5 Tests of a Leader
Some
storms brew on the horizon. We can see them coming and we have time to
maneuver. Other storms just drop out of the sky suddenly like a raging
tornado, wreaking havoc on anything in its path. The storms of the heart
are no different.
But
make no mistake about it. So much of leadership rises and falls on our
ability to pass these repeated tests of the soul. I wish they were just
once in a lifetime, but they are daily and they last until our frail
ending of life.
You might recall me making the case that all great leaders “manage me
and manage others” in simultaneous concert. The great leaders direct
energy toward their own development and growth, not just driving
outcomes in others.
Here
are a few common, but dangerous, storms that can wreak havoc in the
heart of a leader. Every time we pass the test, our moral authority goes
up. Every time we fail, our composite leader score is weakened.
Greed –The temptation to have and hold more and more stuff that I don’t really need.
Louisa May Alcott captured the dangers of greed well, writing, “It does seem that the more one gets the more one wants.”
If
we have money, we want more of it. If we have authority at work, we
want more of it. If we’ve been to 10 countries, we want to visit 20.
To
weather this storm, we must open our hands and move to a posture of
giving. We must remember that we are only stewards of our possessions,
and we must release what we own and want and have. Instead of clutching
more tightly to the stuff that is or could be ours, we must choose to do
the opposite. In one word … we need to Give.
Where can you give this week? What can you give away?
Lust –The temptation to wander with emotional and physical activity outside of my covenant with God and/or my spouse.
The
young man Joseph, in the book of Genesis, was 30 and unmarried. He had a
remarkable riches-to-rags-to-riches story and a lot of authority as
chief of staff for a major figure in ancient Egypt. The only thing he
didn’t have was a woman, and then his boss’s wife came calling. Joseph
didn’t hesitate for an instant. He ran.
When
fighting the squall of lust we must imitate Joseph’s decisiveness and
hit the road. We will NEVER be successful coddling lust in our lap.
Proverbs says it will burn us every time (Proverbs 6:27). Instead of
thinking we can defeat lust or manage our level of involvement, we must
choose to do the opposite. Avoid lingering in conversations or browsing
the Internet. Invite trusted friends to ask tough questions in this
area. In one word … we need to Flee.
Where do you need to flee today?
Revenge –The temptation to settle the score or balance the injustice done to me.
Are
you very good at forgiving and moving on? I am usually pretty good
unless it has to do with something that has happened to me or those I
care for. Get the irony?
You’ve
no doubt heard of Malala Yousafzai, the young woman who was shot in the
head by the Taliban for her efforts to promote the rights of young
girls to attend school. Following her miraculous recovery, she became a
global icon for women’s rights and a Nobel Peace Prize winner. While she
seems to inspire everywhere she goes, I was particularly struck by a
quote from her regarding forgiveness. Speaking about the very people
that tried to kill her, she said, “I do not want revenge on the Taliban,
I want education for sons and daughters of the Taliban.” Not only did
she not seek retribution, she hoped for good.
Revenge
is the tornado that starts spinning in us when an injustice has been
done to us and we can’t move on. We must learn to not retaliate, to not
strike back. We must allow God the right of way to settle wrongs done to
us. Instead of lashing out or scheming to get even, we must choose to
do the opposite. In one word … we need to Forgive.
Who do you need to forgive this week?
Independence
–The temptation to fly solo. The feeling that no one can really
identify with my world and that I am all by myself to sort out and
navigate life.
In
the early years of the Christian church, hundreds of devout believers
flocked to the desert. In an attempt to lead a holy life, far from the
temptations of the Roman world, they consciously separated themselves
from that world. While this often led to sincere devotion and even
spiritual insight, it also necessarily excluded community. Speaking to
the latter concern, one of the early fathers of the Church, Basil of
Caesarea, wrote, “When we live our lives in isolation, what we have is
unavailable and what we lack is unprocurable.”
Put simply, we need community. We need it for our own good, and for the good of others.
We
must fight unhealthy independence. There is a healthy independence and
an unhealthy independence. Unhealthy independence thinks no one can
possibly equal our pain, that I alone am the answer to all my dilemmas
and if it is going to be … it’s up to me (always). In other words, I am
alone with no equal, peer, or community.
To
fight this hurricane we must risk leaning in toward others with
transparency and vulnerability. Instead of pulling away, we must find a
handful of individuals with whom we can be authentic and with whom we
can reveal our hearts and minds. In one word … we need to Engage.
Are you suffering from unhealthy independence?
Pride
–The temptation to think that I am the sole source of success,
significance, and security. It is the mindset that the world revolves
around me.
Jerry
Bridges, in his book Respectable Sins, says that it is “our pride of an
independent spirit that makes us unteachable and unsubmissive.” Ouch.
He hit storms #4 and #5 in less than one sentence.
To
battle this storm, we must acknowledge that we are not the sole cause
of our success, and we must learn to lift others up as a key part of our
success. In short, we must give credit where credit is due. Instead of
sliding into self-focus and arranging all of life around ourselves, we
must choose the opposite. In one word … we need to Share.
Where do you need to share credit?
I
call these five items “storms” or “tests.” Tim Keller calls them
“Counterfeit Gods” and in his book of the same name, he adds the
subtitle: “When the Empty Promises of Love, Money and Power Let You
Down.” (You can read a review here:
http://www.relevantmagazine.com/culture/books/reviews/19906-counterfeit-gods-by-tim-keller)
And
these counterfeit gods will let you down. I’ve seen it in my own life
and in the lives of friends, acquaintances, clients, and business
associates. Over and over again, someone thinks he can handle the storm,
but instead he gets pummeled.
But it doesn’t have to be this way.
The
five tests mentioned above all require the same winning strategy.
Notice that success with any of these storms requires an atypical,
anti-gravitational response.
When
a whitewater rafter is caught in a suck hole on the backside of a rock,
he must act counterintuitively. To survive he must remove his life vest
and allow the rushing foaming water to thrust him to the river bottom.
He must go against his natural inclinations. Only then can he get a firm
footing to shoot through the death loop all the way to the surface. Any
other move will render the swimmer dead.
Likewise,
when you face a storm of the heart, you must do the opposite of what
will almost certainly feel natural. When tempted with greed, we must
give. When tempted with pride, we must share. And so on. Until our frail
ending of life.
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