Showing posts with label educator. Show all posts
Showing posts with label educator. Show all posts

Monday, March 6, 2023

Who is the Christian leader? (PT. 1)

 Greetings,

Agreeably the Christian Leader is an educator responsible for teaching and leading, which is the objective of spiritual leadership to move people toward God's agenda (Temple, 2018). Leaders are designated as "servants of the Lord" (p. 300) and have the responsibility to follow a "divine agenda" (p. 300). The apostle Paul's example marks them as a noticeably specified mission (1 Corinthians 1:17), regular evaluation of the fundamental values and message (1 Corinthians 11:23-26), and the ability to communicate the message to a diverse audience (1 Corinthians 9:19-23). 


Essentially, it solidifies the driving force in how leaders instruct and teach others in the body of Christ (Howell, 2003, pp. 300-301). 


                               Some individuals may ask, what is Christian leadership? 


Malphurs (2003) conveys Christian leaders as reliable and steady servants informing and instructing people in diverse religious settings as directed by God. The process is where leaders experience growth with their followers (Malphurs, 2003, p. 8). He asks the question, "what makes a Christian leader" (p. 8), echoing the answer comes back that leaders grow when they purposely follow after God (Malphurs, 2003). 


The topic is helpful because God, in 1 Timothy 3, laid the groundwork through leadership's foundation. The author uses this foundation to inform the reader that leaders instruct others but are also required to model Christlikeness. In 1 Corinthians 11:1, Paul writes to the Christian church at Corinth, "Follow my example, as I follow the example of Christ" (Malphurs, 2003, p. 10). God's original plan for Christian leadership is further impetus for the Christian educator, reflected in Psalms 51:10, the standard for behaving according to God's instructions, "Create in me a clean heart, O God; and renew a loyal spirit within me" Psalms 51:10 (New Living Translation). If Christian educators want to make a change in the way they represent God and those they are leading, remember they are "God's rescuers" and "God's tutors" given the responsibility to teach and bring back people to God's principles (Temple, 2018). 


The Christian Leader is a servant leader commissioned to lead from the examples of Jesus. Necessity mandates a biblical construct for effective decision-making, which provides a theological foundation for developing the Leader's integrity, and it is God's original plan for moral truth. The essential nature of the Christian Leader's spiritual practice (inward) and (outward) spiritual practice is essential to the Leader's ability to express God's identity in decision-making (Dunham, 2019). 

Advancing the thought expands the idea that one's identity as a Christian leader should inform and influence the Bible's moral truth rather than the moral truth of other perspectives. Without a biblical reference, Christian leaders are subject to unnecessary pitfalls and judgments that affect their followers (Dunham, 2019).


Three essential elements of being a leader of integrity are character, integrity, and reality, strengthening the Leader's personal and spiritual growth (Cloud, 2009).


Christian leaders are not exempt from experiencing ethical situations. While ethical decision-making constructs through other perspectives other than the Bible, four ethical paradigms, in particular, are addressed and noted as the ethics of justice, critique, care, and the profession (Shapiro & Stefkovich, 2016, p. 23). A biblical perspective stresses that service is the core of the Old and New Testaments and asks how leaders serve those they lead. (Temple, 2018). 


The Barna Research Group (2009) intensively interviewed thirty top leaders from various leadership sectors. Discovered that great leaders practice the art of power and use it to foster communication and respect for those they lead. Furthermore, revealing that power is about the correct use of authority and, when used according to the biblical standard, can provide consciousness of moral direction, providing people with a moral framework for their choices and activities (Barna Group, 2009).


The same standard for the Leader's purpose today is given to early church leaders. Timothy in (2 Timothy 2:15; 3:14-17) is instructed by the apostle Paul to study the word of God, which is the undergirding to instruct, rebuke, correct, and train in righteousness, leading to a leader's ability to properly lead the church (Howell, 2003, p. 2). Ezekiel provides the theology of leadership from older traditions; human leaders are "expected and encouraged" to lead from a God-centered perspective (Laniak, 2006, pp. 160-161). 


Supportive of a spiritual application, the following discussion notes the importance of "six musts"(discussed in part 2) for the Christian Leader, which fosters the Christian Leader's integrity and character when grappling with ethical dilemmas (Temple, 2018). 


Servant Leader,

Minister Sylvia Joyner



References

Barna Group. (2009). Thirty respected leaders weigh in on what it takes to be a master leader.

https://www.barna.com/research/ 

Dunnam, M. (2019). Christian leadership. 

https://www.ministrymatters.com/all/entry/9423/christian-leadership

Howell, D. N. (2003). Servants of the servant: a biblical theology of leadership. Wipf & Stock Publishers. 

Laniak, T. (2006). Shepherds after my own heart: pastoral traditions and leadership in the Bible. 

(D. A. Carson) (Ed.), Intervarsity Press. 

Malphurs, A. (2003). Being leaders: the nature of authentic Christian leadership. Baker Books.

Shapiro, J.P., & Stefkovich, J. A. (2016). Ethical leadership and decision making in education. New York, NY: Routledge.

Temple, T. (2018). Presentation: Biblical models of servant leadership

[Video]. 

https://learn.liberty.edu/webapps/blackboard/content/listContent

Temple, T. (2018). Presentation: How is ethical reasoning different for the Christian Leader?  

[Video]. 

https://learn.liberty.edu/webapps/blackboard/content/listContent

Friday, July 8, 2022

Regret is a Monster To Our Faith

Greetings,

I want to share a recent decision I made concerning continuing or not continuing in the EDd Christian Leadership program in Christian Ministry in an email to my academic supervisor at Liberty University: 

Greetings, Professor Momeny,

Life experiences are about making decisions, big and small. Proverbs 3:5-6 is a reminder to Trust in the LORD with all thine heart; and lean not unto thine own understanding. In all thy ways acknowledge him, and he shall direct thy paths. This scripture and others guided me as I made this decision. So, with a clear conscience, I have decided not to continue with this program and take the executive certificate of completion option. I have prayed about this decision and talked it over extensively with my daughter, and she made some valid and solid points that I had already shared with God while in prayer all week. I know this is God's will and that God will use this decision for my good and His glory. As I reflected on yesterday, success is not about reaching an expected end but rather what I have learned and how God will use those lessons to make me a more excellent Christian educator. I am really at peace on this decision. Thank you for taking the extra time with me on this journey. I appreciate your wisdom in the academic and spiritual advice you have shared with me. After completing this email will be working on editing the prospectus to turn in on time. 


Sincerely,

Sylvia Joyner


His response: 


Sylvia,
You have done some incredible work and I am proud of you. You pushed into the unknown yesterday and in such brave fashion. I am also grateful that you focused effort and consideration on prayer before making a final decision. I believe that completion of a post-graduate level executive certificate is just incredible and will enhance both your resume and the areas in which you seek to apply all of this collected wisdom. I want to extend my heartfelt congratulations to you regarding the completion of this work. Should you ever want to publish a paper for the Christian Education Journal, or some other venue for publication, just look me up and we can write together.

Sincerely,

 

Leonard S. Momeny, EdD   

Adjunct Instructor   

John W. Rawlings School of Divinity  


I'm sharing this because life is about decision-making...and as Christian men and women of faith requires making those decisions without regret. My decision also included an option to choose the Executive Certificate of Completion in Christian Leadership as well, which shows the work that was done at the doctoral level has merit. 


I thank God for the opportunity and wisdom collected along the way. I pray that it strengthens your conviction to look forward rather than look backward.

 A lesson I have learned in decision-making is that peace and contentment abound within my entire being. Never should our expression be of looking back and saying, wouldacoulda, or even shoulda did this or that. No, every step I made was ordained by God to bring me to this space in my life. 

This proverbial scripture in Luke 9: 62 summarizes how you should conduct your everyday affairs, signifying that when one follows after Christ and His kingdom, that person should no longer operate from a worldly standard but from a Godly standard. To continue in that temporal vein makes an individual susceptible to always looking back with regret. Someone said, looking back will get you nowhere fast.

The scriptures below speak to the supremacy of living a life of faith and maturity in God. God has not purposed us to be regret makers, but men and women of positive conviction undergirded by the Word of God.


  • 2 Timothy 4:7. 7 I have fought the good fight, I …
  • Acts 3:19. 19 Repent, then, and turn to God, so that …
  • Acts 17:30. 30 In the past God overlooked such …
  • Acts 20:24. 24 However, I consider my life worth …

So, the next time you have a decision (in any area), remember that your decision reflects your ability to live facing forward rather than looking back. 

Remember Lot's wife!!!!!


Richly Blessed,

Minister Sylvia Joyner