Guidance from Overlooked Men and Women of the Bible

Category: Leadership (Page 20 of 22)

Kintsugi

I recently was introduced to Kintsugi – the Japanese art of repairing pottery with gold or silver lacquer and understanding that the piece is more beautiful for having been broken.

Life involves change and loss, scars and pain, chips and dings and sometimes we’re completely broken. But the art of Kintsugi reminds us of resilience and grace and overcoming and healing and putting the pieces back together and the reality that no one needs be perfect.

How cool is that? What a fabulous picture of how the Lord redeems each of us from what we have been to what we will be.

 

If the freedom of speech is taken away then dumb and silent we may be led, like sheep to the slaughter.

Associate with men of good quality if you esteem your own reputation; for it is better to be alone than in bad company.

Perseverance and spirit have done wonders in all ages.

The Leadership of Martin Luther King Jr.

Today is Martin Luther King day and I’m proud to say that MLK has become one of my leadership heroes.

Why?

First, the way he applied his Christian faith and the scriptures to the plight of the African-American in our country. King used what was good and right to move our country a little closer towards goodness and righteousness.

Second, his belief in, and practice of, non-violence. Inspired by Gandhi’s action against British rule in India and the teachings of Jesus, Martin Luther King promoted and practiced non-violence. In reality non-violence was slow, frustrating for his followers and seemed to lack results. However, today we see that it was powerful and mind-changing. How callous must you be to not be moved by the marchers on the Edmund Pettis Bridge in Selma, Alabama, carrying Bibles and singing hymns as they are swept away by vicious state troopers?

These good people were committed to non-violence and to freedom, largely due to the teaching and leadership of Martin Luther King. The changes they marched for did come about, in Alabama and elsewhere.

Contrast Martin Luther King’s philosophy of leading societal change with the current group we see trying to to the same – ISIS. Islamists have embraced jihad and taken violence into their hearts. Terror is their watchword and the killing of innocents their practice. I cannot think of a group more opposite to the philosophy of MLK and more destined to fail.

As you celebrate MLK day, think of the leadership of this man, and think of what you might do in response. How do we help our brother flourish, regardless of skin tone or religious creed? Remember, another teacher taught us a similar lesson many years ago when he encouraged us to do unto others as we would have them do unto us.

Killing Jesus…and Lazarus…

There’s the weird little snippet of a story in John 12:9-11 that I’ve never really thought about or heard discussed or sermonized (is that a word?).  The chief priests in Jerusalem have decided to arrest and kill Jesus (see John 11). Then, Lazarus, who’s already been successfully raised from the dead, shows up and the crowds go double wild. Due to this popularity and the fact that Jesus had raised him from the dead, the chief priests decide to off Lazarus as well. Reminds me of The Godfather.

I wonder if the priests thought through the proper order? You’d need to kill Jesus first, because if you killed Lazarus first, Jesus would just raise him from the dead again. I’m sure they worked through a problem-solved process.

What kind of mental state had these religious leaders gotten themselves into? They were to be shepherds of the people, not natural born killers. Once they decided that the murder of Jesus was an option, it was not a leap to decide to kill the next person, Lazarus. Then the next. Any tactic was justifiable in the pursuit and maintenance of power.

Religion, divorced from a relationship with God, can become as callous and despicable as any other system of government subjugation. Rules and traditions don’t save people, Jesus does. The same Jesus these men later killed. But who, like Lazarus, just wouldn’t stay dead.

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