4 Reasons to Believe in Young Leaders
“The kingdom benefits when younger leaders are unleashed to serve.”
For
a long time, I was the young leader. I took my first role on a church
staff just before I turned 19. When I moved to Cincinnati to serve as
student pastor, I flew into the airport and was too young to rent a car.
I moved to Miami to serve as executive pastor of Christ Fellowship when
I was 27. All the while, godly leaders believed in me and trusted me.
They invested in me, allowed experiences to teach me and mold me, and
kept challenging and encouraging me. I am eternally grateful.
By God’s grace, I hope to do the same for others. There are many
younger leaders in ministries and organizations that are ready to be
believed in and trusted with significant responsibilities. They are
hungry to be encouraged, developed and challenged. Here are four reasons
to believe in young leaders:
1. The Future
Young leaders are the future, and leaders are responsible for future
leadership. A leader who is not developing young leaders for the future
is not serving the organization well. The leader is either being
shortsighted or selfish—shortsighted in that the future is not being
considered, or selfish in that the leader thinks only about
himself/herself.
2. New Thinking
Not only are young leaders the future, but they also carry with them
great ideas, energy and passion. Young leaders want to contribute in
this season, not just the future. They often possess new thinking. They
believe they can do what others feel is impossible. They have not had
the life beaten out of them.
Years ago, I heard Rick Warren say, and I am paraphrasing, “I have
the same ideas now that I had when I was 25, but no one listened to me
then. So I am asking: What 25-year-old should I be listening to?” There
are younger leaders in every organization who could be leveraged now.
3. Kingdom Impact
Historically, God uses young leaders to encourage His people and
build His kingdom. The kingdom benefits when younger leaders are
unleashed to serve. For example, Josiah was 16 years old when he began
to seek the Lord, which led to a revival among God’s people. Mary was a
teenager when the Lord chose to bring the Messiah into the world through
her womb. George Whitefield and John Wesley met together with a handful
of others as college students in what was called the “Holy Club.”
Jonathan Edwards was 19 when he penned his 70 resolutions.
4. Biblical Example
Paul told Timothy, a young leader he was developing, “Let no one
despise your youth; instead, you should be an example to the believers
in speech, in conduct, in love, in faith, in purity” (1 Timothy 4:12).
Paul believed that Timothy, in the midst of his youth, could set the
example and the pace for others.

Eric Geiger serves as the
Vice President of the Church Resource Division at LifeWay Christian
Resources. Prior to LifeWay, Eric served local churches, most recently
investing eight years as the executive pastor of Christ Fellowship
Miami. Eric received his doctorate in leadership and church ministry
from Southern Seminary. He is also a teaching pastor and a frequent
speaker and consultant on church mission and strategy. Eric authored or
co-authored several books including the best selling church leadership
book, Simple Church.
Eric is married to Kaye, and they have two daughters: Eden and Evie.
During his free time, Eric enjoys dating his wife, playing with his
daughters, and shooting basketball.
More from Eric Geiger or visit Eric at
http://ericgeiger.com/
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