Tuesday, March 3, 2020

Naïve Faith in Leadership

I have often encountered in ministry what I would term “naïve faith” as opposed to “mature faith”. Naïve faith is a faith in outcomes (for example, “I have faith that God will heal me”), while mature faith is a faith in the God of outcomes (for example, “Though he slay me, yet will I trust in him.” Job 13:15). Yet in the leadership literature, one repeatedly comes across an attitude to leadership which would seem close to naïve faith. Here are a few examples. Oswald Sanders states that “faith is vision”, where faith merely refers to the goal. Bobby Clinton considers that faith refers to a “God-given vision” that is about some future plan. Walter Wright defines faith as “a vision that makes a difference ... seeing tomorrow so powerfully that it shapes today”. It is not hard to see that this is, in each case, a faith in outcomes.

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