Read an Excerpt
  CONTAGIOUS LEADERSHIP WORKBOOK 
 By JOHN C. MAXWELL  Thomas Nelson 
 Copyright © 2006   EQUIP 
All right reserved. ISBN: 978-1-4185-1784-7 
    Chapter One 
                    God's Call for Us to Lead                                  Lesson 1  
                  Why and How God Calls Us to Lead  
  
                      Let us make man in our image ...                      and let him rule. (Gen. 1:26 NIV)  
  
  Christians have debated the subject of leadership for centuries.  Is it biblical to lead? Are we not called to be followers instead of  leaders? Are we not called to be servants instead of rulers? Can we  honestly believe that leadership is a biblical idea?  
     When we study the Bible closely, we see that leadership is,  indeed, God's idea. God is not only the Ultimate Leader, but  He has called us to lead as well.  
  
  Born to Lead  
  Consider this. The first description of mankind in the Bible  involves leadership. God designed us to lead, to have authority  and take dominion. According to Genesis 1:26-31, you and I  were born to lead. Study this Scripture ...  
     Then God said, "Let us make man in our image, in our     likeness, and let them rule over the fish of the sea, and the birds     of the air, over the livestock, over all the earth, and over all the     creatures that move along the ground." (Gen. 1:26 NIV)  
  
  1. Being made in God's image means wewere created to    LEAD.  
     According to verse 26, we are made in God's image. What     does this mean? One clue is found in the next phrase: "and     let them rule." Knowing we were fashioned to lead and rule     is part of what it means to be like God.  
  
  2. God gave humans AUTHORITY over the whole earth.  
     We should be comfortable with two positions. The first     position is being under God's authority. The second     position is being in authority over the world. God has     given us this calling. We must discover what it means     to lead like God does.  
  
  3. If God told us to rule, we must have the ABILITY to     do it.  
     God never commands us to do anything without enabling     us to do it. You and I have the ability to lead because God     created us and commanded us to do so. Based on your gifts     and personality, you have the ability to lead in some area.  
  
  Being Salt and Light  
  In the New Testament, God confirms this calling to influence  others. Look at Matthew 5:13-16 NASB:  
     You are the salt of the earth; but if the salt has become tasteless,     how will it be made salty again? ... You are the light of the     world. A city set on a hill cannot be hidden. Nor do men light a     lamp, and put it under the peck-measure, but on the lampstand;     and it gives light to all who are in the house. Let your light shine     before men in such a way that they may see your good works,     and glorify your Father who is in heaven.  
  Salt influences the food we eat. Light influences the homes  in which we live. Jesus is calling us to embrace our calling to  influence and to shine wherever we go. The Apostle Paul took  this calling seriously when he said:  
     Therefore knowing the fear of the Lord, we persuade men ...     (2 Cor. 5:11 NASB)  
  
  Divine Permission to Lead  
  Many of us feel like Moses did when he faced God at  the burning bush, in Exodus 3-4. He felt inadequate and  unprepared to lead. But that's what God called him to do.  Many potential leaders in the Bible were afraid and ran from  their call. God had to give them permission to lead.  
     Most of us can list why we don't lead effectively, just  as Moses did. When God called him, he instantly had five  excuses why he couldn't lead. Notice how God responds to  them.  
  
  Excuse One: Who am I? (Exod. 3:11)  
  Moses struggled with his identity. He just didn't feel qualified.  He thought God picked the wrong leader. God's response: It  doesn't matter who you are. I've called you. I am with you.  
  
  Excuse Two: Who are you? (Exod. 3:13)  
  Moses struggled with intimacy. He didn't know God well  enough to describe Him to the people. His relationship  with God was weak. God's response: I AM WHO I AM. I'm  everything you need.  
  
  Excuse Three: What if they don't listen? (Exod.4:1)  
  Moses struggled with intimidation. He worried about people's  reaction to him. God's response: When I am finished, they'll  listen. Trust me.  
  
  Excuse Four: I've never been a good speaker. (Exod.4:10)  
  Moses struggled with inadequacy. Who would follow him if  he couldn't speak well? God's response: Guess who made your  mouth? I'm the source of your gifts.  
  
  Excuse Five: I know you can find someone else. (Exod.  4:13)  
  Moses struggled with inferiority. He compared himself with  other more competent people, and he felt weak. God's  response: Okay, I will let Aaron go with you ... but I'm still  calling you.  
  Question: What excuses do you have for not leading well?  What do you believe God's response might be?  ________________________________________________________  ________________________________________________________  ________________________________________________________  
  
  The Period of the Judges  
  Before Israel adopted a monarchy and Saul was appointed  to be their king, they experienced an era of time called the  period of the judges. It was a season when pure leadership was  required. Every judge who led was a pioneer. The following  verse appears more than once in the book of Judges:  
     In those days Israel had no king; everyone did as he saw fit.     (Judges 21:25 NIV)  
  
  Here are six reasons why this period was a leadership-intensive  season:  
    1. Chaos reigned because there was no precedent for authority       or accountability.  
    2. Since the Jews first occupied Canaan, aggressive enemies       surrounded them.  
    3. There were no government funds for national defense or       safety.  
    4. Other nations influenced Israel with their idols and       superstitions.  
    5. Heroes like Moses and Joshua were dead and there was no       expectation of order.  
    6. Momentum and morale were low, so growth was hard not       easy.  
  
  Fourteen judges led Israel during this period. Each leader  started his/her leadership role from scratch. These are the ones  we know about: Othniel, Ehud, Shamgar, Deborah, Gideon,  Abimelech, Tola, Jair, Jephthah, Ibzan, Elon, Abdon, Samson,  and Samuel.  
     Certainly, we know more about some of these judges  than others. However, from the text we can summarize how  effective leaders led during Israel's most difficult season. During  these times, leaders must go back to the basics. The basics are  clear during this period in Israel's history. The judges had the  following characteristics in common.  
  
  The Basics of Effective Leaders:  
  1. THEY PERCEIVE A NEED  
     Contrary to what many think about leadership today,     during this time leadership always began with a need.     In Judges, it didn't start when someone wanted to fill     an empty position. There were no positions to fill. There     was no protocol or structure at all. There was no vote     for deacons or Sunday school teachers. If you led it was     because you saw a need and got others to help you meet     it. The judges all got their start when they saw a specific     problem they could address.  
         Othniel: Found Israel surrounded by Mesopotamia.          He stepped forward to recruit and lead an army of          Hebrews against the king. He prevailed. This led to          forty years of peace.  
         Ehud: Observed the Moabites dominating his          people, and decided he'd had enough. He led Israel          to a rousing victory over Moab. This led to eighty          years of peace.  
         Shamgar: Stepped forward when the Philistines had oppressed Israel for years. When he personally struck          down six hundred soldiers, he inspired his army to          victory.  
  
  When Leadership Is Pure ...  
  a. It always starts with a need.  
  b. That need sparks passion within a person.  
  c. That person acts in response to the need.  
  d. This action moves others to cooperate.  
  
  APPLICATION: When you hear the many needs around  you, which one strikes a chord within your heart? What  kind of "specialist" are you called to become? What will  you do before you die? What will be your significant  contribution?  _________________________________________________________________  _________________________________________________________________  _________________________________________________________________  
  
  2. THEY POSSESS A GIFT  
  In each case in Judges, the leaders emerged because they  had an obvious gift. They possessed some ability that fit the  need of the moment perfectly. They were competent in a  relevant arena. Their gift solved a problem. In each case, the  "gift" was from God but took on different forms. It was:  
  a. A spiritual gift: Samson had a spiritual gift connected     to his Nazarite vow.  
  b. A natural talent: Deborah had a natural talent for     strategy and wisdom.  
  c. An acquired skill: Gideon and Jephthah developed     their skills to lead over time.  
  
  God has put something inside each of us that is to be  delivered to the people around us. In other words, everyone  has something we all need. When we find it, we naturally  influence others.  
  
  When Leadership Is Pure ...  
  a. A person finds a GIFT inside of them.  
  b. They groom and DEVELOP that gift.  
  c. They eventually match that gift with a place of     SERVICE.  
  d. The gift provides a platform for INFLUENCE.  
  e. They eventually flourish because of their GIFT.  
  
  We naturally lead in the areas of our gifts. In our gift  areas, we are most ...  
  * Intuitive                        * Satisfied  * Productive                       * Natural  * Comfortable                      * Influential  
  
  APPLICATION: How about you? What is your primary  gift? What contribution do you make to the body of Christ  that would be most missed if you were gone? What do you  add to your organization that you do best?  _______________________________________________________________  _______________________________________________________________  _______________________________________________________________  
  
  3. THEY PARADE A PASSION  
  When an outward need and an inward gift match, the  leader often follows by becoming consumed with a passion.  This passion is compelling to others; the leader can't  help but share it with those who want to get involved. In  the book of Judges, several leaders experienced this kind  of inward chemistry that sparks passion. Here are the  ingredients for passion:  
  Passion comes when a leader has complementary ...  
  a. BURDENS: Your interests and concerns  
  b. CONVICTIONS: Your values, principles, and beliefs  
  c. GIFTS: Your God-given abilities  
  d. NEEDS: Your desperate circumstances  
  e. OPPORTUNITIES: Your occasion to get involved  
  
  Passion makes up for a lack of resources. No doubt,  resources are nice to have, but many of the Judges were not  rich in money, people, or talent when they started. Gideon  was scared. Samson lacked a moral backbone. Jephthah  was impetuous. Abimelech got over-zealous and had to be  reprimanded. It appears that Ibzan, Elon, and Abdon might  have been elderly. This doesn't stop people if they have  passion.  
  
  APPLICATION: Passion generally begins with interests.  What are your interests as they relate to leadership and  the needs around you? What makes you cry or makes you  angry? What do you feel so strongly about that you are  driven to act?  ____________________________________________________________________  ____________________________________________________________________  ____________________________________________________________________  
  
  4. THEY PERSUADE A PEOPLE  
  True leaders eventually come to the point where they  attract and empower others to their passion. Sometimes  they just find others who share the same passion. One  thing is sure, genuine leaders connect with others. This is  what separates an entrepreneur and a leader. Leaders don't  act alone. They have followers. They have to, because they  have a cause that's bigger than they are. They need others  to pull it off.  
      Gideon: Gideon was told to gather an army and       attack the Midianites. He recruited too many men,       and God had to trim the size of his army or Gideon       might take credit for the win! This leader persuaded       too many people to follow! If only we had the same       problem.  
      Deborah: Although she was a woman, Israel       was fully persuaded by Deborah. Whatever she       determined to do, the people followed. Barak even       insisted she go with him to battle. He understood       who had influence.  
      Samuel: The strongest of all the Judges, Samuel       was the most influential leader between the time       of Moses and David. His leadership spanned two       generations. Both old and young listened to him.       Even kings looked up to him. He anointed both       Saul and David as kings. He was a leader of leaders.  
  
  Proven practices for getting things done ...  
  a. What gets talked about gets done.  
  b. What gets trained for gets done.  
  c. What gets measured gets done.  
  d. What gets budgeted gets done.  
  e. What gets confronted gets done.  
  f. What gets rewarded gets done.  
  
  APPLICATION: How about you? Who has bought into  your leadership 100 percent? Whom do you persuade? Is it  the old or the young? Are they leaders or followers? How do  you persuade people to take the journey with you? When  do you influence others? Where do you influence them?  _______________________________________________________________  _______________________________________________________________  
  
  5. THEY PURSUE A PURPOSE  
  A final observation is that every judge could lead because  he/she followed a distinct purpose laid out before him/her.  They moved in a direction to reach a specific goal. No  judge desired only to maintain status quo. Each felt he/she  had a divine assignment to perform. You might call it his/  her life purpose. It became a consuming accountability  partner.  
 It would be difficult to separate leadership from  purpose. I cannot imagine leading without a clear sense of  a God-given purpose. Perhaps this is why so many churches  fail to bear fruit. There is no clear, defined, agreed-upon  mission.  
  
  In Judges, Their Purpose Was ...  
  a. Personal: It fit their gifts and passions.  
  b. Measurable: It involved activity that could be     evaluated.  
  c. Memorable: It was specific enough to be remembered     and embraced.  
  d. Meaningful: It surrounded national issues that made a     difference.  
  e. Mobile: It could travel with them wherever they found     themselves.  
  f. Moral: It was right. They not only felt it could be done     but should be done.  
      Deborah: Her sole purpose was to liberate Israel       from the Caananites. She laid out a plan, provided       the resources, commissioned Barak to lead the army,       and when he refused to lead the attack alone, she       went with him.  
  
  ASSESSMENT: Do you follow your purpose? How do you  compare to the judges?  __________________________________________________________________  __________________________________________________________________  __________________________________________________________________  _________________________________________________________________  
  
  APPLICATION: What is your clear purpose? Have you  defined it? Do the key people in your organization agree upon  what it is and how it should be pursued?  _________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________  _________________________________________________________________  _________________________________________________________________  
  (Continues...)  
     
 
 Excerpted from CONTAGIOUS LEADERSHIP WORKBOOK by JOHN C. MAXWELL  Copyright © 2006   by EQUIP.   Excerpted by permission.
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