overcommitting? Whose approval and affirmation and applause other than God's are you searching for that makes you live this way? The answers were worse than sobering. They were devastating.
The elders, to whom I'm accountable, did not cause my pace problem. It wasn't caused by the board or the staff or family or friends. The whole pace issue was a problem of my own making. I had no one else to blame. That's a terribly lonely feeling—having no one else to blame.
So I sat all alone in this cheap restaurant in South Haven, mad as a hornet that I couldn't blame anybody for my kingdom exhaustion and my emotional numbness. To find the bad guy, I had to look in a mirror.
To further complicate matters, the only person who can put a sustainability program together for your future is you. For 15 years, I lived overcommitted and out of control, and deep down I kept saying, Why aren't the elders rescuing me? Why aren't my friends rescuing me? Don't people see I'm dying here?
But it isn't their job. It's my job. Please, if you haven't already, commit yourself to developing an approach to leadership that will enable you to endure over the long haul.
Are my gifts developing?Pop quiz: What are your top three spiritual gifts? If you cannot articulate them as quickly as you can give your name, address, and phone number, I'm tempted to say, "You need your cage rattled!" Before you write me a note telling me I've made you feel bad, I need to let you know that on this issue, I have Sympathy Deficit Disorder. Maybe I need medication or something. But seriously, leaders have to master their spiritual gift profile. They must know which gifts they've been given and how they rank in order.
In addition, the Bible holds every leader accountable before God for developing each of those gifts to the zenith of their spiritual potential.
It's sobering to have to ask myself regularly, Bill, you know God's only given you three gifts. Some people have five, six, or seven. You've been given three—leadership, evangelism, and teaching. Are you growing them? Developing, stretching these gifts? Reading everything you can read? Getting around people who are better than you in these areas? Are you developing the three gifts God has given you? Because those are the ones I've been given, they're the only ones I'm going to stand accountable for before God someday. I'm learning that I cannot give myself any slack when it comes to spiritual gift development.
Is my heart for God increasing? And is my capacity for loving deepening?Have you reminded yourself recently whose job it is to grow your heart for God? Is it the church's job? Your small group's job? No. It's your job to make sure your heart for God is increasing. Nobody can do that for you. You've got to develop the spiritual practices that keep you growing towards Christlikeness.
Likewise, is your capacity for loving people deepening? If you think about it, you realize God has only one kind of treasure. It's people.
When our kids were young and Lynne and I needed some husband-wife time, we'd get a babysitter. And I'd give those sitters my little talk. As we were heading out, I would say, "You need to know something. We only have two treasures in this life, only two. I don't care if you wreck our car or if the house burns down while we're gone. Really. Just promise me. Promise me you'll take really good care of our children. They are all that really matter to us in this world."
God is saying to leaders, "Promise me. Give me your word. Take care of my treasures. Grow in leadership so that you become the greatest you can be at taking care of my treasures. Love them. Nurture them. Develop them. Challenge them. Mature them. They are all that really matters to me in this world."
And right now would be a good time for you to say to God, "I will."

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