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Off the Agenda: Conversations for Building Church Leaders

August 8, 2008

Leadership Axioms

A lesson in decision making from Bill Hybels

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Today is day two of Willow Creek's annual "The Leadership Summit" conference. Yesterday, in his opening plenary address, Willow founding pastor Bill Hybels shared his insights into "The High Drama of Decision Making."

"So much of leadership is decision making," Hybels explained. Yet many church leaders fail to reflect on their decision-making processes. As a result, those leaders can feel totally unprepared to tackle a tough decision with confidence.

Excellent leaders, on the other hand, reflect on their decision-making processes to such an extent that they are able to reduce a lifetime's wisdom into short leadership proverbs, or axioms.

These axioms meet the four requirements for a good decision: 1) they are consistent with the Bible's teaching on a given subject; 2) they are consistent with the wise counsel of trusted advisers; 3) they are informed by past experience; 4) and they are consistent with the Spirit's prompting.

Hybels offered as an example a famous proverb of Abraham Lincoln: the best way to defeat an enemy is to make him a friend. That axiom meets the above criteria. But even more helpful, it is short enough to be recalled at a moment's notice. Say, for example, you find yourself in conflict with another church leader on your staff. Instead of spending the time to walk through the four criteria for a good decision before determining your next move, think of Lincoln's words: the best way to defeat an enemy is to make him a friend. You save yourself time and energy be relying on the wisdom of past experience.

Hybels shared just a few of his own leadership axioms with us at The Summit. And he has compiled all of the proverbs that govern his leadership in his new book, Axiom (Zondervan, 2008).

In the end, though, Hybels suggested that the process of thinking through your own leadership lessons is infinitely more valuable than putting someone else's into practice. That got me thinking: what are my leadership axioms? What proverbs do I follow because I know they are consistent with the Spirit, the Scriptures, and wise council and have been proven true by my experience?

Well, here's one from the Bible: There is nothing new under the sun. This proverb reminds me, when I face a tough situation, that there is a solution because nothing can happen to me that hasn't already happened to someone. It encourages me to take heart and to take a hard look into Scripture and church history to see how others have addressed the same issue.

What are your leadership axioms? What catch phrases do you use that summarize your values and encapsulate a lifetime's wisdom? I'd love to hear them.

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Brandon O'Brien is assistant editor of Building Church Leaders and Leadership journal.


Posted by Brandon J. O'Brien at 2:24 PM on August 8, 2008 | Comments (3) | Trackbacks (0)

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I attended the Willow Creek Leadership Summit at Van Dyke UMC, Tampa. I am also trying to identify my leadership/life axioms. In today's changing times, I've found through experience "Change is rarely a good idea unless it is your own." :-) Helping team members accept change as their own idea promotes ownership, having time for the idea of a necessary change to grow among team members helps insure success.

Spurgeon said: 'Don't drown the person who taught you to swim, or set yourself up in opposition to the one who taught you your trade'. In the midst of all the excitement of walking in the anointing God has given you to lead and to minister effectively, always remember to give honour and credibility to those who have gone before you, even if they are now no longer relevant in their ministry. Regardless of how they have 'lost it', they laid the platform on which you are now building. God will not honour the minister who gets where they are going by taking away from the people who once led or mentored them.

I have two or three axioms that I try to live by:

1) Don't worry, be happy! Christ tells us that we cannot extend our lives by one second through worry. So stop. We are also told that the joy of the Lord is our strength. So Don't Worry, Be Happy.

2) Flexibility is the key to longevity. Don't be so rigid that you can't bend when good ideas or changes come along. Be the willow, not the pine.

3) In all things, do them for the glory of God. Whether I like the task or not, whether it's something that will provide me benefit or just headache, I try to remember that God's glory is what I am here for and put His praise in my heart, head, and mouth.

My boys (21, 18, 15, 13) will say I have 800 more but those are the important three!

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