“Self-leadership. Nobody—I
mean nobody—can do this work for us. Every leader has to do this work alone,
and it isn’t easy. In fact, because it’s such tough work most leaders avoid it.
We would rather try to inspire or control the behaviour of others than face the
rigorous work of self-reflection and inner growth.”
— BILL HYBELS
Where is the flow of our
lives headed? Toward growth or retreating into stagnation? We are doing one or
the other through every infinitesimal stage of our lives.
Nothing of what we do in
our existence is truly passive.
***
Having been asked which
people gave him the most trouble, D.L. Moody, the 19th Century evangelist and
minister, said, “I’ve had more trouble
with D.L. Moody than any person alive.” That speaks volumes for the
problems we all have with our very own selves when we are being honest. Not
that we dislike ourselves, but deep-rooted problems emerge from the ‘ours truly’
more often than from any other single person we know. And despite how much we
would like to change ourselves, we are limited in the power of change, unless
we give God permission to change us by his grace.
The facts revealed upon
self-reflection bear themselves on us when we are honest, and everyone seeking
to grow has the same opportunity. For one moment there is the scary thought—“Who
am I?”—yet it’s quickly replaced with—“Okay... all is good, again.”
Asking the Bigger Questions
None of us are comfortable
asking the tough questions of ourselves; ever. But we can get to a position
where we can instinctually surrender in doing it by knowing it’s inherently
good for us to do.
In many ways, in getting
to a position where we can routinely carry the weight of self-exposure we
gather strength against what seems an indomitable fear. If anything is going to
make us fearful it’s us about ourselves. We don’t want to be vulnerable because
it means there is both an unknown attached and a cost—both are undesirable. But
when self-exposure no longer concerns us we are able to be vulnerable in a sensible
sort of way.
When we have no fear for
what God might reveal through us when we are vulnerable, we live with a humble
boldness that aligns without fear to the truth. We welcome whatever God’s will
is. Our agendas are stripped away and our lack of orchestration of the events
of our lives is testament to our faith—we are being rewarded.
***
Good self-leadership is
the fundamental cornerstone of the effective leadership of people. The best
fathers, mothers, bosses, and authority-figures are deeply relational, firstly
with themselves, holding to a high self-account. This is the toughest work—to be
honest with ourselves. But it’s also the most rewarding of all work, because we
work on ourselves with God’s undeniable help.
© 2013 S. J. Wickham.
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