I have been challenged and helped by this book. The author's perspective on leadership is that humility or service to Christ and others is THE foundation. He emphasizes character over skill sets; faithfulness over performance . . yet he is not soft on performance or success. The chapters on suffering & self-awareness (what the author calls "Emotional Intelligence" are five-star chapters. I am thankful for his humility, frankness, and uncommon level off candidness throughout the book
QUOTES:
The core disciplines of leadership relate less to what we do (important as that is) and more to who we are , which informs what we do.
The typical out- of- control schedules that characterize many leaders’ lives are not congruent with becoming leaders of deep influence. Nor are these kinds of schedules necessary.
The question is how we will allocate our time and priorities for long- term leadership success, over against short- term leadership wins.
Emotional intelligence is the ability to understand ourselves, to know what drives us, to accurately understand how we are perceived by others, to understand how we relate to others, and to control our emotions in healthy ways.
Much life dissatisfaction, restlessness, and frustration come from not being in the right spot!
Moses was a leader for the Exodus, Joshua for taking the land, David for unifying Israel.
I define a high- impact team as “a group of missionally aligned and healthy individuals working strategically together under good leadership toward common objectives, with accountability for results.”
The very fact that we cannot define or measure success indicates that it is not high on our priority list. We would rather hope and assume that we are doing well than to actually measure and look reality in the face.
Those who focus on fewer, more important things see the greatest results.
Since there will not be a perfect me till I see Jesus, I don’t have to pretend that there is a perfect me now.
We cannot influence others from a pedestal;
While these can be valuable pieces of the equation, the reality is that the most powerful growth and transformation is life- on- life, rather than primarily classroom. That is why Jesus lived with twelve disciples, dialogued with them, did ministry with them, and even sent them on their own for special ministry.
Success is faithfully living at the intersection of God’s gifting and His calling on our lives, wherever that should be.
Success breeds arrogance, unless we continue to intentionally cultivate authentic relationships with other Christ- followers who can challenge our thinking, hold us accountable, and keep us humble.