SOME PRINCIPLES TO LIVE BY
Walk in a deep, abiding faith in the Sovereign Almighty God.
This will produce the ability to
maintain composure, rest, and peace in the face of pressure, problems,
adversity, and conflict. It will prevent unwise and premature reaction, carnal
grasping and impulsiveness. Faith produces the grace to wait, endure, and
persevere. It will help produce a security that will counteract insecurity
which has caused problems for so many ministers and has hurt so many people.
Faith in the Sovereign God is at the heart of our ability to face life
redemptively. It is at the heart of Romans 8:28. “For all things work together
for good to those who love God and are called according to His purpose.”
Psalm 31: 14-15, Daniel 2:20-21, Psalm 75, Heb 11.
Walk with purity of heart and motive, sincerely seeking God’s will and God’s
interests.
This will produce a clarity in your ability to hear God and will produce
peace. When you desire God’s will, you can rest knowing He stands behind it.
This also removes the need to manipulate people or struggle to artificially
enforce and reinforce your own plans that might not be in tuned with God’s
will, way, or timing.
A pure heart will lend itself to producing good relationships. An impure heart
becomes affected by selfishness, pride, and wrong motives that hinder
relationships through jealousy, insecurity, competition, and ambition.
When your motives are pure, people will trust you and they will entrust things
to you. John 5: 30, Philip 2: 3-4,19-21, 4:17, Psalm 139: 23-24.
Engage the Lord at all times, to abide in Him, to maintain your
relationship, fellowship, and communion with Jesus Christ. For apart
from Him you can do nothing.
This intimate relationship with Him is the birthplace of vision and revelation,
and will produce enabling power, the ability to strengthen yourself in the Lord
and do what He has called you to do. The commission that comes from His
presence produces faith and boldness that overcome fear and discouragement. It
gives grace for obedience and suffering. An intimate walk with the Lord gives
you the ability to change and enables you to face the adjustments which are
necessary for life, progress, and growth. Otherwise, you will fall into rote,
ritual, and stagnation that choke life. John 15: 1-5, Acts 6:9, Ps 73:15-17,
Ephesians 2:14-20.
Lead by truth, influence, and example In your spiritual responsibilities.
This will require actual spiritual life and growth in your walk with the
Lord. It requires a real leader, a man upon whom the hand of God and His
anointing does rest. This will require a life of faith, obedience, and purity
of motive. Leaders who fail in this area end up overseeing a stagnant and
complacent flock, or they tend to drive the flock by domination, manipulation,
or intimidation. 1 Timothy 4:12, Acts 1:1-2.
Maintain integrity.
This means adhering to truth and being loyal to truth and reality. Do not speak
what is not true in trying to protect yourself or to get what you want. Do not
manipulate words and facts in order to get your way or control people. Do not
sacrifice a good conscience or moral integrity to accomplish your vision. If
your vision or any aspect of it ever seems cross-purpose to moral integrity,
you must choose moral integrity. Holding faith and a good conscience helps you
to avoid shipwreck. Holding faith means you know you are walking in God’s will.
Holding good conscience means you know you are walking in God’s way. Holding
faith and a good conscience means that what you allow and approve is not contrary
to God’s will and God’s way, and that in your heart you know that the Lord is
pleased and has approved your actions. 1 Timothy 1:18-19, Acts
20:18-20,26-27, Ps 86:11-12, Ps 15:1-5.
See yourself as the servant of Christ.
This will prevent you from serving yourself and being in bondage to man. Seeing
yourself as the Lord’s ambassador will help you not to take things personally,
since you represent HIM. A servant’s heart will help you walk in humility and
meekness. As the Lord’s servant you work in God’s field, in God’s household,
God’s vineyard…not your own. A steward is a servant who rules and governs what
belongs to another. Seeing yourself as the Lord’s servant will help you be
willing to suffer for His sake. Seeing yourself as God’s servant will help you
to realize that you also serve His people rather than lording it over
them. 1 Cor 4:1-2, 2 Cor 6:4-10, Daniel 3:16-18, 26-28. Psalm 143:11-12.
Be faithful to Jesus from the peak to the pit, on the mountain top, in the
valley, and everywhere in between.
You must handle success in a godly manner, not giving place to pride and
vainglory. You must also handle failure, either actual or only apparent, in a
godly manner and not give place to self-pity, self-centeredness, bitterness,
and despair. Know that mistakes are part of the growth process. We see this in
the lives of the twelve disciples. Be faithful to the Lord in good times of
blessing and in hard times of adversity and perplexity. Psalm 42:5-7,
Philippians 4:11-14.
Develop the ability to be a good listener.
Communication is essential in good leadership and in all relationships. And
this works in both directions. You must also listen as well as speak. The
scripture tells us to be easily entreated. A good listener often indicates a
good heart. It is one evidence of caring, love, and concern for other people.
Listening is necessary in building relationships. It will help you avoid
frustrating those you serve, and will prevent presumption, rash judgments, and
shallow answers on your part. You must hear the whole story before you make
judgments. Leaders need to be prophetically sensitive to the voice of the Holy
Spirit and be willing to listen to wise counsel, but they also must be willing
and able to listen to and hear those who follow them…their pains and needs as
well as their concerns and suggestions. Otherwise, they risk the folly of
Rehoboam who did not listen to wise counsel.
Proverbs 18:13, 2 Chronicles 10: 12-16 (10:1-16)
Walk in love and in the compassion of Christ.
Love reflects God’s own heart for His people and for the world. Compassion is a
vehicle for the presence and power of God and will release the work of the Holy
Spirit in and through you. Love will cause you to be gracious, gentle, and wise
in those times where truth alone would bring pain and hurt to people. It
tempers your actions when you might otherwise “strike the rock” rather than
“speaking” to it as the Lord might command. The absence of love represents an
insensitivity to the Holy Spirit and may also indicate wrong motivations. You
don’t want to be like the leader who loves crowds but hates people. Philemon
1:8-9, Matthew 9:36, Philippians 1:3-10
Disciple others. If you are a leader, build a team.
Don’t try to be superman; build a team. Success comes partly by a leader’s
ability to recognize legitimate areas of personal weakness, and by graciously
recognizing, receiving, and making opportunity for those complimentary and
various gifts that God
has given him in the men and women who surround him. A good leader is not
threatened by the anointing and gifts in those around him. He encourages them
rather than stifling them. 2 Timothy 2:2.
Be filled with the Holy Spirit and allow Him freedom to operate in you, in
those you lead, and in your fellow believers.
Walk in the gifts and manifestations of the Holy Spirit. The gifts of the
Spirit are the power of Christ manifested among us. Don’t quench the Holy
Spirit. The manifestations of the Holy Spirit are the actions and presence of
Christ at work in and through His people. Hunger for the Lord’s presence. Be
filled with the Holy Spirit. Do not grieve (Ephesians 4:30), quench (1
Thessalonians 5:19), or resist Him (Acts 7:51), but rather desire spiritual
gifts for yourself and for the church. And stir the gifts that are within
you when they appear. Do not neglect them.
1 Timothy 4:14; 2 Timothy 1:6; Luke 24:49; Acts 4: 29-33; 1 Corinthians 14:
1-11; 14:1.
Walk in the fruit of the Holy Spirit.
The fruit of the Holy Spirit represent the nature of Christ. As a follower of
Christ, you are charged to walk in love, joy, peace, longsuffering, kindness,
goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control. Galatians 5: 22-23.
Be faithful to the word of God and to the testimony of Jesus.
Proclaim and share the gospel of Jesus Christ as Savior and Lord. Believe and
live according to the Word of God. The word of God and the testimony of Jesus
are foundation blocks in our faith and are the two main objects of Satan’s
attacks. We must stand on scripture and proclaim Jeus’ death and resurrection.
He is Lord and savior. Matthew 28:18-20, Revelation 1:9, 1 Corinthians
15:1-8.
Strength. Stand with Endurance, perseverance, and
longsuffering.
The mark of spiritual maturity is
not “glory clouds” and glitter, but is perseverance, endurance, and continuing
in faith in all things.
Ephesians 6: 13-14, Luke 21:19,
Hebrews 6: 12-20, Luke 18:1, Hebrews 10:35-39, Matthew 13: 5-6, 20-21, Jeremiah
12:5, Proverbs 24:10.
Be bold to speak the gospel.
Throughout the Old Testament we see
the Lord exhorting His people to be bold, courageous and not to fear. When
Jesus commissioned His disciples He exhorted them many times saying “Do not
fear.” We see this principle lived out in the lives of the Apostle Paul and the
early Christians in the book of Acts. The word “bold” is used to describe them
many times. They were bold in the face of persecution. Boldness, conflict, and
the miraculous power of God go together. We fail to experience the power because
we in fear try to avoid the conflict. God loves boldness. It represents faith
and trust in God and a reverential fear of God. Proverbs 25:26 says a righteous
man who falters before the wicked, if he trembles, shakes, yields, compromises
his integrity through fear, he is like a muddied fountain and a polluted spring.
We are to be bold. We are not to cower, quit, compromise, or surrender.
Matthew 10: 19, 26, 28, 31. Acts 4: 29, Philip.1:20,
Emulate the Apostle
Paul’s charges given to Timothy in 2 Timothy chapters 2 and 4.
Preach the word. Be ready in season and out of season. Convince, rebuke, and
exhort with all longsuffering and teaching. Be watchful in all things, endure afflictions.
Do the work of an evangelist and fulfill your ministry. Be strong in the grace
of God. Be diligent to present yourself to God, a worker who does not need to
be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth. Be an example to the believers
in word, in conduct, in love, in spirit, in faith, in purity. Give attention to
the word of God in reading, exhortation, and teaching. Do not neglect the gift
that is within you but rather stir it up and use it to serve the Lord Jesus,
and to edify and build His Church.
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