Leaders are involved in one of the most morally significant callings
on earth, and nothing the leader touches is without moral meaning and
importance. While the leader shares the same basic moral requirements as
everyone else, there are certain virtues that the leader simply cannot
do without.
In making us in his image, God created human beings as moral
creatures. Our minds are constantly in a moral mode of thinking and
reasoning. Our consciences demand attention, and we are continually
observing others around us for moral signals.
Our Creator gave us laws, principles, precepts, and commandments that
guide us, convict us, and protect us. Christian leaders know to be
thankful for the common morality that is revealed in nature and has been
recognized in some form in virtually every civilization and culture. We
are also thankful for the specific moral instruction given to us in the
Bible through the commandments and statutes and laws that frame our
Christian moral knowledge.
Furthermore, we must recognize the importance of the moral order
represented by the government, which, after all, was also given to us by
our Creator in order that we might live in societies of order and
peace. If these structures of law and morality did not exist, leadership
would be impossible.
But laws and commandments are not enough. Leadership requires the
possession and cultivation of certain moral virtues that allow
leadership to happen. If the leader does not demonstrate these essential
virtues, disaster is certain. Consider these people who have changed
the moral landscape of modern life. When you hear the name Richard
Nixon, the first thing that comes to mind is the fact that he became the
first (and so far, only) president of the United States who had to
resign from office. When you hear of Enron, the first thing we all
remember is the spectacular failure and collapse of a major American
corporation, at least in part because of fraudulent valuations. Continue at Al Mohler
No comments:
Post a Comment