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Lead with a limp - man rock climbing on cliff

Lead with a limp

October 28, 2018 by brianmichaelsteck Leave a Comment

A phrase used often in the Christian leadership program for twenty-somethings I work with, when referencing a seasoned leader, is that they “lead with a limp”.

This isn’t some strange reference to valiant leaders with physical disabilities (e.g., Franklin D. Roosevelt or John McCain). It is, instead, acknowledgment of their humility; a humility gained only after walking through hardship, defeat and the reality that leadership and perfection are unacquainted.

Desiring to lead with a limp

In our world, to “lead with a limp” is a sign of honor. It says, “Behind that welcoming smile is a story of a man or woman who knows pain and suffering, and has chosen to hold their head high and fight another day.”

The untested leader is at the mercy of circumstance.

Like a vessel without a ballast, they are easily swayed and prone to succumbing to the waves of adversity. And while adversity is a blessing to ones’ personal growth, it can be disastrous to an organization whose leader has been placed in positional authority prematurely, without having overcome many series of adversity previously.

Cherish the hard things in life

For this reason, I encourage young men and women to do hard things.

Our society praises and promotes the personality who seems to effortlessly climb the ranks of success (only to then drop them immediately once their humanity is revealed). This elevation of mere humans to celebrity status can make us think that setbacks are proof we are not meant for greatness. This is a lie.

And before I mislead you, greatness is not fame or fortune. Greatness is knowing who you are in the face of your creator and humbly and obediently walking that out.

Greatness, in its’ proper definition, is something we should strive for because it brings God glory. He created us to know Him and be known by Him, to hear Him and respond. Greatness, however, was never achieved by one who escaped challenge.

So do hard things. Learn from your mistakes. Grow. And gain humility, all the while.

You will get knocked down, and that’s okay. But failure is only rewarded to him who refuses to get up again.

When you push through the anguish of loss, the embarrassment of momentary defeat, or the demoralization of inadequacy, don’t lose hope. You are journeying through the gauntlet of perseverance and soon will know what it means to lead with a limp.

Filed Under: Discipleship Tagged With: Humility, Leadership

When It's Better To Receive Than To Give

When it’s better to receive than to give

February 28, 2016 by brianmichaelsteck Leave a Comment

I believe that there is a time and position of the soul when it’s better to receive than to give.

Sincere pursuit of selflessness can turn into a kind altruism that is detrimental to our identity. In the effort of serving, loving and giving of ourselves, it’s so easy to get attached to the insatiable desire to please everyone and every thing. Our good intentions move us down a dangerous path of earning and striving, which is ultimately rooted in fear and not love.

Each time we bless others out of this good but tainted source, we deposit a little bit more of our worth and value in our actions.

What I’ve found to be true is that God’s love was never prompted from our actions. Instead, it is our very identity as His sons and daughters that induces this great love. It is relationship, not effort. And ultimately, it is identity — God’s identity, as the eternal source of love, reflected in us.

When Humility Is Really Pride

Ever been complimented and immediately denied the encouragement by listing a barrage of reasons why that could not possibly be true?

Ever give a compliment and get rejected like I would if I tried to dunk against an NBA player? Yeah. No fun. What’s up with that?

It’s false humility. And it can fool the best of us. Usually it’s because we don’t actually believe the compliment; either because of low self-esteem or being conditioned to reject compliments out of fear of being thought arrogant and thus unloveable.

This was me too. But I learned that the very response I thought was humility was actually pride. Giving off the aura of humility, my dejection of truth was actually a method of drawing more attention to myself. Don’t we all love it when, after rejecting encouragement, they come back with an extra heaping of it to help convince us?

I’ve found that true humility is grounded in God-centered identity and it allows us to accept compliments with a simple, “Thank you!”

Try it sometime. You’ll be amazed and what kinds of emotions and thoughts bubble up to the surface of your mind when you do; and once you get over the awkwardness of simply accepting encouragement, you can bring it before the Lord and let God heal you of the lies you believe about yourself.

Learning To Receive

I believe that the reason we’ve developed this “compliment-shield” is that, at our core, we don’t believe we are lovable. We believe we must earn love and that we couldn’t possibly be worthy of love simply because of who we are.

But this is what Jesus came to earth to prove to us:

But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us. Romans 5:8

God’s desire has always been for unity with His people. You were worthy of His love and sacrifice, even before you breathed your first breath.

Just try to say that: “I am worthy of love. God made me worthy of love.”

It’s not sin. It’s not arrogance. It’s not pride. It’s truth. And it brings God glory.

Let God love you.

When we acknowledge God’s love for us and our worthiness of God’s love, simply on the basis of being His, He is glorified. So stop fearing love. Step into it. When you do, you will experience the completeness that He intended for His children and you will understand that there is a time when it is better to receive than to give.

Filed Under: Soul Care Tagged With: Humility, love, Pride

Holding Camdyn For The First Time

You at your worst

January 31, 2014 by brianmichaelsteck Leave a Comment

Holding Camdyn For The First Time
Holding Camdyn For The First Time
I’m enjoying the incredible blessing of being a first-time father to a precious baby girl. She’s healthy, beautiful and giving us more rest than expected at this young age.

But there are moments when I forget the blessings that surround me and instead see things as if life were crashing down around me. These are the moments when I’m no longer patient or kind, but when the very worst comes out of me.

If you’ve experience these moments yourself, you may have noticed patterns in your thinking or behavior. For me, I blame. Something goes wrong — a delayed flight, a dropped call, an explosive diaper — and my initial response is “well, if they could just…” or “if they would just do it right, just this once…” But the truth is that, the problem doesn’t lie with others, it’s with me.

I’m the problem and Christ is the solution.

When I fail to realize this, I point fingers and place blame on just about anyone and anything around me; maybe outwardly, but most of the time this all takes place in my mind.

I had one of these moments this morning, during a middle-of-the-night diaper change, when a miraculous two outfits get soaked, as my daughter exercised her gift of waiting until the diaper is off to relieve herself. I reached into the diaper bag and the wipes were nowhere to be found; meanwhile, she’s squirming all through the mess on the changing pad. The disinfectant spray was empty and the pacifier would not stay in her mouth, no matter what I did (a small strip of duct tape did cross my mind).

In my mind, I blamed a half-dozen people for why all these problems were their fault.

And that’s when it hit me. It’s not about them. They had nothing to do with it. It’s about me and my heart.

God immediately made it apparent to me that it’s been several days without a solid devotional time with Him, and it was showing. So as I realize this, and try to draw away for a few moments before I go up to get my precious daughter for her morning bottle, I humble myself before you and show my cards.

None of us are perfect. Who are you when you’re at your worst? Where is Christ in the midst of that? May you find Him and cling to Him, no matter how many stinky diapers get thrown your way 😉

Filed Under: Surrender Tagged With: Blame, Humility

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