Leadership happens in odd and tricky places sometimes. 

I’ll bet Aaron Brantley would have been thrilled for someone be a leader as he crawled across a concrete parking lot to get help. Brantley was attacked at a busy Detroit gas station, left with a broken leg. He crawled from the gas pump to the gas station door while people drove and walked past him.

Brantley was an 86-year-old World War II vet when this happened.

Leadership isn’t just leading others. It starts with you and ripples out. It’s about helping even if others aren’t. Leadership is doing the right thing when others are walking away. Leadership is gathering your resources and working. 

I don’t mean to condemn the people who walked away. They obviously didn’t know what to do. They may have been embarrassed or busy or a little afraid. Was this a scam? Was this practical joke? Maybe they really didn’t care.

It’s clear someone needed to step up. A leader.

Leadership doesn’t spring from our brains without any preparation. We need to think ahead. We need to be intentional about goals and plans. We need to talk to others and get some training.

We need examples to help us. Especially as followers of Jesus, we want to find God’s guidance. How do I lead as a Christian? Does that look different than other leadership models?

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As followers of Jesus, we often look to the Bible. We’d like to find bullet point to clarify Christian leadership. Highlighted principles would be helpful. Maybe we can find some rules of Christian leadership.

Instead, we find stories. 

But stories are good. I’ve seen leadership principles pulled from stories about presidents and generals. I’ve seen leadership points gathered from a book about building a boat. Stories can teach us more than we realize.

What can stories teach us? 

Real people in real situations

We’re not told proverbs but get to see the ideas in action.  We learn of the emotions of people as they interact with real-life situations.

The good the bad, the ugly

The Bible doesn’t sugar coat. We’re allowed to see mistakes, wrong motives, wisdom. The people in the Bible’s stories aren’t perfect but they have the opportunity to learn. And we can learn along with them.

The context for courage

Would you rather be told “take courage” or be told the story of a person who overcame great difficulty to succeed? Courage is more nuanced than it seems. We can get away from platitudes to real-life scenarios.

Heart of the leader illustrated

Stories bring emotion and depth. We walk with the people, hear their fears and concerns, and understand better how a leader interacts with those they lead.

Engaging

We can hang with a story longer. It has conflict, people, setting, a plot.  It’s much more interesting than the bullet points we thought we craved.

Fleshed out truth

Not all principles can be put in a proverb or cliche. Stories help us see the truth in its dimensions and layers.

Mistakes managed

Leaders aren’t invincible heroes. They make mistakes. Sometimes the leader in a story figures out the error. Sometimes God corrects them. Often we see it coming, sometimes before the main character does.

The beauty of human relationships

The interaction between people always enriches leadership principles. We don’t lead in a vacuum. Or we shouldn’t.  Stories illustrate that beautifully.

QUESTION: What have you learned from stories?

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