17 comments so far
Know that the discomfort which accompanies your transparency and honesty is a blessing to all who have the benefit of learning through experiences you share.
As I have said before, your leadership will always result in ultimate success, not because Shane is perfect, but because Shane knows he is not and allows life to be a continuous learning/growing experience.
Your willingness to seek and find the wisdom in every circumstance serves you well.
That last line sounded like one you would get from a fortune cookie at “Madam Chin’s Oriental Buffet”….sorry about that!!!
Oh Shane! You really NEVER cease to amaze me! Thank you for your honesty not just in this post but also for your willingness to recognize when you might be wrong. I am SO thankful for the amazing leadership that God has placed in His church here. And I am thankful that He continues to refine each of you to be EXACTLY the leader He has called you to be!
Shane, I don’t know you, but happened to come across this post of yours. What you have done is truly reflect on a great example of what a servant leader does everyday - that is look in the mirror in any given leadership situation and ask himself - what may I have done to create this situation? In situations where the team member doesn’t perform as expected, the servant leader (the truly talented leader) asks himself (or herself) how they (the leader) contributed to the team member not performing up to standard.
Unfortunately, many people who are in a leadership position always assume they did the right thing, all the time, and never step back and ask what part of the blame they should take when one of the team does not perform as expected.
Keep this up - it is great!
man…this just spoke to me…thx for being transparent and sharing
Great reminder that as leaders, we have to give people an opportunity to “lead up” and not just follow all the time.Thanks.
I was first attracted to this post by an admitted lack of discernment TWICE in one conversation. THAT’s rare!
Your admittance to the power of Access is a sign of humilty and bodes well for your own Access to Christ to rekindle anew.
An overview of the Catholic Church finds the local parish priest in line to talk with many in authority, and few opportunities for the Pope and parish priest to meet one-on-one. The pews empty weekly as the priest suffocates from lack of oxygen access.
I read of a fellow stopping his attendance at Church. The minister eventually came to his home having noticed the nonattendance.. Both knew each other. Both knew what was going to be said. “Where ya been?”
But the pastor was silent. He entered the home and both men sat silently by the fireplace. Eventually, the pastor got up, took the tongs and thrashed the fire around.
He chose a glowing coal and pulled it out of the fire center, and placed it on the outside of the sparking-ember-catching-grate on a concrete corner. He sat down, silent again.
Both men watched as the glowing coal slowly died.
The pastor reversed the process and used the tongues of fire paraphenalia to lift the dead coal onto the fire center again. Immediately, the lifeless coal began to glow and soon turned orange red with heat and light.
The man who long ago began to skip church finally spoke.
“That was the finest sermon you have ever preached pastor. See you Sunday!”
The sermon contained NO words.
But the man had access to his pastor alone.
And the coal had access to the fire center…. to glow anew.
And the fire of the Holy Spirit connected the wisdom to the pastor, and the discernment to the parishoner who was not there at church to see or hear, into a man closer to God.
Access allows the Holy Spirit to take “two or more gathered” and perform miracles……even NOW in our times.
The writing above was good.
The humility better.
It is often the first trait discarded among those who reach the top.
Decline soon follows.
Even though these moments often blind-side us-Wow, don’t they make for great moments of self-realization and personal growth.
Aren’t we lucky when our jobs as leaders lead us to such discoveries about ourselves, and lead us to a clearer vision of our leadership goals?
Thanks for sharing-AHA, moments are so contagiously inspiring!
Excellent post. Well written. I’m glad you connected it with visioning and structure.
Thank you for never condascending to me or anyone from the haven of rest no matter who they were! JESUS really comes through your entire families countenances and that’s an incredible example for others! Thank you for being my friend! I’m praying for your brother and I,m always here to let JESUS.thru me help you and newspring any way I can! Never me always CHRIST! Allen
Fantastic Post! I needed this reminder. I’m going to have our entire management team read this!
[...] grateful people like him choose to mentor people like me from afar. Good stuff from a humble (check out this post form him), but very passionate [...]
[...] on emotional compliance with vision even seems to infect Noble’s mid-level leaders. Note this account from NewSpring’s Creative Arts pastor: I had a meeting scheduled with a person on my team to [...]