Leadership is an act of submission to God. To be a leader means listening to all kinds of people and situations. Out of that listening, we are hoping to discern the mind of God as best we can. This is the price of leadership—it’s an act of sacrifice. So leadership is part and parcel of the work of submission to God.
I could be perfectly happy to go up into those mountains and disappear. But at least up to this point, that has not been my lot. There is a sense of call to take leadership roles. You’re serving people and submitting to God as best you can.
We all learn submission because we all have “bosses,” whether we’re presidents of companies or not. The easiest place to learn it is in family. Paul’s words were, “Submit to one another out of reverence for Christ”—there is subordination, husband and wife, parent and child. We’re doing that all of the time, looking to the needs of our spouse or our children, even though we have to make certain kinds of decisions they may not like. It’s an act of submission to help.
I think of Pope Gregory the Great. He wanted the cloister. He wanted to pray and study, and yet he was thrust into this administrative job, and he submitted to that. And in that submission, he became a great leader. You could say that the only person who is safe to lead is the person who is free to submit.
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This article accompanies an interview with Foster.
Foster is head of Renovaré, an interdenominational renewal movement.
Christianity Today interviewed Richard Foster and Dallas Willard on the Renovaré Spiritual Formation Bible and on the difference between discipleship and spiritual formation.
Celebration of Discipline and Life with God: Reading the Bible for Spiritual Formation are available from ChristianBook.com and other retailers.