Author Archive

Do you see yourself as a steward of leadership resources? (207-5)

Written by Barry Werner on January 30th, 2012. Posted in Accountability, Commitment, Leader Qualifications, Leadership Principles, Luke, New Testament, Personal Development, Power and Influence, Skills, Stewardship.

Leaders are simply stewards of the resources God has given them. Read Luke 19:11-26.

During His public ministry Jesus often told stories that illustrated a principles for life. In one of these stories Jesus told about a landowner who, just prior to leaving on an extended trip, gave three men some funds to spend, save, or invest. Each had the freedom to use the money as they saw fit but each would be asked for an account of how they handled the money when the landowner returned. The landowner’s expectation was that these men would be stewards of the money he had given them and, in Jesus’ story, those who had been faithful stewards of the funds were rewarded for their efforts and those who did not steward the funds would be held accountable.

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Do you have situations in your life that are keeping you from total commitment to your area of leadership? (207-4)

Written by Barry Werner on January 23rd, 2012. Posted in Commitment, Decision Making, Leadership Principles, Luke, New Testament, Skills.

The effective leader must pass the “Commitment Test.” Read Luke 18:18-23.

During the three years of Jesus’ public ministry, as His popularity grew, many people desired to be close to Him, join His team, seek affirmation for their life decisions, and get His answers to spiritual questions. It is refreshing that Jesus always went straight to the central issues in their life that would keep them from finding the answers they sought and achieving their potential.

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Do you give second chances when behavior changes? (207-3)

Written by Barry Werner on January 16th, 2012. Posted in Attitude, Conflict Management, Forgiveness, Interpersonal Relationships, Leadership Principles, Luke, New Testament, Personal Development, Perspective, Relationships, Skills, Team Building.

Effective leaders handle conflicts personally, privately and with the spirit of forgiveness. Read Luke 17:3-10.

Jesus, knowing His disciples would soon have major leadership roles, continually taught principles that would make them more effective leaders. When He told them they should forgive a person who had wronged them, even if they wronged them seven times, as long as that person returned and ask for forgiveness, His disciples’ first thought was this may be too much and they would need more faith to accomplish the task. Jesus simply told His team their faith was sufficient and conflict resolution and forgiveness was part of a leader’s everyday job. Jesus was clear that a leader should not expect praise for doing what was an expected part of their leadership role.

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Do you learn even from negative examples? (207-2)

Written by Barry Werner on January 9th, 2012. Posted in Character, Core Truths, Example, Initiative, Leader Qualifications, Leadership Principles, Loyalty, Luke, New Testament, Personal Development, Stewardship.

Even a negative example can teach leaders positive lessons. Read Luke 16:1-16.

As Jesus spoke with the crowd described in Luke 15:1-2, He told a perplexing story in chapter 16:1-13 that appeared at first glance to encourage dishonesty. Jesus’ real message is that Christian leaders should mimic the steward’s shrewdness, not his dishonesty. This story of the unrighteous manager teaches leaders lessons about shrewdness in business and a few subtle truths about leadership:

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Do you have a strategy that communicates critical goals and priorities? (207-1)

Written by Barry Werner on January 2nd, 2012. Posted in Commitment, Communicating Vision, Communication Skills, Goals, Leadership Principles, Luke, New Testament, Personal Development, Self-Discipline, Skills, Vision.

The effective leader finds a number of ways to constantly restate the goals and priorities of their mission. Read Luke 15:1-32.

Jesus was clear about His mission. According to Luke 19:10 He came “…to seek and to save what was lost”; those that were separated from God. Jesus found many ways to communicate that goal to the crowds that followed Him, His team, and the religious and political leaders. In Luke 15 Jesus reinforced His mission through three different stories about different situations; the sheep were lost naturally, the coin got lost accidentally, and the son got lost willfully. No matter what created the lost condition, Jesus came to find and help those who were separated from God.

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