Categories
Biblical Studies Leadership

Themes of Leadership in the New Testament

Introduction

The modern search for the latest in leadership intangibles is a search linked to the latest fad or newest modern thinkers’ understanding of how to motivate people to accomplish an organization’s goals. This search enamors the modern and leads to many uninspiring paths fraught with misuse. Leadership based on this amorphous data leads to a lack of clarity and surety. For the Christ-follower, leadership is about so much more than the latest fad; it is rooted in ancient Scripture and provides a solid foundation for growth. To be sure the Holy Scriptures is not a leadership manual per se, but there are clear directives from the Creator God for effective leadership today. The wise modern leader mines the Scriptures to understand and apply the godly themes of leadership found within this diverse ancient collection.

The New Testament, at its heart, is a collection of inspired writings focused on the dawning of a new day in the revelation of God to humankind. It is about Jesus, His followers, and the church He commissioned them to build. The “Great Commission” requires of these Jesus-followers a renewed empowerment of the Holy Spirit for effective leading (Matt. 28:19). In studying the Greek, according to Robert Wayne Stacy, we come to the overarching idea that, “In the New Testament, leadership as guiding is normative. A leader is a “guide,” a “shepherd,” a “helper,” a “coach,” to use a more contemporary metaphor.[1] This nuanced understanding contrasts with the modern, more controlling understanding of leadership. The modern, secular leader seeks to dominate, manipulate, and utilize power plays to move people and produce organizational change. With the foundational understanding of leadership in the New Testament as guidance, the following three major themes emerge: leadership begins with followership, leadership bases from a place of service, and leadership flows best through teamwork.

Leadership is Followership

In the Synoptic Gospels, a clear distinction emerges of Jesus calling and empowering followers. The initial twelve apostles each received a call from their respective places in life to “follow” Jesus and implement His mission. Matthew details in his gospel this call first-hand, “‘And He said to them, “Follow Me, and I will make you fishers of men.” Immediately they left their nets and followed Him (Matt. 4:19-20, NASB).[2] Notice the directional nature of the call; it requires something and then produces results. In other words, God does not call people to occupy places of leadership immediately, but He first asks them to learn to be followers; then, he produces His purpose. Stacy states concerning the twelve, “They are Jesus’ followers, his surrogates, his representatives, his proxies if you will. They are not “leaders” in their own right or by their own power. Indeed, they are followers, not “leaders.”[3] In order for the modern to lead effectively, he must first learn to follow consistently.

Following Jesus requires a call and impartation, as exampled by the calling of the original twelve apostles. The person seeking leadership desires something good, but they must wait for the call in order to move appropriately within the timing and purpose of their Creator. Paul, in his letter to his prodigy Timothy, explains that “It is a trustworthy statement: if any man aspires to the office of overseer, it is a fine work he desires to do” (1 Tim. 3:1). The importance of timing and learning to follow provides the leader the skillset necessary for the understanding of the emotional state of those he leads. If a person never follows, the possibility of pride and arrogance to intrude exists.

Leadership Based in Service

A second critical theme of Biblical leadership coursing through New Testament thought is leadership based in service. Paul in his letter to the Philippian church details a beautiful picture of high Christology and servant leadership,

Make your own attitude that of Christ Jesus, who, existing in the form of God, did not consider equality with God as something to be used for His own advantage. Instead He emptied Himself by assuming the form of a slave, taking on the likeness of men. And when He had come as a man in His external form, He humbled Himself by becoming obedient to the point of death — even to death on a cross. For this reason God highly exalted Him and gave Him the name that is above every name, so that at the name of Jesus every knee will bow — of those who are in heaven and on earth and under the earth — and every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father (Phil. 2:5-11, HCSB).

The importance of this text for servant leadership at first seems obscure, but with careful exegesis, the reader understands the call for Jesus-followers to imitate Christ as leaders. Joseph H. Hellerman writes of the recognized leadership element, “The reason is that scholars are increasingly recognizing that Paul is concerned in the passage not with the nature of Christ’s “equality with God” but, rather, with what Christ chose to do with it the privileges associated with his divinity.”[4]

The leader surmises the same way Christ chose to subject His divinity to His humanity in service at the cross, so also he submits his talents and abilities in service to those he leads. Another intimate portrait of Christ as servant illustrates with the washing of the disciples’ feet in the upper room. If Christ willingly chose the position of a slave concerning those he led, then how much more the modern Biblically inspired leader. Servant leadership is a deliberate act and never coerced; however, this positional directive from our model Christ allows the leader to minister to those under his care correctly.

Teamwork Leadership Creates Flow

The idea of teamwork-oriented leadership also flows through the pages of the New Testament. From the sending out of the disciples by Jesus in pairs to minister throughout Judea to the evidentiary team basis for Paul’s three missionary journeys, the Scripture examples teamwork as the most effective form of leadership. Paul’s letters confirm his relational approach to ministry and detail the status of those relationships and how crucial community happened within them. Hellerman writes, “Paul’s letters confirm the historical accuracy of the relational approach to ministry portrayed in Acts. Here, moreover, we get a sense of the nature of Paul’s relationships with his companions, as well as some idea of the teammates’ roles and responsibilities.”[5] Sacrificial love and mutual respect permeated the Pauline ministry model that he exampled to the churches he planted. Paul did not institute a hierarchical model of leadership but followed a mutually submissive model. As Hellerman concludes, this created an affective bond, “the time Paul spent traveling and ministering together with his coworkers, often in harsh and challenging settings, generated close affective ties among team members.”[6]

The flow created from this model of teamwork spread the gospel across the known first-century Roman world, reaching the very center of power Rome. This flow resulted from the bonds created with the Pauline ministry team because it impassioned and empowered the early church leaders to fulfill their mutually distinct callings. Paul writes to the Ephesians of this diversity of ministry, “And He gave some as apostles, and some as prophets, and some as evangelists, and some as pastors and teachers” (Eph. 4:11). In Christian leadership, diversity elicits strength within the context of the church.

Conclusion

The church today faces unprecedented challenges and opportunities. As leaders move to operate in a post-modern culture that opposes the solidity of truth, instead opting for the fluidity of relativity. It is paramount for the leader following Jesus to implement ancient, proven God-honoring principles in their leadership contexts. The past paradigms of leading from positions of power and authority no longer adequately produce results in the modern climate. Today’s leader leading from a service-oriented, teamwork-based position fully committed to following Christ will see the same impact that infused the early first-century church.

These principles undergirded the expansion of the gospel in the earliest days and continue to work today, regardless of the cultural context. Leadership firmly planted in these timeless themes guard against harm to the body of Christ and faulty established church foundations. The temptation persists for church leaders to find more accessible paths to facilitate quicker and more impressive growth. The leader, however, must resist this challenge to the Biblical model. Jesus warned in the gospel of Matthew, “the way is broad that leads to destruction, and there are many who enter through it” (Matt. 7:13). This text is not only applicable to salvific issues, but also to how a leader appropriates the call placed on his life. If they seek the easy path or trendiest way, the possibility exists to lead them and their followers to a place of destruction. The carnage of destructive leadership litters the path of the Christian landscape because of the easy way. Leaders can find comfort and hope in the never-changing principles found in the Scriptures for their ministries. The church waits for a new wave of leaders committed to the end in the face of the waves of post-modern thought established in truth.

Bibliography

Forrest, Benjamin K., and Chet Roden. Biblical Leadership: Theology for the Everyday Leader. Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel Publications, 2017.


[1] Benjamin K. Forrest and Chet Roden, Biblical Leadership: Theology for the Everyday Leader (Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel Publications, 2017), 305.

[2] Unless otherwise noted, all biblical passages referenced employ the New American Standard Bible.

[3] Forrest and Roden, Biblical Leadership, 320.

[4] Ibid, 414.

[5] Ibid, 425.

[6] Ibid, 426.

Categories
Biblical Studies Leadership

Leadership Themes from the Torah

Introduction

The topic of leadership etches itself in the mind of the modern person because on the bookshelves in every bookstore; they find leadership knowledge to consume. This inundation leaves the reader’s mind searching for the paramount truth of leadership skill and understanding. How can the source of truth be so distinct yet varied? Is there a source that modern Christians can count on to provide a firm foundation to proceed as a leader?

The source for “true north” leadership posits from the ancient Scriptures and provides a concrete layer for the leader in establishing his journey. The Pentateuch in Genesis sets from the beginning that dominion over Creation is the call of humankind. “Then God said, “Let Us make man in Our image, according to Our likeness; and let them rule over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the sky and over the cattle and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth” (Gen. 1:26, NASB).[1] YHWH defines humanity’s purpose establishing a plan to develop the man to fulfill His divine will. Throughout the Torah, God strands together cords of leadership principles resulting in the fulfillment of His dominion story of Creation.

In Biblical Leadership – Theology for the Everyday Leaders, Benjamin Forrest and Chet Roden compiled essays from leading biblical scholars focused on developing a biblical theology of leadership. Though there are various themes and applications found in the compilation, three are critical for the effectiveness of the modern Christian leader – a recognition of and submission to the purpose of YHWH, personal humility and a shepherding-servant approach, and a dedication to training the next generation of leaders.[2]

Recognition and Submission

In the Pentateuch, the writers established the importance of YHWH’s authority and the leader’s acceptance of His call and submission to it for success. The Scriptures relate this implicit calling in Genesis with God’s focus on Abraham and His covenantal relationship with him. The writer declared, “‘For I have chosen him, so that he may command his children and his household after him to keep the way of the Lord by doing righteousness and justice, so that the Lord may bring upon Abraham what He has spoken about him” (Gen. 18:19). Ellis Brotzman, in his essay, Godless vs. Godly: Leadership in the Pentateuch, states, “This passage highlights a number of principles relating to godly leadership. First, and most important, the leader is ultimately chosen by God. While there may be room for a person’s own interest in leading, or for the interests of a group in having a certain person lead, ultimately the choice must be grounded in God’s own will.”[3] The student of Torah understands that the authorization of leadership comes from God by His divine will and choice.

Throughout the Old Testament, the reader finds examples of the importance of God’s divine choice and authority. This authority predicates not on the qualifications of the person chosen but concentrates on the purpose of the Creator God. Gideon is a prime example of divine purpose irrelevant to human quality. Michael J. Smith writes, “In response to Israel’s cries for help, God went about recruiting Gideon to fill the role of deliverer-judge. Exum wrote, “No character in the book receives more divine assurance than Gideon and no one displays more doubt.”[4] YHWH qualifies the modern leader by his willingness to recognize and submit to the providential call answering their doubts and empowering them for divine service.

Personal Humility and Shepherding-Servant

The second predominant theme woven through the Old Testament is the leader’s response to God through personal humility and their engagement with others from a service-oriented posture. Gary Yates states in his essay A Call for Faithful Servants: Leadership in Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel, “A proper view of self in relationship to God in the leader produces humility, submission to the authority of God’s commands, and recognition of the superiority of divine wisdom to human wisdom.”[5] The prophets recognized their place concerning the call of God, producing confident humility in their proclamation to the people of Israel. The result of the leader’s humility is prosperity for the people of God.

In his essay, Tremper Longman III declares that “As a result of Solomon’s humility before God and his people, Israel prospers in every way.”[6] When the modern leader understands humility and projects this God-ordained attitude, the people he leads flourish. Solomon’s humility reflected not only in his relationship to YHWH but also in his relationship with the people he led. When a leader correctly positions himself under God, he shepherds the people in his care humbly and effectively. In Kaiser’s essay on Psalm 23, he writes concerning the shepherd model of service. The image of the shepherd as a guide permeates the text. Kaiser states, “Sheep in the Middle East are not driven from behind the flock, as they might be herded in other parts of the world, but are led by the shepherd walking in front of them, to form a path for the flock to follow. That is why all the sheep are guided so well; they follow single-file in the path set by the feet of the shepherd.”[7] The modern leader, like the ancient shepherd, leads the flock from the front, guiding them through the dangerous life-terrain and journey ahead.

Training the Next Generation

The third thematic thread in the Old Testament Scriptures relates to the idea of legacy. The mandate of leadership perpetuates truth or compromise from generation to generation. It is paramount that a biblical leader proactively trains and teaches followers to assume a godly mantle of authority.   

The narrative of Judges reflects the tragedy of the missed opportunity to transmit a godly legacy. The trajectory of a downward moral slide is evident throughout the text. In his essay, Smith states, “We see Israel’s tendency, which is not too uncommon throughout history, to compromise on the spiritual commitment of those who came before them. However, part of this result may lie in a former generation’s inability to faithfully pass the faith on to their children.”[8] According to Smith, if a leader “…fails to do this, it can be expected that the next generation will fill the void with an allegiance of their own finding.

In contrast, Esther modeled effective leadership resulting in a lasting legacy for her people. Debra Reid writes, “She has worked carefully and tirelessly, courageously and creatively. Her rise to effective leadership is complete and now earns for her not personal honor but a lasting legacy, in the form of a joyful community festival that will outlive her.”[9] The courage of Easter and the faithfulness in answering the call of God not only saved her present people but benefited the generations that followed. The Christian leader that positively promotes the transference of faith impacts not only his present but also those who follow after them.

Conclusion

In conclusion, the modern Christian leader, when leading from a consistent, firm biblical foundation of a God honored call, a humble, shepherding attitude, and a proclivity towards a legacy, finds his effectiveness increased. The importance of the leader’s recognition of the divine call and his submission provides clarity and flow for the ministry to others. It properly orients him to serve those in his care with humility and love. The ordered submission to God’s authority leaves no place for prideful and aggressive methodology.

A shepherding stance toward those he leads protects the people from careless and pejorative attitudes. It allows the people to flourish under godly direction, with the leader serving as a guide careful navigating the specific journey of his calling. A shepherding humility is always apropos, no matter the context, location, or cultural dimensions. As detailed in Psalm 23, the Good Shepherd provides and sustains for those he leads proactively in the “valley of the shadow.” The follower is confident that the leader cares for their well-being from a place of humble service.

The final impact for the modern Christian leader results in a lasting generational legacy. As the leader actively trains, models and teaches those who follow, they prepare the groundwork for the continuance of the faithfulness of God in His people. The reward for the leader is permanency in a lineage of truth through those in his care. It requires modeling of character and commitment to the tenets of Scripture and results in lasting impact.

Bibliography

Forrest, Benjamin K., and Chet Roden. Biblical Leadership: Theology for the Everyday Leader. Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel Publications, 2017.


[1] Unless otherwise noted, all biblical passages referenced employ the New American Standard Bible.

[2] Benjamin K. Forrest and Chet Roden, Biblical Leadership: Theology for the Everyday Leader (Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel Publications, 2017), 42.

[3] Ibid.

[4] Ibid, 102.

[5] Ibid, 187.

[6] Ibid, 172.

[7] Ibid, 158.

[8] Ibid, 96.

[9] Ibid. 282.