The Stage or the Cross?

Why we tell the stories of Christlike servants.

Illustration by Abigail Erickson / Source Images: Getty

Recently I passed an old acquaintance in a crowded room. We exchanged a friendly nod, and then I froze midstride. I had to ask him a question. In the past, he had convened stadium-sized events devoted to Christian leadership. People (mostly men) would gather by the thousands and listen to dazzling speakers on everything from biblical principles of leadership to the pragmatics of building a platform and increasing your productivity. I wondered how he thought back on that chapter in evangelicals’ collective story.

The problem was not any single event or speaker. The problem was that there was once in American evangelicalism a booming industry of leadership development that was swiftly followed by a catastrophic season of leadership failure. Had the Christian leadership industry yielded a generation of faithful and effective leaders? Or had it attracted, encouraged, and equipped too many who sought leadership for the wrong reasons?

Many books, events, and courses with leadership in the title offer important insights. Not all are the same. But something felt awry, even those years ago. Advertisements featured fashionable men in dashing poses. Sometimes there was a nod toward “servant leadership,” but this felt more like the sanctification of human ambition. What was glorified was the sage on stage—typically a speaker wearing a slick headset mic while unfolding some profound point or clever anecdote.

Was the point to be a leader in the imitation of the Son of God, who humbled himself unto the point of death? Or was it to be observed as a leader on a stage, admired and adored? I confess I’ve developed an allergic reaction to the language of leadership. It used to be that the call to the pastorate—or ministry of any sort—was to die to oneself, to sacrifice, to suffer in obscurity but in fellowship with God. The best leaders tend to be those who want nothing to do with it. The New Testament does not really talk about leadership, platform, and power. It talks about servanthood, the cross, and surrender.

In this issue, you’ll meet some extraordinary servants, people who do not aspire to be leaders but whom God elevates because they bring glory to him in the ruins of Ukraine or the mountains of Nepal, in Mississippi or the former East Germany. We will continue in Christianity Today to shine a light on those who exemplify Christlike servanthood.

As for the friend who once filled stadiums for leadership events? He said he won’t do it anymore. Now he meets—offline and off the stage—with smaller groups of servants who want to follow Jesus in their brokenness. Perhaps that’s a good sign.

Timothy Dalrymple is Christianity Today’s president and CEO.

Also in this issue

What does ministry look like when every day might be one’s last? Our cover story details the ongoing work of several Ukrainian pastors who’ve led scattered and traumatized congregations through a year of war. Also in this issue: ministry to moms and babies in post-Dobbs Mississippi, what the tower of Babel really means, and Chinese ministries that use tea to bridge generational divides.

Cover Story

Ministers in Ukraine Are ‘Ready to Meet God at Any Moment’

The Bono Interview: Plaudits and Problems

News

Church Planting After the Fall (of the Berlin Wall)

God’s Yoke for the Decision Fatigued

Let’s Rethink the Evangelical Gender Wars

Divine Abundance Is More Than a Charismatic Hobbyhorse

Testimony

I Was the Proverbial, Drug-Fueled Rock and Roller

Benjamin Budde

6 Ways to Parent Your Kids for the New Creation

Our March Issue: Illumination and Illusion

Kelli B. Trujillo

‘Why Church?’ Is the Wrong Question

I Don’t Want to Be a Universalist

Richard Mouw

News

Mississippi Evangelicals Prepare to Welcome Dobbs Babies

News

Evangelicals Outgrow Catholics in Central America

News

Israeli Academics Question Archaeological Discoveries

News

With Gossip of the Gospel, the Church Grows in Nepal

Words Are Holy. So Why Don’t We Talk Like They Are?

Paul J. Pastor

Beware Our Tower of Babel

John Walton

Can Bubble Tea Bring Gen Z into the Chinese Church?

David Platt: We Take the Gospel to the Nations, as the Nations

Review

All the World’s Not a Stage

Benjamin Vrbicek

Review

What Women Miss When They Go Missing from Church

Megan Hill

New & Noteworthy Books

Matt Reynolds

Excerpt

The Bible Gives Investors Like Me a New Perspective on Risk

Henry Kaestner

View issue

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