A Jesus and His Management Team

The man in the gray flannel robe.

The Leadership Lessons of Jesus: Timeless Insights for Today’s Leader,by Bob Briner and Ray Pritchard (Broadman & Holman, 120 pp.; $14.99, hardcover). Reviewed by John Throop, president of The Summit Group, a management consulting firm in Peoria, Illinois, and an Episcopal priest.

A contemporary temptation in popular theology—and the rage in Christian publishing—is to put Jesus into a coat and tie to teach a leadership seminar. The Sermon on the Mount may be replaced by the Sermon from the Top Floor Corner Office. Jesus’ disciples become his management team. The Bible becomes the strategic plan. Jesus the Savior remains, to be sure. But now, meet Jesus the Mentor.

It’s very easy to reclothe Jesus in contemporary images to meet current needs rather than to let Jesus be Jesus. Translating his first-century ministry into the end of the twentieth requires careful exegesis and a nuanced hermeneutic. The temptation is to impose our own agenda on the biblical text instead of being challenged by it.

In The Leadership Lessons of Jesus: Timeless Insights for Today’s Leader, sports entrepreneur Bob Briner and Ray Pritchard, senior pastor of Calvary Memorial Church in Oak Park, Illinois, cull the first six chapters of the Gospel of Mark for material on Jesus’ leadership insights. They present 52 brief lessons—one per week—designed to help a leader in business, charity, or the church.

These two faithful men seek to make Christ relevant in the workplace, a laudable goal. Their point is well taken, too; there is indeed something important and eternal in Jesus’ leadership method. His followers changed the culture and conscience of the ancient world, and we still follow his teachings today.

Yet Briner and Pritchard’s approach is too brief and broad, and their use of Scripture too superficial. For example, in a discussion about calling (a most important subject), the authors point to Mark 1:11 and state, “Evidently, Jesus’ leadership status needed to be re-affirmed by God the Father as Jesus began his earthly ministry.” But what precisely does this mean? Did Jesus struggle with his calling? How? Will we, too, hear a voice from heaven?

The application of the text is no better: “Never let someone else determine God’s will for your life. No one else can understand God’s unique call on your life as clearly as you.” But are there not times when we need the guidance and even the reproach of others—times when we don’t see clearly at all? Is calling an entirely individual activity, or is there a role for the community of faith?

Sound-bite reflections can make it appear that Jesus’ kingdom mandates fit seamlessly with the suburban pieties of American culture. Is it even accurate to speak of Jesus’ “leadership” as if he and a corporate executive or a football coach were engaged in the same task? Only deep and thoughtful engagement between theology and the workplace will give us the tools we really need for leadership on the front lines of daily labor and commerce.

Copyright © 1997 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Also in this issue

Missing God At Church? Learn why so many are rediscovering worship outside their own traditions in the latest issue of Christianity Today.

Cover Story

Are Evangelicals Missing God at Church? (Part 2 of 2)

Cover Story

Are Evangelicals Missing God at Church? (Part 1 of 2)

What's So Amazing About Grace? Part 2

Who Holds These Truths?

When Christians Fight Christians

When Christians Fight Christians Part 2

The War of the Scrolls, Part 1

The War of the Scrolls, Part 2

The War of the Scrolls, Part 3

A Call for Church Welfare Reform, Part 1

A Call for Church Welfare Reform, Part 2

What's So Amazing About Grace? Part 1

Sex Abuse: Sexual Abuse in Churches Not Limited to Clergy

Northern Ireland: For God or Ulster? Part 1

Northern Ireland: For God or Ulster? Part 2

Disney Boycott Gathers Steam

New Headquarters Under Construction

U.S. Lifts Travel Ban to Lebanon

Artists Achieve Secular Chart Success

Assemblies Retain Ordination Ban

Charges Against Jailed Pastor Dropped

Greeks Face Proselytism Court Test

CBN Inaugurates Satellite Broadcasts

Free Love Didn’t Come Cheap

The Price and Payback of Advertising

Editorial

Don’t Give Up on the Church

Editorial

Progress for the Persecuted

Fighting the Good Fight

Imagine There’s a Heaven

Lord, Teach Us to Pray

People of the Book

Rated BQ (for Big Questions)

The Changing Sound of Music

News

News Briefs: October 06, 1997

Classic & Contemporary Excerpts from October 06, 1997

Reconciliation: 'The Kids Are the Candles'

Theological Education: Fuller Integrates Theology, Technology

New Rules on Religion Shield Federal Workers

Lutherans: Role of Bishops Stalls Lutheran-Anglican Unity

Kenya: Church Leaders Mediate Reform Prior to Elections

Southern Baptists: Calvinism Resurging Among SBC's Young Elites

Second Bid Launched to Abolish NEA

A Name Is No Guarantee, Part 1

A Name Is No Guarantee, Part 2

View issue

Our Latest

Taylor Swift Makes Showgirls of Us All

Something compels us to perform our relationship with the pop star’s music. Maybe that’s her secret to success.

Public Theology Project

The Loss of One Forgotten Virtue Could Destroy the Country

We’ve all become numb to this unserious, trivializing age.

News

Amid Floods and Heat Waves, Indian Church Fights Climate Change

Christ Church in Kerala tends to its garden while helping its parishioners and neighbors live sustainably.

A Civil War of Words

Evangelical factions can increasingly be identified by our speech. We agree on big issues yet insult and talk past each other.

The Manosphere Gets Discipline Right and Dependence Wrong

Young men are right to want agency, clarity, and strength. But grit alone cannot carry them.

The Russell Moore Show

Benjamin Watson and Russell Moore on The Just Life

Christian justice, gospel-centered living, and faithful action

Is a Ban on Conversion Therapy Constitutional?

In her Supreme Court challenge, evangelical therapist Kaley Chiles calls the Colorado law a violation of her free speech.

Wire Story

Tony Evans Will No Longer Pastor Dallas Megachurch After Restoration

Oak Cliff Bible Fellowship announced that its pastor of 48 years won’t return to leadership. The church expects son Jonathan Evans to succeed him.

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube