altars to god or monuments to self?
I ran across this blog entry by Mark Batterson. I respect him as an author, a pastor of a growing church and a man who is leading my generation of leaders. I hope this post challenges you as a leader in training. If you enjoy this post I recommend you check out Mark's book In a Pit with a Lion on a Snowy Day, and visit his blog, Evotional.com.
"Altars to God or Monuments to Self?"
This morning I'm doing a session at the Evolve Conference titled The Secure Leader. I'm going to use Saul as a case study in insecurity. Two verses represent two defining moments in his life.
I Samuel 14:35: "And Saul built an altar to God; the first one he had ever built." So far so good. Saul is building altars to God. But fast-forward one chapter. I Samuel 15:12 says, "Saul went up to Carmel to build a monument to himself." Somewhere between those two verses, Saul stopped building altars to God and started building monuments to himself. There is a fine line between Thy Kingdom Come and My Kingdom Come. At some point, it was no longer about God. It was about Saul.
Here are seven habits of secure leaders:
1) Don't play the comparison game.
No one wins! Comparison either leads to pride or jealousy!
2) Success isn't numbers
Saul got caught up in the numbers game. And David had better stats. Listen, if my children grow up to love God and everything else falls apart I'm successful. But if NCC grows to 50,000 people and I sell 10,000,000 books it means nothing if my family falls apart. Jesus was successful because he poured his life into twelve people!
3) Celebrate your failures.
Insecure people are afraid of failing. Secure people laugh at themselves. They celebrate failure because it accentuates what God can do inspite of us!
4) Don't panic
Saul
panics when his men start scattering so he makes a sacrifice instead of
waiting for Samuel. Insecure people get nervous. They give up. Secure
leaders hang in there no matter what.
5) Don't get defensive
How you handle criticism will make you or break you. You need tough skin and a soft heart. If you're insecure your defense mechanisms will get the best of you. So instead of leading out of imagination you'll lead out of insecurity.
6) Surround yourself with the right people
Who
was Saul's greatest asset? David. But if you are insecure, your
greatest asset will become your greatest threat. And it will
short-circuit your ability to surround yourself with a great team. And
it will limit your influence.
7) Keep building altars to God
God often uses us at our point of insecurity because then He gets all the credit. I pray for the favor of God as much as anything else because I want God to do things for me that I cannot do for myself. And every time we experience God's blessing we need to build an altar. That's why we named our coffeehouse Ebenezers: hitherto the Lord has helped me. The blessings of God either turn into pride or praise.
Are you building altars to God or monuments to yourself?
Lists like this are a very compact way to represent a collection of wisdom, but somehow I find them (lists) a bit bland. What interests me more, is what is the core value that would make a leader come out on the good side of most of these points?
My best guess: Intimacy with, and confidence in: Christ.
Posted by: Charles | February 25, 2008 at 01:41 PM
I agree that with all the lists out there I also want to get the main point. I usually take one of the points and try to work on it. For example imagine if you celebrated your failures. What an incredibly difficult thing to do but will dramatically change you as a leader and make you more secure in Christ. I look at it like the sermon on the mount with a whole list of things for us to do but even if you just worked on one you would be so much better off.
Posted by: Brandon | February 26, 2008 at 06:22 PM
Brandon, focusing on one item seems a more manageable way to benefit from an otherwise daunting list. Thanks for the suggestion.
--Charles.
Posted by: Charles | February 29, 2008 at 10:02 AM
these comments are hilarious... LOL
Posted by: chris | February 29, 2008 at 02:12 PM