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Leading with Zeal through Personnel Season

BlogLeadwithZeal5.26.16

"Zeal is the great desire to make God known, loved, and served, and thus to bring knowledge and salvation to others[Leaders] who possess it fulfill the duties of their profession with enthusiasm, love, courage, and perseveranceTo reach it, [leaders] must neglect nothing. Without it, everything falls apart."

- Blessed Basil Moreau


The phrase "Lead With Zeal" immediately conjures up images of a smiling, upbeat leader who jubilantly moves about her school lovingly investing in people, while offering encouragement and a positive vision for the future. Moreau captures this concept in the first two adjectives he uses to describe zeal — "enthusiasm" and "love."

But please don't miss the next adjective: "courage."

As we move through personnel season, far too often I see faith-based school leaders shrink back from tough conversations. Cowardice is disguised and passed off as "Christian humility" and "kindness." I even had a leader say to me once, "We're all sinners. How can I, a sinner, sit in judgment on the performance of one of my teachers, a fellow sinner?" To steal a quote from Samuel Johnson: "Doctrine is the last refuge of a scoundrel"

It's not that these conversations are easy. In "The Advantage," leadership guru Patrick Lencioni writes:

"Many leaders who struggle with this (I'm one of them) will try to convince themselves that their reluctance is a product of their kindness; they just don't want to make their employees feel bad. But an honest assessment of their motivation will allow them to admit that they are the ones who don't want to feel bad and that failing to hold someone accountable is ultimately an act of selfishness. After all, there is nothing noble about withholding information that can help an employee improve. Eventually that employee's lack of improvement is going to come back to haunt him in a performance review or when he is let go. And I'm pretty sure there is nothing kind about firing someone who has not been confronted about his performance." (59)

When I'm faced with a tough personnel conversation, I remind myself that Jesus is walking with me in this work. I also repeatedly say two simple prayers leading up to the conversation.

  1. "Father, give me boldness-I'm doing this for the kids and to serve you."

  2. "Holy Spirit-Please give me the words to say."

When we submit ourselves to the Spirit and keep ourselves in humility before Christ and the students we are called to serve, he will give us boldness. He will give us the words to say. In doing so, we will fully live out Moreau's vision of Zeal-leading not just with energy, enthusiasm, and love but also leaning into tough conversations with courage and boldness in the name of Christ.