It’s a new year, and most people are thinking ahead and looking to the future. In God’s house, it is a time when church and ministry leaders are considering things like vision and mission statements, strategic planning, and goals for the coming season.
Unfortunately, with the unexpected past season of COVID, standard vision planning and evaluations have been significantly disrupted, fostering uncertainty. If your assessment of vision success is linked to the number of people coming to weekly meetings in a building, it has been a troubling time.
Many seek God to change or dust up their vision statements and missional goals with the new year. Some incorporate methods and tools from the business arena because of the influence of the past 50-60 years of the church growth movement. It has brought both helpful and harmful things to the body of Christ, especially with the ideas of leadership, vision, and success. It has resulted in an entire leadership industry that has fostered an entrepreneurial, CEO, mega, celebrity-branded approach to pursuing vision, mission, and success.
Many leaders have a narrative that is more like an entrepreneurial success story than a God-given vision. They often sound like an American rags-to-riches story. Almost overnight, an anonymous leader gets a vision and moves to international influence. He and his organization/church became an epicenter of expanding spiritual enlightenment. They move from struggling for survival to thriving in abundance. They increase in numbers, influence, platforms, and measurable success.
While these stories are appealing, it is essential to remember that our ideas of leadership, vision, and moving forward should also include examples from God’s word. We are not simply to pursue cultural ideas of vision and success but God’s.
Biblical Leadership Success Stories
When you consider the leaders highlighted in Hebrews chapter 11 (referred to as heroes of the faith), you quickly realize they probably wouldn’t be asked to share their testimonies at any of the mega leadership summits that are popular today.
Nothing was said about Enoch’s successful vision implementation. He didn’t achieve five and ten-year goals. He didn’t leave a thriving organization behind that had a mega impact. He walked with God, pleased Him, and God took him to heaven early.
How about Noah, who spent about 100 years preaching and building an ark to save people, and only his natural family responded? Later on, he had moral failings, which eventually caused great hardship in his family. Today, we consider a church with only the leader’s family involved a colossal failure. The family dysfunction would make it even worse.
Then there was the father of our faith, Abraham. He was an important leader to all of us because Jesus is “Abraham’s Seed.” Abraham left his hometown in pursuit of God’s vision. However, there were some problems with his five and ten-year plans because he didn’t seem to have any. He actually “went out not knowing where he was going” (Hebrews 11:8), “wandering around, looking for a city whose builder and maker was God” (Hebrews 11:9-10). He never found that city in his lifetime, and his story had many ups, downs, failures, and successes.
Hebrews 11 summarizes the results of vision in these leaders’ lives “All these died in faith without having received the promises even though they saw them and welcomed them from a distance” (Hebrews 11:13).
I am not highlighting these things to justify leaders who don’t seem to have much initiative or vision. I want to consider another aspect of vision, seen in the Bible, that much of the leadership industry today cannot entertain. Yet, it is more in line with biblical ideas of vision.
The Apostle Paul and His Vision
God’s vision affected Paul differently. Many mega leadership vision clichés wouldn’t fit well into Paul’s life. “Dream big and lead big; Announce your vision and keep pushing the envelope; Get disruptive and run your vision up the flagpole; Get the right people on and off the bus; Use win-win strategies with your team; Let the vision take you outside the box, then keep coloring outside the lines; bigger, bigger, bigger, success, success, and success.”
Near the end of Paul’s life, he made his famous statement about vision as he stood before King Agrippa while heading to a season of imprisonment and eventual death.
- Acts 26:19 “So, King Agrippa, I did not prove disobedient to the heavenly vision.”
Consider how this vision played out in Paul’s life. He left a promising career with the Pharisees. He received his education at the school of Gamaliel (Acts 22:3), one of the most noted rabbis in history. Paul had a great lineage “of the tribe of Benjamin, a Hebrew of Hebrews” (Phil 3:5), and was a legal scholar. All of this set Paul for a future of success in climbing the Pharisaical ladder for more significant influence and prestige. Who knows the pinnacle he would have achieved?
When God initially captured Paul, He sent Ananias to pray for him and help impart vision. Many mega-vision stories don’t contain an element seen in Paul.
- Acts 9:15-17… he is a chosen instrument of Mine, to bear My name before the Gentiles and kings and the sons of Israel; 16 for I will show him how much he must suffer for My name’s sake.
Paul sees it as part of his vision as he was going to Jerusalem.
- Acts 20:22-24 “And now, behold, bound by the Spirit, I am on my way to Jerusalem, not knowing what will happen to me there, 23 except that the Holy Spirit solemnly testifies to me in every city, saying that bonds and afflictions await me. 24 “But I do not consider my life of any account as dear to myself, so that I may finish my course and the ministry which I received from the Lord Jesus.
“Not knowing what will happen; bonds and afflictions await me” does not sound like a successful vision. Yet Paul continued receiving prophetic confirmations to keep moving forward to fulfill it.
- Acts 21:10-11…a prophet named Agabus came down from Judea. 11 And coming to us, he took Paul’s belt and bound his own feet and hands, and said, “This is what the Holy Spirit says: ‘In this way the Jews at Jerusalem will bind the man who owns this belt and deliver him into the hands of the Gentiles.”
God’s vision was costly to Paul. He shared the details to the Corinthians.
- 2 Corinthians 11:24-28 Five times I received from the Jews thirty-nine lashes. 25 Three times I was beaten with rods, once I was stoned, three times I was shipwrecked, a night and a day I have spent in the deep. 26 I have been on frequent journeys, in dangers from rivers, dangers from robbers, dangers from my countrymen, dangers from the Gentiles, dangers in the city, dangers in the wilderness, dangers on the sea, dangers among false brethren; 27 I have been in labor and hardship, through many sleepless nights, in hunger and thirst, often without food, in cold and exposure. 28 Apart from such external things, there is the daily pressure on me of concern for all the churches.
There is usually a costly element to a God-given vision. If not, it may just be a good idea centered on a rags-to-riches story rather than a biblical vision.
Five questions you need to consider about vision
- What are the things God has shown you that you cannot, not do, even if it costs you inconvenience and suffering? Vision isn’t something you are content with knowing; you must pursue it. It limits you from going after other things that distract you from it.
- What things has God shown you that are so important you would be willing to leave a “successful” group of 1000 who are not following it to join with a smaller group of 20 who are?
- What things has God shown you that would cause you to leave a city with lots of opportunities to move to a smaller place that doesn’t have them (or leave the security of a smaller town to embrace the insecurity of a bigger city)?
- What things has God shown you to pursue that are so important you will live downwardly mobile instead of upwardly mobile according to society’s ideas of success?
- What things has God shown that would compel you to take a job with half your current salary to put you in a place where you could more fully pursue His vision?
We can describe Biblical vision as a compelling picture of a future God has shown you that you will pursue faithfully to see become a reality. Consider these questions before God as we look ahead to our planning for the new year.
Doug Kreighbaum