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LinLead 09-06-82 |
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Leading
Cross-Culturally Covenant
Relationships for Effective Christian Leadership Sherwood
G. Lingenfelter Baker
Academic, 2009, 175 pp., ISBN 978-0-8010-3605-7 |
Sherwood Lingenfelter is provost and senior vice
president at Fuller Theological Seminary.
He is the author of several books including the widely used Ministering Cross-Culturally. The book speaks to both Western and
non-Western leaders in multi-cultural situations. It is divided into four parts: Inspiring
People, Building Trust, Pathways to Empower, and Leading
Cross-Culturally. Each chapter in this
brief volume begins with a case study to illustrate the complexities and
difficulties that leadership must face.
Lingenfelter hopes to help leaders understand their own culture of
leadership, become effective learners, deal with power and control, and apply
Christ-centered principles that transcend our culture and our
sinfulness. 1. What Is Leading
Cross-Culturally? People are locked into a culture and tradition of
leadership from their life history and social context. Even our most current leadership principles
are culturally bound and become obstacles when applied cross-culturally. "The first characteristic of leading is
building trust within a relational community." (16)
Trust is a fundamental characteristic of leadership. "The complexity of leading
cross-culturally lies in the challenge of building a community of trust among
people who come from two or more cultural traditions that provoke a clash of
worldviews." (20) Definition.
"Leading cross-culturally…is inspiring people who come from two
or more cultural traditions to participate with you…in building a community
of trust and then to follow you and be empowered by you to achieve a
compelling vision of faith." (21)
2. Kingdom Vision and Work The leader must ask whether the vision is his or
God's. "To have effective,
compelling vision for ministry, the kind of vision that will motivate people
to follow, the Christian leader must have a deep and intimate walk with
Christ and listen to and be filled with the Holy Spirit. But even more importantly, this vision must
be tested in the community of the body of Christ, refined by the
participation of the body in shaping it, and then mobilized by the body in
prayer and action." (32) "Kingdom work combines both good news and a
healing touch." (36) "…the only vision worth following is God's
vision, and God reveals that vision to many, not just one." (42) 3. Kingdom Values and Rewards In one case study the African partners saw
partnership as relationships of commitment to God and one another for the
work of ministry, somewhat like marriage.
The Westerners saw partnership as relationships for completing the
task, unlike marriage. Both understood
partnership according to their cultural bias and worldview. Africans valued reciprocity and social
relationships whereas Westerners focused on performance and getting things
done with quality and productivity.
The Africans saw the Westerners as harsh, unbending and uncaring whereas
the Westerners saw the Africans as undisciplined, careless about time, and
having low productivity goals. The values Jesus proclaims in the story of the
landowner hiring men to work in his vineyard contradict most cultural values
about how we work. 4. The Necessity of Learning Culture is not neutral. Culture is God's gift to humanity but
rebellion against God has degraded it.
We are not to conform to this world but be transformed (Rom 12:2). "One of the distortions that we as human
beings bring to social relationships is that of making our familiar structure
the only structure that God can use to accomplish his purpose." (64) "Effective cross-cultural leadership
cannot happen if we are unwilling to learn about and accept the social-game
assumptions of our partners. We cannot
negotiate effective working relationships when we have disagreements about
legitimate forms of behavior and action and do not listen carefully to one
another with an attitude of respect and acceptance. Further, when we allow such disagreements
to reach a point where we judge and condemn one another's spirituality, we
destroy any possibility of working effectively together. The commands of Scripture make it clear
that the first and most important criterion in our relationships is that we
love one another." (65-6) 5. Covenant Community, the
Highest Priority The strawberry marketing case study described a
situation where an expatriate saw an opportunity for local farmers with an
excess of strawberries to market them in the city at a profit, thus improving
their standard of living. The
expatriate did not meddle in the local "default" values of the
culture, some of which undermined the trust essential for a successful
operation. Their value on harmony in
clan relationships and their worldview that promoted "getting my
share," created a lack of trust and inability to confront those who were
cheating. The Westerner focused on the
task and not spiritual or character development. He assumed a separation of professional work
and spiritual life. The alternative to one's personal default culture
with its values, expectations, and roles, is the new life in Christ with its
alternative lifestyle. The hidden flaw
in this project was a vision of a profit for local farmers, a vision for
profit, instead of a vision to help local farmers realize their potential in
Christ. Unless the community changed
in significant ways, the social needs would not be met and the development
project not sustained. "The
relationships and rewards must focus on achieving the spiritual outcomes of
truth and trust…." (73) The covenant community is a three-way agreement
of relationship between people and people, and between people and God. The foundation for every multicultural team
must be an understanding that they are a chosen people with a new identity,
that they are on mission for God, and that they have received mercy. We must obey Christ's commands to not judge, to
be merciful, and to forgive. Judgment
and condemnation destroy relationships and undermine every kind of
ministry. Task-focused ministries are
misplaced at their core. "Instead
of giving first priority to attaining vision, meeting goals, and
productivity, they must rather give highest priority to the formation of a
community of trust and then to doing the hard 'bodywork' of creating both
community and trust. Leaders must help
the group center on their new identity in Christ and lead them in a process
of commitment to Christ and to one another to be the people of God on mission
together." (80) 6. Creating Covenant Community 7. Trustworthy Leadership Leadership is not achieved through structures or
social processes but by how one lives within a structure, respecting people,
accepting their differences, and engaging them in ways that inspire trust and
transform yet sustain relationships and structure. (citing Max Depree) This is particularly true on multi-cultural
teams. "People come together with
different national identities, cultural histories, and values about work and
leadership. Unless they dialogue
together about these differences and covenant to give their identities in
Christ priority in their relationships, it will be impossible for them to
work together." (99) Leading
multicultural teams requires higher commitment to "be the church"
to fulfill God's mission. "The critical factors for leading
cross-culturally are Christ-centered learning and trustworthy
covenant-centered leadership."
(101) Cross-cultural ministry
requires a commitment to entering into a culture as a learner. 8. Power-Giving Leadership "Control is the basis of power. People who seek to control their
circumstances, their jobs, their relationships with others, and their
effectiveness in their work are all seeking power." Power is the "ability to produce
intended effects in the world." (197, citing Marguerite Shuster) A person's existence becomes linked to the kinds
of things that one produces - work, relationships, wealth, etc. "A person who does not find his or her
life leading to at least one significant end feels impotent and even
hopeless." (108) "'Power
transactions' are those reciprocal exchanges between persons of unequal power
that result in each obtaining some measure of self-interest." (108) "A power
exchange occurs when someone who controls something of importance to
another uses that control to obtain compliance or conformity of the other to
his or her will." (109) "Perversion of the structures of
relationship most often comes from our obsession to achieve a particular
good, such as a biblically sound church." (110) Such a distortion leads us into destructive
patterns of behavior and relationship.
Power cannot be the source of our meaning and
significance. Jesus must become the
center of who we are and replace our quest for power. The Christian leader works to build
relationships that influence others to follow Christ. People are more important than authority
and control. "Instead
of powering outcomes, the relational leader builds trust and influences
followers through integrity of character and depth of relationship."
(111) "When we obey his command
to love first, relationship takes priority over control, and contextual
leadership becomes possible." (112)
9. Empowering and Mentoring "The mentor must take the risk of letting go
and trusting that God will accomplish the purpose." Many missionaries and mission agencies have
great difficulty in releasing control.
The risk is great. It is a
significant act of faith and trust. 10. Responsible-To Leadership "When vision is lost, teams and projects
become dysfunctional management nightmares…." (138) Our primary role should be to encourage, not to
dominate. "The key lies in
building relationships that lead to trust, influence, and encouragement for
the work and purpose of God." (140)
11. Exercising Power, Asking
for Correction "A leader must use power in such a way that
the team is motivated to higher levels of achievement." "One of the most important functions
of a leader is to keep the team or organization focused on its mission."
(145, citing Richard Wood) One of the most important powers of a leader is
to require dialog. This puts the
outcome at risk but it frees the leader to be a participant in seeking a
solution. "The exercise of power for the common good
of the covenant community is a responsibility of those assigned leadership
roles." (146) "One of the most common flaws of leaders is
their failure to ask for correction, and when they receive it, to accept it
and learn from it." (147)
"Effective leaders encourage and empower followers to evaluate
effectively their performance. This
must be built into our understanding of covenant community and social
game." (147) 12. The Challenge of
Cross-Cultural Leadership What if I have unsatisfactory people on my team? The author says God loves weak people and
intends leaders to work with the people He gives them. The disciples were a motley group of
characters with a variety of flaws. People are emotional beings first and rational
second. We must practice spiritual
disciplines and community fellowship to enable us to mediate our emotional
responses in Christ. 13. The Hope of Cross-Cultural
Leadership Values are always eroding. What are you doing to renew your sense of
mission, your vision and your values?
"One of the first things lost in multicultural teamwork is a
focus on mission and vision."
"Every leader…must give repeated attention to the mission, the
vision, and the values that are essential to kingdom work." (164)
"The essence of effective leading for
multicultural teams may be summed up in the phrase 'body work,' or 'being
disciples to make disciples.' We
cannot expect to be effective in the ministry of the kingdom of God if we are
not following Christ. We must begin by
being disciples if we hope to be able to make disciples and make a difference
in our world." (166) |
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