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Leaders crash. Christian leaders disappoint. Ministries implode. Relationships fracture. Why? Is it lack of accountability? Misaligned priorities? Board failures? Sometimes. But there's often something deeper--an idolatry around power and glory, deep in the human heart. At the start of John 13-17, before Jesus teaches or prays or does anything else, he serves . . . his enemies! At the moment when he had every excuse to care for himself--facing the cross, of course--he serves . . . his enemies. How do we serve like Jesus? And how is this the antidote to the leadership failures we see so prevalently?
By Rob TrenckmannLeaders crash. Christian leaders disappoint. Ministries implode. Relationships fracture. Why? Is it lack of accountability? Misaligned priorities? Board failures? Sometimes. But there's often something deeper--an idolatry around power and glory, deep in the human heart. At the start of John 13-17, before Jesus teaches or prays or does anything else, he serves . . . his enemies! At the moment when he had every excuse to care for himself--facing the cross, of course--he serves . . . his enemies. How do we serve like Jesus? And how is this the antidote to the leadership failures we see so prevalently?