Showing posts with label leadership. Show all posts
Showing posts with label leadership. Show all posts

Saturday, January 24, 2015

the catalytic leader and the developmental leader

I have a friend who has written a short case study about two kinds of leaders. He labels the first type of leader “catalytic” and the second type of leader “developmental.”

In his story, the catalytic leader cast a compelling vision and many, many people were drawn to that. Others joined the vision because it was exciting and dynamic—but after a while they fizzled out because they had little support. Their inner life was given little nurturing.

The developmental leader focused on a small few and tried to build into them so that they could, in turn, build into others in a similar way. The small few kept going and, eventually, there emerged a few more of those “small few”. Leaders emerged out of this and multiple initiatives were birthed.

It is a good story since we are often drawn to the more “catalytic” type of leaders whereas the developmental types just carry on quietly. My friend asked for some feedback on the case study, its presentation and accompanying questions. I share my response below because it may be a help to someone else. I pray it is.

My context for this discussion is “ministry” but I suppose you could extract principles from this for almost any venue. I hope the context is not too distracting for some readers. At any rate, here are my thoughts on “catalytic” leaders and “developmental” leaders.

……………………..

Well written, buddy! Good questions.

You asked a question about each type of leader learning to incorporate the other type’s approach. As someone with a developmental bias, I would say that being truly developmental has a natural catalytic affect (but see my caveat below on this), whereas being catalytic does not necessarily develop people (and can, in fact, kill the “catalytic” movement because of that). This is what your case study seems to indicate.

I suppose one caveat to that is this: if the developmental type of leader is building into people with the intent of reproduction, then it will be catalytic. Some “developmental” type of leaders build into people but have no vision to release those they are “developing.” I liken this approach to parents who teach their kids just enough…to stay dependent on the parent. Such mentoring is not developmental, to be sure…but it has the appearance of “development.” In the end, there is very little difference between this type of leader (the “developer” who wants to “keep everyone close”) and the catalytic leader who does not develop, because in the end…it will all cave in on itself. Of course, I would submit that the “developmental” leader who wants to keep everyone close and safe is not really developmental, just controlling. True development leads to differentiation, which is good, healthy and strong.

So, as your case study points out, the truly catalytic leader is the one who knows how to develop people truly. 

I am mindful here of something we in the missional movement are fond of saying. We like to say that “if you start with mission you get ministry” but “if you start with ministry you won’t get mission and eventually you won’t even have ministry.”

While I subscribe to a missional ecclesiology, I think that way of viewing it tends to come from a catalytic (“apostolic”) bias. I would tweak the statement and say, “With true discipleship you get mission—and the rest follows from that.”

Discipleship in the way of Jesus forms a developmental community with a mindset of mission. Mission provides the context for development (the need for development) but if you don’t have the developmental community in place mission tends to become a solo affair (as in the case of the “catalytic leader”). When mission is a solo affair, you don’t get development and eventually you don’t have mission because it is not sustainable.

That is why we see that true discipleship moves one to mission but mission (the way we tend to do it) does not always produce disciples. Disciple-making requires receptivity to being developed in community. Once we are receptive to being developed in community, we have an ocean of grace to buoy us up and the wind of the Spirit to drive us along.  But it takes a receptivity to developmental community to sustain that kind of journey. Without it, we fizzle out.

I think your question about each type of leader learning to adopt the traits of the other is a good one, but I would push the catalytic leader harder to become developmental than I would push the developmental leader to become “catalytic”. In fact, I would say that it could be that the developmental leader doesn’t need to be “pushed” at all—they already are being catalytic.

I admit that does show my developmental bias, but believe me when I say I’m trying my darndest to put that aside for the sake of this case study.

In either case, good work! It is well-presented and, as you can see, gets some good discussion going.

Grateful for you,

Troy  

Thursday, February 9, 2012

interview on The Leader's Nook

My good friend Elizabeth de Smaele is a spiritual director who lives in The Netherlands. She has a great website filled with many resources! One section of her site is dedicated to the spiritual formation of those in leadership.

She interviewed me some days ago on the topics of conflict transformation and prayer. Part one of the interview is up on her site. I encourage you to check it out!

Here's the link:
http://www.deeper-devotion.net/conflict-transformation.html#1

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

john stott and our need today


I just heard that John Stott died this morning. I don’t know why I should feel teary right now. It is not as though I knew him personally. I think it is because I lament the passing of a man who was, from what I could tell, a true model of grace and humility in Christian leadership. His passing has made me realize: “Men like him are too few these days. Too few, indeed.”

I wracked my brain, trying to think of those leaders today who could hold a candle to Stott’s class. Sadly, I could think of very few.

Too often our writers and teachers use sarcasm harmfully. Too often we employ excessive wit and incision, taking pot-shots at one another with unmitigated hubris. Too often our writers and teachers create unhelpful polemic in hopes of fostering “dialogue”. But how much “dialogue” really happens? Stott’s passing has made me realize that too often our Superstar Christians rely on charisma and style, leveraging clever forms of communication and wordsmithing (and publishing ploys) to propogate messages that are, by comparison…

…less-than-helpful,
…less-than-loving,
…baldly self-serving,
…far-from-thoughtful and lacking in humility.

I pray Stott’s life speaks loudly to us in these days. I pray that reflecting on his example imbues us with new-found dignity in our discussions and debates. I pray his spirit infects ours. We could sure use a dose of grace.

Lord, let us learn to follow in John Stott’s example, even as he followed the example of Jesus.

Sunday, February 20, 2011

on pacing as a dervish whirls

One of the greatest gifts a leader can give to another is the gift of non-anxious presence.

She has lost her job, her father, her husband and her home all in the space of a year. She is understandably troubled. Is she losing her mind? Was she simply deluded to believe that life could be blessed? “Where are you God?” All certainties have crumbled. The sea swelled, it seems, in an instant and the skies opened up; it is storming now, suddenly. Tears come easier than smiles. Will she live out the rest of her days in mourning? Where can she turn?

If only Jesus were here to sit with her and weep. He may have come late, but everything would be better now, everything would be okay.

“Where were you, Rabbi?”

We have been worrying, wringing our hands, hearts wrenched. Wretched. Pacing as a dervish whirls. What shall we do? What shall be done?

“Master, if only you had come when we called you! Where were you? He’s dead now and nothing can be done. Of this I am certain.”

If only Jesus were here; we could hear his words again: “Do not let your hearts be troubled. In this world you will have trouble. But, take heart: I have overcome the world.”

He is not troubled. From where does this confidence come? And how can he be so certain everything will turn out alright? What can be the meaning of such a statement when he told us just the other day he would be crucified? He is not troubled.

I cannot know why he is not troubled. I cannot know. Perhaps he knows that after the killing comes the creating. I do not know. I do know something seems askew with this life. I do know we were not made for mere death. I do know I was made for love.

I know that his presence with me somehow carries both imminence and transcendence. It is both now and not yet. It is constant. It is able to hold me, it has held me and I take it on faith-contrary-to-feelings that it will yet hold me. Beginning and End, who was and is and is to come. He is eternally faithful even in the midst of present injustice. How can this be? Simply by his presence. Simply by his non-anxious presence.

Can we be Jesus to each other in the midst of our crises? Even if we are late in coming, can we impart hope by grounding ourselves in hope? We may not be able to explain everything, but let us not try to. Let us simply be with each other in our losses and sorrows. We may give a great gift to another, standing strong side-by-side.