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Kingdom Math

by Bill Hybels, Willow Creek
Posted: Tuesday, June 10, 2008, 14:12 (BST)
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A couple of years ago as I was preparing my talks for The Leadership Summit, I was meditating on why a church leader’s influence is so paramount in the redemptive work that we’re all called to do.

I started to recall all the experiences I’ve had with literally hundreds of churches throughout the world. I recalled the faces of the battle-weary pastors who wondered aloud whether or not it was all worth it, and I sympathised deeply with the numerous challenges that were unique to their particular community or part of the world.

And then I recalled some of the things I learned having been around Washington DC. I became very aware of what our government leaders can and cannot do. They can write some laws and change some broad legislative actions but they can’t change the nature of the human heart.

They cannot take a fundamentally hateful person and turn him or her into a fundamentally loving person. They cannot take someone who is unconcerned about the poor and make them concerned about the poor.

That transforming work is distinctly the work of Christ as a result of the gospel message being proclaimed through local churches. If that’s true, I thought, then there’s a whole lot more riding on this thing we call church leadership than meets the eye.

In a moment of personal clarity, I began to understand the “Kingdom math” in a way I hadn’t before. The new “equation” — if you will — raised the stakes for me and helped fuel my already white-hot passion for helping church leaders in the world’s most important mission.

It goes something like this: If you change a church leader, you change a church. If you change a church, you can change a community. If you change enough churches in that community, you can change a region, a nation, and eventually the world.

Change a Leader, Change a Church

If you’re ever going to change a church, a church leader will have to change from having a fuzzy vision (or no vision) to a clear and hot vision. They’ll have to change from a protecting ground mentality to a taking new ground mentality. They’ll have to change from merely presiding over a church to energising,empowering, and unleashing a church. A huge change has to occur in the heart, mind and skills of a leader in order for the rest of the equation to make sense.

A leader who has experienced that kind of change can then effect change in their church by changing it from a vision-free church to a vision-focused church and from a passive, spectator-orientated environment to an engaged, activistic environment.



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