By Albert Mohler
AlbertMohler.com
http://www.albertmohler.com/2013/04/08/leadership-as-stewardship-part-one/
Christians are rightly and necessarily concerned about leadership,
but many Christians seem to aim no higher than secular standards and
visions of leadership. We can learn a great deal from the secular world
and its studies of leadership and its practices, but the last thing the
church needs is warmed over business theories decorated with Christian
language.
Christian leaders are called to convictional leadership, and that
means leadership that is defined by beliefs that are transformed into
corporate action. The central role of belief is what must define
any truly Christian understanding of leadership. This means that
leadership is always a theological enterprise, in the sense that our
most important beliefs and convictions are about God. Our most
fundamental beliefs about God determine everything else of importance
about us. If our beliefs about God are not true, everything we know and
everything we are will be warped and contorted by that false knowledge –
and this fact points to a huge problem.
The culture around us has its own concept of God, and it has little
to do with the God of the Bible. Out in the fog of modern culture, God
has been transformed into a concept, a therapist, a benign and indulgent
patriarch, and a user-friendly deity. As theologian David F. Wells
states so powerfully, “We have turned to a God that we can use rather
than a God we must obey; we have turned to a God who will fulfill our
needs rather than to a God before whom we must surrender our rights to
ourselves. He is a God for us, for our satisfaction, and we have come to
assume that it must be so in the church as well. And so we transform
the God of mercy into a God who is at our mercy. We imagine that he is
benign, that he will acquiesce as we toy with his reality and co-opt him
in the promotion of our ventures and careers.”
In the aftermath of this crisis in the knowledge of God, many
essential truths are eclipsed or lost entirely, and one of those truths
is the principle of stewardship.
The Sovereignty of God and the Stewardship of Leaders
Out in the secular world, the horizon of leadership is often no more
distant than the next quarterly report or board meeting. For the
Christian leader, the horizon and frame of reference for leadership is
infinitely greater. We know that our leadership is set within the
context of eternity. What we do matters now, of course, but what we do
matters for eternity, precisely because we serve an eternal God and we
lead those human beings for whom he has an eternal purpose.
But the most important reality that frames our understanding of
leadership is nothing less than the sovereignty of God. Human beings may
claim to be sovereign, but no earthly leader is anything close to being
truly sovereign. In Daniel chapter 4, we learn of Nebuchadnezzar, King
of Babylon, one of the most powerful monarchs in human history. God
judges Nebuchadnezzar for his arrogance and pride, and he takes
Nebuchadnezzar’s kingly sovereignty away from him. Later, after his
humbling lesson, God restored Nebuchadnezzar to his greatness. Now, if
your sovereignty can be taken away from you, you are not sovereign.
Nebuchadnezzer spoke of the lesson he had learned about who really was
sovereign, and he testified of God’s true sovereignty, stating that “his
dominion is an everlasting dominion, and his kingdom endures from
generation to generation.” [Daniel 4:34]
Like Nebuchadnezzar, today’s Christian leaders know that God is
sovereign, and we are not. But, what does it really mean to affirm God’s
sovereignty as Christian leaders?
It means that God rules over all space and time and history. It means
that God created the world for his glory and directs the cosmos to his
purpose. It means that no one can truly thwart his plans or frustrate
his determination. It means that we are secure in the knowledge that
God’s sovereign purpose to redeem a people through the atonement
accomplished by his Son will be fully realized. And it also means that
human leaders, no matter their title, rank, or job description, are not
really in charge.
The bottom line is this – we are merely stewards, not lords, of all
that is put into our trust. The sovereignty of God puts us in our place,
and that place is in God’s service.
The Steward: The Real Meaning of Servant Leadership
The biblical concept of a steward is amazingly simple and easy to
understand. The steward is one who manages and leads what is not his
own, and he leads knowing that he will give an account to the Lord as
the owner and ruler of all.
Stewards are entrusted with responsibility. Indeed, stewards in the
Bible are shown to have both great authority and great responsibility.
Kings had stewards who administered their kingdoms – just think of
Joseph as Pharaoh’s steward in Egypt. Rich citizens hired stewards to
serve as what amounted to Chief Executive Officers of their enterprises –
just think of the parable Jesus told about the wicked steward in Luke
16:1-8.
Paul describes ministers as “stewards of the mysteries of God” [1
Corinthians 4:1] and Peter spoke of all Christians as “good stewards of
God’s varied grace.” [1 Peter 4:10] Clearly, this is a concept that is
central to both Christian discipleship and Christian leadership.
Christian leaders are invested with a stewardship of influence,
authority, and trust we are called to fulfill. In one sense, this
underlines just how much God entrusts to his human creatures, fallible
and frail as we are. We are called to exercise dominion over creation,
but not as ones who own what we are called to lead. Our assignment is to
serve on behalf of another.
Just think of the leadership failures and crises that regularly
populate the headlines. Many, if not most of those failures originated
in the leader’s arrogance or overreaching. Stewards cannot afford to be
arrogant, and they must quickly learn the danger of overreaching. At the
same time, stewards are charged to act, and not to stand by as passive
observers. Leaders are to lead, but to lead knowing that we are leading
on another’s behalf. Leaders – no matter their title or magnitude – are
servants, plain and simple.