I called Bobb Biehl a couple of years ago at a moment I found myself “unclear” and “fuzzy.” He shared with me 3 killers of effective leadership that have served me since that conversation. The following is my expansion on his points:
1.Fog
When we don’t see clearly where we are, where we are going, and how we are going to get there, leadership (and life I may add) is hard.
We know that Jesus “often withdrew to lonely places and prayed” (Lk.5:16). It was a great struggle for Him, at times, to fully and clearly submit Himself to the will of the Father in critical moments. How can we expect it will require any less of us?
Let me suggest 2 things if you are in a fog. First, receive your fog as God’s prompting for you to spend extended time alone with Him – perhaps a ½ day or a 1-2 day retreat. Secondly, prayerfully seek out a mentor, a spiritual director, a coach, or a more experienced leader. Before you meet, consider the following: If I could ask just two questions –one personal and one related to my leadership– what might they be?
2.Fatigue
Our bodies are major not minor prophets. When we are physically, spiritually, or emotionally drained, God is speaking. Slow down. Take a nap. Work less. Go away for a few days. It is the most loving thing you can do for the people you serve. Vince Lombardi said it best: “Fatigue makes cowards of us all.”
3.Flirtations
Flirtations refer to ideas and projects we shouldn’t be involved in right now. We go to a conference and hear about exciting initiatives. We read about other ministries expanding into new arenas. We hear about how other leaders are growing their churches. And we become stuck in what Eugene Peterson calls “ecclesiastical pornography.”
We get distracted from what is important before us – following through on our core priorities like making disciples, taking time to invest in our team, thinking through the steps it will take to reach our goals, moving beyond visions to concrete plans, dealing with relational tensions, etc. Leadership is slow and hard – for all of us.
Flirtations repeatedly came Nehemiah’s way to get him off the wall he was building. Yet he resolutely said: “I am carrying on a great project and cannot come down. Why should the work stop while I leave it and go down to you?” (Neh.6:3). May God grant you and I the same clarity, energy and single-mindedness.
PS – Keep sending me your comments and questions on Twitter @petescazzero