“Have
not I commanded thee? Be strong and of a good courage; be not afraid, neither
be thou dismayed: for the Lord thy God is with thee whithersoever thou goest.”
Joshua 9:1
Fear can and will keep many good leaders from becoming great leaders. Many
mountain climbers have stood at the base camp of Mt. Everest, yet only a small
percentage of them have had the courage it takes to actually climb to the top
of that mountain. Fear of the unknown. Fear of what people will say if we fail.
Fear of criticism along the way. Fear of being the only one saying “It can be
done.” Fear of our vision being rejected by others. Fear can kill our God-given
directive. It can suffocate our dream.
A position or a title
does not make a person a leader overnight. Though a person is chosen to Pastor
a church, they are not truly a leader until they face their fears and actually
lead the congregation that God has placed in his hands to where God wants it to
go. Being chosen to lead is easy. Actually leading is hard.
What defines a true
visionary? Is it someone who has a lot of great ideas? Someone who sees the
need for change, but never causes that change to take place? If you are unable
or unwilling to cause change, don’t say anything. Although you may see a need
for change, don’t say anything, unless it is to spark a vision in another
person who is capable of creating the needed change.
When you see another
minister or ministry that is successful, go to them and find out how and why
they are having success. Strive to learn from them. You will usually find that
the reason they are having success is due to something you felt the Holy Spirit
speaking to you about in the past. You might realize that God told you to do
this same thing in the past, only you lacked the courage to launch into
it. You must admit that some of the more successful people around you are
doing things that you yourself have considered, only they did it and you
didn’t.
Our temptation is all
too often to accept the status quo. We measure ourselves by ourselves. We
determine that since we have increased by some percentage point, we are being
successful. However, we really need to begin measuring ourselves by God’s
standards. Does He view a church of 75 as a success when it sits in the middle
of a 10,000 soul populace? Now if that church is less than 3 years old, it is
truly a success but, if that church is 20 years or older, that’s another story.
The status quo is
safe. It’s comfortable. Accepting the status quo, however, will kill a
church. Oh, it will still be there, but the vision and drive that it takes
to win a community will be forever lost unless you decide to face the enemies
of change and even your fears.
Watch and study
churches around you that are having success. Follow the steps they are taking
to create and maintain the success they are having in their city. One thing you
will discover is that no two of them are doing the same thing. What’s causing
their success is that they are doing things that appear radical to those
who question their motives, intents, and directives. In the face of great
criticism from within and without, every one of these churches and their Pastor
have decided it is better to fight and lose than sit on the sidelines and do
nothing.
For a pastor to accept
mediocrity or the status quo is to die. You may be living on the outside, but
on the inside you are dead. Your vision casting days are over. Your ability to
walk into the darkness and know that people are willing to follow you is gone.
You are no longer a leader. You may have a position. You may be the boss, but
you are no longer a leader of people. When a pastor finds that his ability
to lead is over, it is time for him to prayerfully ask God for the courage to
face his fears.
Moses, there is a Red
sea waiting for you to split. Elijah, there is a Jordan River in front of you.
Peter, go ahead and step out of the boat. David gather up your stones, your
giant is going to fall. John, though they’ve boiled you in oil and sent you to
die on Patmos, God now has a book he wants you to write.
Pastor, your
congregation will follow you if you boldly step out in faith and do all that
God is telling you to do. They are inwardly waiting for you to lead
them. That church bully is really saying to you, “Pastor lead me!
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