Leadership Letters
Leadership Letters

Writings on Christian leadership and leader development by Malcolm Webber

August 2007
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Addressing the Current Leader Development Crisis #3

Malcolm WebberMalcolm Webber

As we have seen, we need a new paradigm of leader development. We cannot keep building leaders the same way while merely trying to do it faster and on a larger scale. More of the same will not do! We need to transform the way leaders are built. We need a new paradigm.

In our last Letter, we looked at the first four of seven key paradigm shifts that address the current crises of leader quantity and quality. The new paradigm is characterized by:

1. A new goal.
2. A new process.
3. A new design.
4. Leaders building leaders.

Now we will consider the final three paradigm shifts.

5. Churches building leaders.

Biblically, the primary unit of leader development is the local church or cluster of churches. It is not the disconnected academic institution.

In the new paradigm, just as leaders personally embrace their God-given responsibility to build leaders, so local churches embrace their God-given responsibility to build their own sons and daughters. This shift also has the potential to address both crises of quality and quantity. Some of the benefits are:

6. Church planting through leader development.

Jesus’ vision was for hundreds of thousands of churches around the world in every people group. He did not, however, personally plant any! Instead, He built leaders and those leaders then turned the world upside down. We have done it the other way around, by multiplying evangelistic efforts and planting many churches and then trying to address the need for leaders.

In the new paradigm, healthy leader development is raised to the same level of priority and focus as church planting. This is the only way we will plant and grow sustainable churches.

7. The centrality of the Person of Jesus Christ in Christian leadership.

For many years, Christian leadership training consisted essentially of courses related to biblical knowledge – Old Testament Survey, New Testament Survey, Systematic Theology, Biblical Ethics, Church History, etc. Of course, this did not prepare the students very well for the practical demands of life and ministry. To meet this need, new and more practical approaches to leader development have grown in popularity, often consisting of business models of leadership or motivational, “success” anecdotes of basketball coaches, football stars and wealthy businessmen.

However, when Jesus described His own leadership, His entire focus was on His inner union with the Father:

The Jews were amazed and asked, “How did this man get such learning without having studied?” Jesus answered, “My teaching is not my own. It comes from him who sent me…” (John 7:15-16; cf. Acts 4:13)

I am telling you what I have seen in the Father’s presence… (I have) told you the truth that I heard from God… (John 8:38-40)

…the Son can do nothing by himself; he can do only what he sees his Father doing, because whatever the Father does the Son also does. (John 5:19)

…it is the Father, living in me, who is doing his work. (John 14:10)

In the new paradigm, union with Christ, the cross, suffering, holiness and dependency on the Holy Spirit are at the center of all our leader development. The Person of Jesus Christ is the Beginning and the End of all Christian leadership and leader development.

Abide in me, and I will abide in you. No branch can bear fruit by itself; it must abide in the vine. Neither can you bear fruit unless you abide in me. I am the vine; you are the branches. If a man abides in me and I in him, he will bear much fruit; apart from me you can do nothing. (John 15:4-5)

Summary
In summary, these are the seven key paradigm shifts to transform the way leaders are built:

  1. A new goal – the healthy Christian leader, not just academic achievement.
  2. A new process – holistic development, transformation and not just information.
  3. Intentional design – a collage of diverse learning experiences, not simply perpetuating traditional courses while teaching (lecturing) as we were taught.
  4. Leaders build leaders – leaders taking personal responsibility for leader development, rather than only fulfilling ministry responsibilities themselves while delegating leader development to others.
  5. Churches build leaders – the primary unit of leader development is the local church or cluster of churches, and not a disconnected academic institution.
  6. Church planting through leader development – the emphasis on building leaders must be raised to the same level of priority and focus if we are to plant and grow sustainable churches.
  7. The centrality of the Person of Jesus Christ in Christian leadership. Union with Christ, the cross, suffering, holiness and dependency on the Holy Spirit (John 15:4-5) must be at the center of all our leader development. The Person of Jesus Christ is the Beginning and the End of all Christian leadership and leader development.

This is how we can build Christian leaders who will, once again, turn the world upside down!

Our next Letter will continue to study the paradigm shift of leader development.

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