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Leadership BooksGrowing Your Church Through Training and Motivation

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Up to the Challenge




The redeeming and rebuilding of human lives is exceedingly more difficult than building widgets or delivering predictable services.
—Bill Hybels

After twenty-four years of leadership, I have come to believe five truths about leadership in the church:

1. I believe the church is the most leadership-intensive enterprise in society.

My friend runs a company with about 3,000 employees. He says he wants to relax after retirement and lead a church: "It doesn't have to be a Willow Creek-sized church. Maybe just 7,000 or 8,000 with some growth potential." I told him that leading a church will ruin his retirement because the church demands a higher and more complex form of leadership than business does.

I've been on both sides. Running a business is challenging, but the leader of a company has a clearly defined playing field and enormous leverage with his or her employees. The business leader delivers a product or service through paid staff who either get it done or get replaced.

Church leadership is far more complex than that. The redeeming and rebuilding of human lives is exceedingly more difficult than building widgets or delivering predictable services. Here's why:

Every life requires a custom mold. You don't stop the line in a factory every time a product comes down it. In church work, we're developing individual, custom-made lives. We stop the line for every life.

I've read books about Napoleon, de Gaulle, Eisenhower, MacArthur, Patton—all the great military leaders. I don't want to minimize their capabilities or the courage it took to charge a hill in time of battle, but I've wondered, What would it have been like for some of those leaders to have had to work it out with their deacons before they charged up the hill? How well would ...



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