No leader sets out to be an
idolater, but it happens anyway, and will seriously hurt your leadership
effectiveness. Eric Geiger share four idols to be aware of.
Originally posted by Eric Geiger
Leaders have been given the
holy responsibility of developing and equipping others. Just as in other
areas of our lives, our idolatry, our longing for something other than God,
keeps us from obeying Him with glad hearts. A leader’s idolatry will prevent
a leader from the holy task of developing other leaders.
Tim Keller, David Powlison,
and others have thought more deeply and written more eloquently about the
idolatry that plagues our hearts. They have identified four common idols
beneath the surface, idols that drive sinful and destructive behavior:
Power: a longing for influence or recognition
How do these idols prohibit leadership development? What does
a leader with these idols likely think or say about the responsibility to
develop others? Below are the four idols with accompanying thoughts or
phrases leaders have muttered:
Control
If you have thought or said either of the above, your struggle
with control is hampering your development of others. A leader with control
issues is a leader who fails at a chief leadership task: developing others. A
leader who struggles with handing significant responsibility to others fails
to provide necessary experiences that aid in development.
Approval
If you have thought or said
either of the above, your longing for approval is hurting you and the people
you lead. A leader who needs affection and approval from others is reluctant
to develop and deploy other leaders because the leader fears the affection
and approval could be divided.
Power
If you have thought or said either of these, you likely love
to be a leader so you can be seen as a leader. You love your title (leader)
more than your task (developing others). Augustine wrote, “No one can be a
good bishop who loves his title and not his task.” A leader whose chief
desire is to be perceived as a powerful leader will ignore the greater and
more important work of developing others.
Comfort
If you have said or thought
either of these about developing others, your desire for comfort or the
status quo is keeping you from doing the difficult, messy, and painstakingly
slow work of investing in future leaders. A longing for comfort will keep a leader
focused on the short-term, the temporary, and the easy. Leadership
development is none of these as it takes time, has eternal ramifications, and
is hard work.
Are any of these idols
stopping you or your team from developing others? We are wise to heed the
apostle John’s encouragement: “Dear children, keep yourselves from idols.” If
we don’t, we will neglect one of our chief roles as a leader.
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Monday, 29 May 2017
Four leadership "Idols" that can really hu
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