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Some of us remember reading and
using Olan Hendrix’s classic Management For The Christian Worker. He has
had over fifty years of ministry experience with church and para-church
organizations. He has learned over those years of ministry that one of the key
ingredients to accomplishing a mission is to have effective leaders in place.
You need leaders doing the things that make them effective, and not doing those
things that can distract from their leadership. For an organization, including
the church, to be effective, the leaders need to have a plan with measurable
goals and divisions of labor within the body.
At our 2003 conference on
Christian schools, co-sponsored by Christian Schools International, Christian
Education and Publications invited Olan Hendrix to be a keynote speaker on this
topic. Governance was at the top of the list for many schools surveyed on their
school’s greatest challenge. The Three Dimensions of Leadership contains
much helpful information that can be transferable to the local church.
In our seminars on strategic
planning, CE&P has emphasized that planning is not unspiritual and certainly not
unbiblical. God himself is the master planner and history is the unfolding of
the consummation of his master plan. Nor does planning excuse the leadership
from the responsibility of much prayer and homework. As Hendrix reminds,
planning, done biblically, does not mean depending less on the Lord but rather
knowing what he expects of us in serving his purpose in the church.
Hendrix writes, “Leadership
without management is fluff. Management without leadership is mechanical.” That
statement sets the stage for discussing the what, why, and how of leadership.
Hendrix also relates leadership to management because the two, while
inseparable, are different.
I am so glad that our
Westminster Confession of Faith speaks to the sufficiency of Scripture. We
can, by God’s common grace, glean some helpful and practical advice on
leadership and management from the area of general revelation. Although the
Scripture is not a management textbook, it is a book that reflects the
outstanding traits of good leaders while warning us of characteristics that
cause much ill through the history of God’s people. Not all problems in
organizations (particularly churches) are spiritual in nature. Some result from
simply not doing commonsense things in planning, budgeting, organizing and
training the people.
The church and most Christian
schools are governed by volunteers, which require a different approach from paid
staff. There are some practical points we need to remember when working with
those volunteers. This book includes several. Hendrix continues to learn better
ways to accomplish a mission. I appreciate that about him. In this book he
reflects his appreciation for the work of John Craver. He has learned from
Craver how to take the concepts of governance and apply it to Christian schools,
other Christian ministries, and churches. Following the Craver governance model,
Hendrix reminds us of the need for the board to be clear regarding its own work,
to resist the temptation to micro-manage, and how to relate to the
organization’s staff in a way that enables them to evaluate the results or ends
of the organization’s mission.
I have and am presently serving
on several boards where applying some of Hendrix’s principles and concepts have
proven to be most helpful in keeping the ministry and mission clearly in focus.
Asking and answering the question, “how are we doing regarding our mission” is a
key to effective leadership and management. Elders, deacons, Christian school
boards, and other ministries will find much to glean from these154 pages. This
would be a good study guide on what we call strategic faith planning.
- Charles Dunahoo, CEP
Coordinator
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