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LEADERS WHO LAST Learning to Live and Lead Differently Dave Kraft TimeLine Books, 2004, 123 pp. ISBN 0-9715339-1-1 |
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Kraft is a leader in the Navigators’ Church Discipleship
Ministries. See www.navigators.org/cdm This book applies particularly to
Navigator-style one-to-one discipleship.
Dave adapts the “discipleship wheel” diagram illustration to
leadership. The hub represents the
power of Christ and the spokes represent purpose, priorities, passion, and
pacing. The book outline is logical
and crisp. The leadership race is a marathon, not a hundred-meter
dash. You want to finish well and
influence others. Too many are
dropping out. (13-14) Etathesiophobia – fear of change. (16) [Who knows when you
might be able to use this word!] Definition. “A
Christian leader is a humble, God-dependent, team-playing servant of God who
is called by God to shepherd, develop, equip, and empower some people of God
to accomplish an agreed-upon vision from God.” (17) Key ingredients of leadership:
Part I. Foundations
The leader leads from the inside out and lives in five
areas:
Many leaders have never established habits of personal
intake of God’s Word. This is
vital. Each one must discover his own
pathway to deep intimacy with Christ.
(21-3) Four “R’s” of Bible Reading: Read. Reflect. Respond.
Record. These practices allow
God to whisper to you. (24) “Great men and women of God are great because they enjoy
exceptional intimacy with the Lord.”
(25) “Some people come into our lives and quietly go. Others stay awhile, and leave footprints
on our hearts, and we are never the same.” (31) Kraft’s purpose statement: “To leave footprints in the hearts of God-hungry leaders who
reproduce.” “I mentor, coach, and invest in the next generation of
leaders.” My purpose focuses me like
a laser beam. (31-2) Many leaders are self-satisfied. They think they know enough.
Don’t invest time in them.
(31) What business are you in?
What is your purpose? (33) “Jesus had two purposes: to die for the sins of the world,
and to train twelve disciples to carry on the ministry of evangelism and
discipleship.” (34) “A purpose statement is, in essence, a written-down reason
for being.” “Clarity is power: Once
you are clear about what you were put here to do then ‘jobs’ become only a
means toward accomplishing your mission, not an end in themselves.” (34) Identifying your purpose.
Note:
Read the list. Note common themes and key ideas. Summarize in a statement. (35) [I suggest beginning with what
God wants done in the world and then use some of the above tools to find
where you fit into it. dlm] “It is very important that what I do is a reflection of my
life purpose—that this purpose sings inside me today.” “Passion is contagious.” (38) “Two pastors were discussing their theological positions
when one said to the other, ‘Well, it appears to me that we basically believe
the same things.’ To which the other
responded, ‘Yes, but the difference is that you have it on ice and we have it
on fire.’” (39) “The Lord wants all His leaders to be so in love with Him,
so excited about His purpose for their being here, that a deep heartfelt
passion results.” (40) Steps to passion:
“Decide what is truly important in life and what
isn’t. Then discipline yourself to
focus on what is important.” Give
time and energy to God, people, and spiritual growth. (46) Priorities protect your passion and purpose and keep them
focused so that your energies are not scattered all over the landscape. Say yes to less! (48) Those who are goal-oriented, fast-paced, type A’s must be
careful not to overstep God-given capacity limits. There is a speed limit for life and ministry. The Sabbath is a revolutionary challenge
to the violence of overwork. (54-5) The author’s plan:
Part II. Formation - Calling, Character, Gifts,
Growth
Calling: A clear,
deep, intuitive sense that God has His hand on you for a specific task, an
overwhelming conviction that you can do no other. Others may spot it before you do. (62-67) Four calls: to
salvation, to discipleship, to service, to leadership (64) Leaders carry out four functions: shepherd, develop,
equip, and empower. Leaders must be
gifted and skilled with words. They
must have word gifts. Discover your
gifts through gift inventories, your experience and passions, and feedback
from others. (70, 73) “The greatest crisis in the world today is a crisis of
leadership, and the greatest crisis in leadership is a crisis of character.”
(quoting Howard Hendricks, 75) “Most leaders focus too much on competence and too little
on character.” (76) Your character is what you really are. Your reputation is what people think you
are. (77) Character development is a lifelong pursuit. (80) Some essential character traits: gentle, thankful, humble,
patient, compassionate, forgiving, honest, self-controlled, tactful,
trusting, transparent, vulnerable, affirming, dependable, encouraging. (81) Never lose the spirit of a learner. Ask questions. Read all the time.
Write what you are learning.
Check out opposing ideas.
Develop the skill of being highly receptive to new ideas. Dip your bucket deeply and regularly in
the well of new and fresh thinking.
(85-89) Part III
Fruitfulness - Vision, Influence, Legacy
“Not much happens without a dream. And for something great to happen, there
must be a great dream. Behind every
great achievement is a dreamer of great dreams. Much more than a dreamer is required to bring it to reality;
but the dream must be there first.” (quoting Servant Leadership, Robert K.
Greenleaf, 95) Leaders travel in a specific direction and recruit others
to join them. (95) Beware of no vision, unclear vision, and ineffective
communication of the vision. (100) “Creative and continual communication from the leader
first, and then from others, is the key to keeping the fire burning.” (101) Planning is best done in a team context. (101) “The key is a leadership team that lives the vision,
breathes it, models it, tells its story every chance it gets, sleeps it, eats
it, and otherwise calls people together around it.” (101) “Often a visionary leader with a burden
and dream is the spark that starts the fire.” (102) “Be careful with whom you spend the bulk of your
time. A leader needs to influence the
many by investing in a few and letting those few influence the rest.” “Followers don’t do what leaders say as
much as they do what leaders do – how they live their lives. Modeling has much to do with authenticity,
genuineness, fruit of the spirit—Christ-likeness.” (104-5) “You can impress from a distance, but you impact
up close.” (quoting Howard Hendricks, 105) “A leader is a person who is on a journey and has the
ability to attract others to join him on that journey.” (105) “A leader’s greatest assets are the people he influences.”
(105) “Seven Habits of Highly Ineffective Leaders:
“If you need people, you can’t lead people. There is an inability or lack of desire to
make the tough calls, speak the truth, or do the hard things. Motivated by a fear of disappointing
people, this inability will seriously hamper and work against your ability to
lead.” (108) Invest time in resourceful people and trainable
people. (109) Every leader needs someone to hold them accountable. (109) Be intentional, prayerful, careful, and strategic with
whom you spend time, and how much time.”
“Future leaders should get your prime time.” (111-12) “To grow by addition you recruit more followers. To grow by multiplication you add more
leaders.” “Invest in future
leaders.” “Leaders make leaders.”
(113) Pray for God-hungry potential leaders. Select a few. Look for teachable, available, and growing disciples who might
be already leading. Assemble subject
material in the categories of character (being), caring (relating), and
competence (doing). (115) Direct the beginner.
Coach the struggling learner.
Encourage the cautious contributor, and entrust the independent
learner. To obtain copies of the book contact the author at
davekraft@comcast.net |
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