Why Leaders Fall

One of the great needs in the market place and in the spheres of ministries is for the leaders of both businesses and organizations to have leaders that live an examined life. An examined life is a life where the heart is probed not only for giftedness and abilities  but, also for the stuff within that is deeper and mostly unexamined in today’s MBA programs and many divinity schools.

As I've said else where "shine and show" are not fruits of the Spirit and they are not what makes leadership healthy.  We sub-comb to "shine and show" when we do not look deeper; when we do not examine the quadrants of the heart of a leader.  Looking deeper requires wisdom. Looking deeper requires sage like probing and listening more to what is not said, than what is said explicitly.An examined life is a life that Socrates told us that is a life truly worth living.  He said, "An unexamined life is not worth living." And his words apply to leadership. An unexamined leader is dangerous.

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The Dangerous Ladder To Success

Long ago a Chinese man began his career making bell-stands for the huge bronze bells that hang in Buddhist temples. This particular man became prized and celebrated for making the best, most elaborate and enduring bell-stands in the entire region. No other person could make the bell-stands which such strength and beauty. His reputation grew vast and his skill was in high demand. One day the celebrated woodcarver was asked, “Please tell us the secret of your success!” He replied, “Long before I start making and carving the bell-stand, I go into the forest to do the work before the work. I look at all of the hundreds of trees to find the ideal tree—already formed by God to become a bell-stand. I look for the bows of the tree to be massive, strong and already shaped. It takes a long time to find the right tree. But without doing the work before the work, I could not do what I have accomplished.”NEVER?The ground at the foot of the ladder of success is littered with the names and faces and stories of leaders who self-destructed on the way up. Unless you’ve been living under a rock somewhere, you know this. You know their names and faces. You’ve seen them interviewed by nightly news anchors, you’ve read the scandalous articles online, and you’ve possibly thought but that could never happen to me.According to the Harvard Business Review, 2 out of 5 new CEOs fail in their first 18 months on the job. It appears that the major reason for the failure has nothing to do with competence, or knowledge, or experience, but rather with hubris and ego. In other words, they thought but that could never happen to me.I’m here to tell you that it can happen to you. And if by some stretch of the imagination you believe that you’re immune to a crash-and-burn because of your faith in God, then you’re living with the exact kind of naivete that can ruin your reputation, your family, your health, and your legacy. Your name can be added to that ever-growing pile at the bottom of the ladder of success. In my work with hundreds of leaders from across the world, I find that far too many have eagerly entered the workplace, marketplace, or mission field with the goal of establishing themselves and striving toward a successful future. But unfortunately they missed or overlooked something crucial along the way. They end up in my office soaked in tears and shame because they were fired for ethical violations, they didn’t know how to work on a team, and some even succumbed to the much darker sides of money, sex and power. At one time they thought but that could never happen to me. But it did.The obvious question here is why? I’ll offer my take. But I warn you, the answer is not pretty. From my latest book Inside Job: Doing The Work Within The Work (Due for release June, 2015 by InterVarsity Press)

The Eight Virtues We Most Need Today

By Stephen W. Smith

This post is my attempt to try to define what "faith" means.  The foundation for this post is the ladder that Peter describes that followers of Jesus should ascend in life to rise above the brokenness of the world; the collapse of our values; the implosion of ethics and the competing religions of our day.  To put this in context, read Peter's words here, then go on to read the blog entry:

"So don’t lose a minute in building on what you’ve been given, complementing your basic faith with good character, spiritual understanding, alert discipline, passionate patience, reverent wonder, warm friendliness, and generous love, each dimension fitting into and developing the others. With these qualities active and growing in your lives, no grass will grow under your feet, no day will pass without its reward as you mature in your experience of our Master Jesus. Without these qualities you can’t see what’s right before you, oblivious that your old sinful life has been wiped off the books."--2 Peter 1:5-7.

My intent here is to redefine each of Peter's 8 virtues so needed today.

The first is faith.

Peter’s first rung on the ladder we are to ascend is faith. Currently there are over 44,000 different Christian denominations all trying to define what “faith” means. There are various creeds and doctrines all seeking to say what is absolutely essential to believe. It’s embarrassing and humbling to realize that there are so many schisms, splinters and sects all fiercely holding to their own version of what faith really means.

Even here, I will perhaps please some and perhaps offend all, but let me try to explain what I believe Peter intended.  First, it may come as a shock to you to read here that Jesus Christ was not a Christian. It’s clear from reading the four eye witness accounts of Jesus life and teachings, that Jesus Christ never intended to begin a new religion. He came to begin a new way of life. 

His first followers were never called Christians either. They were all called, “followers of the way.”[1]  The way Jesus signaled to walk was  a way that was far, far different from the rival religions of his day.  Jesus, as the leader of this new way called for people to follow him in this new way of life and living. He mentored those who he called to follow him. They spent time with him.[2] Through spending time together, they learned how radically different the way of Jesus actually was. It was a way that would require them to embrace a Kingdom view of life—not just follow a list of rules and regulations.

Jesus never called people to embrace Christianity as we know it today. He called people to walk in a brand new way of life that would be radical; consuming and risky. It was not a way to be comfortable but a way to make the comfortable uncomfortable by making radical calls about their possessions, relationships and ethics.

Since Peter was one of the first people that Jesus called into this new way of living, Peter knew and understood quite well that to be a follower of Jesus was to be a person of faith that trusted Jesus, followed Jesus and one that would attempt to live like Jesus.  This way involved the formation of a character, conscience and faith that would be like the founder’s—Jesus.

To be a follower of Jesus did not mean so much a list of beliefs as we have wrongly assumed today. To follow Jesus meant the transformation of one’s character, ethics, way of thinking; values and life’s goals.  This is the faith—Peter is calling us to have.

The “faith” that Peter is saying that  is so very foundational is about a way  of life not a list of doctrines and dogma. Peter really had no doctrines, nor did Paul in the early beginnings of the history of the Christian church. There was no list of beliefs; no doctrinal statements that the thief on the cross who was crucified with Jesus had to sign off on.  It was simply a way—a way of life characterized by being reconciled with God; reconciled with one another in a new way of relating that was based on love and most importantly—that this new way become THE way that the global community should embrace and attempt to walk in this way.

Let me be clear. This history of what has happened on this way and to this way that Jesus first so clearly defined and unpackaged for us has become cloudy, murky and unattractive. How could Peter who first encountered Jesus naked in a fishing boat come to wear the garb of a pope?  How could the early followers of Jesus who huddled first in homes morph into mega-churches today? How could such a simple, yet radical “way of life” become something churches fight over and within the walls of our own churches disagree so much about today?  How could the American church keep quiet about the Holocaust in World War II and how could the world wide church be so silent about the atrocities done to innocent Rwandans in the Clinton presidency? How could denominations squabble over so little when our world seems bent on sliding into the abyss of a hell-like state.  There are many, many questions to our sad and fragile history and most of the questions expose our ineptness in truly getting what Jesus must have intended.  But this does not mean that we throw the baby out with the bath—so to speak.

The way of life—the way Peter was called to walk by Jesus is the same way that you and I are called to follow. Peter never meant the faith in a list of doctrines to be our foundation in life. He never meant a creed to be our cement. The faith Peter describes is the faith he must have recalled he had to exercise when Jesus himself, called him to leave a boat intended to fish for mere fish—only now to be one who would walk in the very way that the founder walked in.  This way for Peter actually meant to die a death like his founder in that Peter met his death being also crucified but reported to have been nailed to a cross up-side down—an act of total humiliation and retribution.  We walk this way, step by step—the exact steps that Peter described earlier in this first epistle when he said, “This is the kind of life you’ve been invited into, the kind of life Christ lived. He suffered everything that came his way so you would know that it could be done, and also know how to do it, step-by-step.”  Pete’s “step-by-step” way was what he was referring to in his rungs on the ladder he now describes in the passage we are working through here.

 

This “faith” is more action than belief; more movement than institution; more passion than liturgy; more personal than corporate; more a way than a membership in a church; more a ethos  than a church.

 

This is the exact “faith” that is needed to re-define success. It is this faith that shapes one’s legacy. It is this faith that keeps one from perpetually chasing the bitch-goddess of success.

 

This DNA kind of faith is what is essential to living above the white-water of competing morals and shouts from the masses to go along with the crowd and do what others are doing. It is this precise kind of faith that gives one the “gravitas” to stand firm; to perhaps stand tall in the minority and to stand firm in the mudslide of 21st century implosion of values. This “faith” is what is absolutely foundational to both our well-being and any attempt we have to have an impact on the plethora of other ways we are faced with to live; to do business; to do church and to truly follow the way of Jesus.

 Copyright 2013. Stephen W. Smith. All Rights Reserved. This material is a part of a forth coming book written by Stephen W. Smith.

I invite your comments, reactions and recommendations~



[1] See Luke’s account of this in his book named, “Acts” in the New Testament: Acts 9:2; 19:9,23;22:4; 24:14,22).

[2] Mark 3:14