Summoned to Lead
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Leonard Sweet
Leonard Sweet is an author of many books, professor (Drew University, George Fox University, Tabor College), creator of preachthestory.com, and a popular speaker throughout North America and the world. His “Napkin Scribbles” podcasts are available on leonardsweet.com
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Summoned to Lead - Leonard Sweet
Sample Resources by Leonard Sweet
11 Genetic Gateways to Spiritual Awakening
AquaChurch
Carpe Mañana
Communication and Change in American Religious History
A Cup of Coffee at the SoulCafe
FaithQuakes
Health and Medicine in the Evangelical Tradition
Jesus Drives Me Crazy!
The Jesus Prescription for a Healthy Life
Quantum Spirituality: A Postmodern Apologetic
SoulSalsa
SoulSalsa audio
SoulTsunami
SoulTsunami audio
Strong in the Broken Places
Learn about these resources at http://www.leonardsweet.com
ZONDERVAN
Summoned to Lead
Copyright © 2004 by Leonard I. Sweet
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of Zondervan.
ePub Edition June 2009 ISBN: 978-0-310-83404-5
Requests for information should be addressed to:
Zondervan, Grand Rapids, Michigan 49530
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Sweet, Leonard I.
Summoned to lead / Leonard Sweet.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN-10: 0-310-23222-8
ISBN-13: 978-0-310-23222-3
1. Leadership—Religious aspects—Christianity. I. Title.
BV4597.53.L43S94 2004
253’—dc22 2004002601
Scripture versions cited in this book are listed on Scripture versions cited in this book, which hereby becomes part of this copyright page.
The website addresses recommended throughout this book are offered as a resource to you. These websites are not intended in any way to be or imply an endorsement on the part of Zondervan, nor do we vouch for their content for the life of this book.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or any other—except for brief quotations in printed reviews, without the prior permission of the publisher.
Interior design by Nancy Wilson
To Caden Walker Sweet and Conor Leonard Sweet twin pirates of the heart
Scripture versions cited in this book:
Scripture quotations marked KJV are taken from the King James Version.
Scripture quotations marked NASB are taken from the New American Standard Bible, © Copyright 1960, 1962, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977 by The Lockman Foundation. Used by permission.
Scripture quotations marked NIV are taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version®. NIV®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 by International Bible Society. Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved.
Scripture quotations marked NKJV are taken from the New King James Version. Copyright © 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Scripture quotations marked NJB are from the New Jerusalem Bible, copyright © 1985 by Darton, Longman & Todd, Ltd. and Doubleday, a division of Random House, Inc. Reprinted by permission.
Scripture quotations marked NLT are taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation, copyright © 1996. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., Wheaton, IL 60189, USA. All rights reserved.
Scripture quotations marked NRSV come from the New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright © 1989, Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Scripture quotations marked REB are taken from the Revised English Bible, copyright © 1989 by Oxford University Press and Cambridge University Press.
The Septuagint.
Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
About the Publisher
Share Your Thoughts
Acknowledgments
I write about things I want to learn more about.
To be a writer does not mean to preach a truth,
novelist Milan Kundera has written. It means to discover a truth.
In the process of discovering
the truths of something I wanted to learn more about (leadership, the Shackleton saga), certain people helped turn my ears into eyes. Mark Wilson (Knoxville, Tennessee), Jason Minnix (Portland, Oregon), and Terry O’Casey (Warrenton, Oregon) read early drafts of the manuscript and pointed out numerous places where I had a fair eye but a tin ear. Mary Kate Morse’s encouragement kept me on course, even when I wanted to abandon ship. Paul Woods and Jim Ruark gave invaluable editorial assistance in keeping the modulations
on track and reminding me that the reader does not want to know everything that the author knows.
My research assistant Betty O’Brien prevented many less head-on collisions with my subject matter than are already here. Many times Betty led me by the ear to hear the music and to face the Music. The care and ingenuity of my executive assistant, Lyn Stuntebeck, enabled me to compose on the hoof while speaking at ports of call around the world. I thank David R. Wilson and Dave Fleming for bunging down a few ideas with me. My friend Jesse Caldwell III set me straight on numerous occasions.
Inevitably, regrettably … Oh, no, is this another butt-sit day?
Elizabeth, Thane, Soren, and Egil keep teaching me what it means to live under the gaze and grace of God.
This book integrates and consolidates research done over the past two decades, most of which shows up here for the first time but some of which appeared earlier in stray asides and some other guises—in an issue of my spirituality newsletter SoulCafe, in segments of chapters in 11 Genetic Gateways to a Spiritual Awakening (Abingdon), chapter 6 of A Cup of Coffee at the SoulCafe (Broadman & Holman), and chapter 5 of AquaChurch (Group Publishing). I want to thank the publishers of these books for their patience with my alien registers, as well as the numerous hearers
who for the past 15 years have put up with my discordant public lectures on Sound Theology
and Ultrasound Leadership
and Sonograms of the Future,
pressing me further with their questions and puzzlements. Unfortunately, I have not had the advantage of learning from Stephen H. Webb’s The Divine Voice: Christian Proclamation and the Theology of Sound (2004), which appeared after this book was put to bed. I can’t wait to learn from it.
Computer engineers used to talk about the blinking twelve problem
—except they weren’t talking about VCRs themselves. My blinking twelve problem
has been lessened somewhat by doctoral students I work with at George Fox University: Rick Bartlett, Tony Blair, Doug Bryan, Jason Clark, Winn Griffin, Rick Hans, George Hemingway, Nick Howard, Todd Hunter, Randy Jumper, Eric Keck, Mike McNichols, Ken Niles, Craig Oldenburg, Kevin Rains, Rob Seewald, Rick Shrout, Dwight Spotts, David Wollenburg. They would have liked this book better if I had done for the other three senses (tongue, finger, nose) what I tried to do here for ear and eye. These synaesthetic leaders have ears that see, noses that hear, eyes that smell, etc. But they helped open all my senses to new stimulus, learning, and relearning.
Leonard Sweet
Valentine’s Day 2004
introduction
UltraSound
The Era of the Ear
Faith is the daring of the soul
to go farther than it can see.
—19th-century theologian William Newton Clarke¹
Leadership is the art of the future. A leader is one in whom the future shines through in support of the present in spite of the past.
But something is wrong in our understanding of leadership. The decades that brought us the greatest burst in leadership literature also brought us corporate scandals with Enron and World.com and Adelphia and Tyco and Global Crossing and Arthur Andersen, and they brought us President Bill It-dependson-what-the-meaning-of-‘is’-is
Clinton. More than seven out of 10 USAmericans say they distrust CEOs of large corporations. Nearly eight of 10 expect top executives to take improper actions
to help themselves at the expense of their companies.
THE VISION THING
What is wrong is the vision thing.
Our understanding of leadership needs to be turned upside down.
The future needs ears even more than it needs eyes.
In the literature on leadership, the eyes have it hands down. Warren G. Bennis’s famous definition of leadership established the course for countless others: the capacity to create a compelling vision and translate it into action and sustain it.
² An adviser to heads of the largest nations and businesses in the world, Bennis is sometimes called the godfather of leadership literature.
In his 27 books Bennis introduced a new orthodoxy that made leadership into a science with its own set of rules and principles: leaders are made, not born. Anything that involves a goal (i.e., vision
) requires a leader, and everyone needs to be trained to be a leader. By the late 1990s, many of the 200,000 MBA graduates turned out every year had taken required leadership
courses and visioning
workshops.
No wonder the business world has made vision
a catchword, perhaps the catchword of the 20th century.
It was this definition of leadership’s intellectual haute couture that inserted itself into a presidential campaign. The phrase the vision thing
stems from candidate George Bush’s 1988 response to a friend who suggested that he spend some time thinking about what he would do as president.
The manager has his eye always on the bottom line; the leader has his eye on the horizon.
—Business professor
Warren Bennis³
Bush blurted out, Oh, the vision thing.
George W. Bush now says that what he learned from the mistakes of his father was, The vision thing matters.
⁴ His MBA-less father was right.
This is an anti-leadership leadership book. It offers a patently and passionately unfashionable stance on one of the defining issues of our day.
THE CALL
To put it bluntly: the whole leadership thing is a demented concept. Leaders are neither born nor made. Leaders are summoned. They are called into existence by circumstances. Those who rise to the occasion are leaders.
Everyone is called
by God for some kind of mission. But sometimes the called
are called out
for leadership. How you manifest your mission will change throughout the course of your life. But the mission remains constant. When how you do your mission and how you make your way into the world coincide, you are living the dream life.
True, some people are born leaders. It just comes with their psychological territory. But these are few and far between.⁵
Ask any kindergarten teacher. You want to know if you’re a leader? Look in back of you. Anybody following?
We’re all players
in life.
Yet sometimes life summons players
to be leaders.
It may happen only once or twice in life. Sometimes life takes shape in such a way that a player is like the missing piece of a puzzle: the exact fit for the situation. Up to that point, the jagged pieces of your life don’t seem to fit into any significant pattern. But then life calls you out and summons you forth. A player in life becomes a leader, and even born leaders
find themselves following the summoned leader. Not accidentally, the primary language of many is hearing the call.
One freezing Thanksgiving evening, dairy worker Guillermo Garcia was herding Holsteins toward the barn in thick coveralls and heavy rubber boots. He looked up and suddenly discovered a shoeless, shivering seven-year-old boy screaming while vomiting on the manure-stained frozen mud: My mom! My mom!
Unfortunately, Garcia didn’t speak English. But he knew someone who knew someone who did, who called 911.
The vomiting, shoeless boy was Titus Adams. Titus had run a quarter-mile in his white socks to seek help. He and his two sisters, Tiffany and Tierra, had been riding in their mother’s pickup truck on a remote road north of Greeley, Colorado. They were in their pajamas, ready to be carried in and put to bed once they got home from Thanksgiving Day at Grandma’s. Titus was talking to his dad on the cell phone when his mother stretched to get the phone at the call’s end. She unbuckled her seat belt, then lost control. The pickup rolled twice and ejected her through the glass of the driver’s window. Tammy AdamsHill lay unconscious and near death in 23-degree weather.
The children were strapped in. Titus unbuckled his belt and checked his sisters. Tiffany’s nose was bleeding and a cut on her head was staining her blond hair. Tierra was unharmed but hysterical.
Titus knew what he had to do. He bundled coats around his sisters. He gave Tierra her pacifier. He told Tiffany to stop crying. Stay right where you are. Don’t cry. I’m going for help.
The truck doors wouldn’t open, so he climbed out the window his mother was thrown from. Titus looked for her in the dark and felt his way around the truck on the ground but couldn’t find her. In the distance he saw lights from a small farmhouse (a tenth of a mile away), but the lights from the dairy barn shone brighter. Titus ran toward the brighter light. It was a quarter-mile away.
Titus was a called-forth leader. He saved his mom from dying that night.
Titus was not trained to be a leader. He was born a player, not a leader. But he was summoned by a situation. He was called out by history. He became a leader by responding to the call.⁶
Will you rise to the occasion? Will you be there when life calls you forth? Will you answer the call of called-forth leadership?
What is the most desirable characteristic for a new CEO? Is it vision, or is it vigilance and good corporate governance? Lou Gerstner uttered a now-famous sentiment back in 1993: The last thing IBM needs now is vision.
⁷
In one sense, the last thing the church needs is more vision.
When Christians sing Be Thou My Vision
we are testifying to the fact that we have all the vision we need in Jesus. Where we need help is in developing a musical ear: ears to recognize the UltraSound vision that is already at work in our world, ears to hear the false notes, and ears to tune ourselves to God’s Perfect Pitch, Jesus the Christ.
The need to go beyond vision is borne out by arguably the two most important leadership books of the past 25 years: Tom Peters and Bob Waterman’s In Search of Excellence (1982) and Jim Collins and Jerry Porras’s Built to Last (1994).⁸ Peters and Collins are archrivals. Their books seem to be at opposite poles. But when the rhetorical flourishes and turf markings are stripped away, both authors emphasize the same thing: What makes a successful corporation is not a great product or a great leader, but a great culture in which people are empowered in creative goodness, innovative beauty, and unyielding truth.
It’s easier to hear this in the dowdy,
calm, long-haul Collins than in the sexy,
hyperactive, make-shift Peters. For Collins, charisma is a liability—something to be overcome, like a speech impediment.
⁹
Collins is known for one primary prejudice: an enduring distrust for the concept of leadership. I’ve never believed in leadership,
he says. In the 1500s, people ascribed all events they didn’t understand to God. Why did the crops fail? God. Why did someone die? God. Now our all-purpose explanation is leadership…. We have basically lots of witchcraft, lots of religion, and very little understanding.
¹⁰
The only thing we can say for sure about great leaders is that no two are alike. Every great leader’s greatness
is different.