Play to Your Strengths

Posted in Growing Leaders on Feb 22, 2012

Play to Your Strengths

One of the most disconcerting practices I find in the church is the near obsession we have with our faults and our weaknesses. I’m not sure who to blame for what amounts to bad theology, but it seems that Augustine, Calvin, Luther, and Wesley may all share some it. Or perhaps it’s the whole therapeutic model of pastoral care and counseling. Certainly, Christian Schwartz’s Church Health model is a contributor. Regardless, I see Christians, leaders, and churches expending untold resources to either bolster their weaknesses or struggling to turn their weaknesses into their strengths.

Don’t get me wrong, weaknesses can hamstring both churches and leaders, but I’ll deal with that particular issue next week. For now, let’s focus on what great leaders and great churches focus on: Their strengths.

One of the key reasons churches don’t grow is that they haven’t though through what they are best at … instead, they choose to try and be equally excellent in everything in order to reach everybody. The problem with that thinking is that few churches have the resources to be really excellent in more than one or two things, and since they focus on being good at everything, they effectively are at best mediocre at everything they do and in their vain attempts to reach everyone, they reach virtually no one.

It’s the same with most church leaders. Pareto may not have reflected the ideal, but he surely reflected the reality. We tend to spend only 20 percent of our energy on those things that make the most difference, while we twiddle away 80 percent of our time on the tasks that accomplish very little. A good part of the reason for that is that most church leaders try to do too much, and much of what they do they simply don’t do well. Let’s face it, someone who’s great at admin may not be the greatest evangelist. By the same token, a charismatic church-growth focused pastor may not have the pastoral-care compassion gene. What makes either of these a great leader is when they realize their strengths and focus their energy on getting even better within their giftedness.

Churches are the same way. Those churches that know what they do well … perhaps better than any other church in the community … and puts their resources in that area are those that regularly see significant growth.

So, what are your strengths? … and what is your key strength? If you’d be the leader or the church God’s gifted you to become you’ll put your eggs and your energies there.

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One Comment

  1. Feb 22, 2012

    Your nailed it on this post. I have found many people still believing its beneficial to work on weaknesses instead of strength, but over the last few years the strength movement has really picked up. I’m a firm believer in finding, developing, and using your strengths while avoiding you weaknesses. My desire and passions is to help church’s in this areas. Great post.

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