Lead From Your Strengths
I was interested to read a recent
article by Chad Hall on the subject, ‘Lead From Your Strengths’. He quotes Marcus Buckingham, a British-born
leadership guru with a business background. Businesspeople and pastors are
lapping up his approach. A URC minister friend who belongs to the WCA recently
heard him speak at Willow Creek’s Leadership Summit, and said it was the best
teaching on leadership he has ever heard. Hence my interest in Hall’s piece.
I haven’t bought Buckingham’s books, and it’s apparent that
if you want to use his online Strengths
Finder (I know, I’m a sucker for these surveys), you need to have purchased
the relevant book and have an access code. So all I have to go on is Hall’s
summary. He says this: Buckingham helps you evaluate which are your top five
strengths from a selection of thirty-four. It’s then a question of using those
strengths. To quote Hall:
Using strengths means three things: (1) knowing what your
strengths are so you can focus on making the most of them; (2) applying your
strengths to an ever-increasing range of opportunities; in other words, use
them more and more; and (3) further strengthening your strengths rather than
shoring up your weaknesses as your best plan for leadership development.
How do we evaluate the – ahem – strengths (and weaknesses)
of this teaching from a Christian perspective? Beginning with the positive,
there is clearly something here that taps into emphases on spiritual gifts and
offices. No-one is omnicompetent. We each have a place in the Body of Christ,
and we depend on each other. Furthermore, in leadership terms this needs
linking to a team leadership style. It is common to observe that no minister
has all the gifts required for ministry, and will certainly not be a duplicate
of his or her predecessor. This is compassionate in promoting an understanding
attitude to leaders, but the obvious corollary to me is that the missing gifts
need to be found from somewhere. If the minister doesn’t have them (and why
should s/he?), then either they need to be found in the congregation generally,
or we need a team of leaders. There is an important task to find those who can
minister in ways I cannot, and to authorise and liberate them.
So my broad sympathies are with leading from my strengths. I
have had enough experience in fifteen years of church members upset because I didn’t
fit their mould of the gifts a minister should have. If there were a wider
acceptance that leaders use their strengths, not their weaknesses, it would
save a lot of pain for many people – not just the leaders.
However (you knew that word was coming, didn’t you?) … I am
aware from personal experience that it is easy to hide behind those things I know
to be my strengths and not grow. I have previously
written
here
how I had never previously taken school assemblies. I had run from them! My predecessor
in this appointment was a teacher before he entered the ministry. He was
doubtless a natural. However, I now enjoy greatly going into primary schools. I’ve
even collected a second one. I seem to have struck a chord with the children. I
didn’t know I could do that. Perhaps Buckingham allows you to tap previously
undiscovered strengths. Either way, we need an openness and vulnerability so
that using our gifts in concert with others of differing abilities doesn’t
become a reason to hide.
Technorati Tags: ministry, leadership, spiritualgifts, ChadHall, MarcusBuckingham
Ministry And Opposition
Rick Warren on how to handle opposition:
Persistence is the ultimate test of leadership. How do you handle ministry when the going gets tough? The secret of success is to simply outlast your critics.
A fine, if simple article. It perhaps needs a tone about humbly seeing whether your critics are telling you some partial truths that you need to hear.
Technorati Tags: RickWarren, ministry, opposition, Nehemiah
links for 2008-01-12
-
Beta version of new BBC home page.
Boo Hewerdine
The wonderful Boo Hewerdine is playing in Chelmsford next month. It’s an acoustic gig as part of the build-up to this summer’s Chelmsford Christian Festival. Support comes from Andy Thornton of Greenbelt and Late Late Service fame. The gig is on 23rd February at Central Baptist Church. More info is available here.
Technorati Tags: BooHewerdine, AndyThornton, ChelmsfordChristianFestival, refresh08, CentralBaptistChurchChelmsford, GreenbeltFestival, LateLateService
From The Margins
If renewal comes from the margins, then we need to listen carefully to those ‘reflective Christians’ who doubt and question what the majority takes for granted. So says Brian McLaren: Good Marginal Thinking | LeadershipJournal.net
Technorati Tags: renewal, margins, BrianMcLaren
Why Young Adults Leave American Churches
Why Many Young Adults Quit | LeadershipJournal.net
Quote from the article:
Lifeway‘s Ed Stetzer blames the losses on sorry youth ministry: “Too
many youth groups are holding tanks with pizza,” Stetzer said. “There’s
no life transformation taking place. People are looking for a faith
that can change them and be part of changing the world.”
Technorati Tags: youngadults, churchleaving, Lifeway, EdStetzer
Spicy Church
Is the Church bland or spicy? Mark Labberton on how to make church and Gospel spicy (as it should be): The Lima Bean Gospel | Mark Labberton | The Christian Vision Project
Technorati Tags: MarkLabberton, gospel, church