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Home > Articles > Humble Pie
Humble Pie
4 good lessons from a bad decision


Topics:Authenticity, Character, Confession, Humility, Leadership, Mistakes
Filters:Church board, Management, Pastor, Volunteer
Purpose:Discipleship
References:Proverbs 12:1, Ephesians 4:2
Date Added:January 02, 2008

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Posted: January 11, 2008
Richard Linares  (Guest)
As i read this I was so encouraged of your testimony of Honesty. I as a student of a Bible Institute have always felt the importance of honesty. I have made some mistakes and have seen the hand of God When I choose to Humble myself rather that to be pridefull. Blessings to you and your church.


Posted: July 30, 2008
Paulina Kumah  (Guest)
This is just fantastic. May the Lord help us to remain humble and sincerely seek His will in all things. God bless you.


Posted: April 23, 2008
Saleem John,  (Guest)
CHRISTIANITY In the following article an account is given of Christianity as a religion, describing its origin, its relation to other religions, its essential nature and chief characteristics, but not dealing with its doctrines in detail nor its history as a visible organization. These and other aspects of this great subject will receive treatment under separate titles. Moreover, the Christianity of which we speak is that which we find realized in the Catholic Church alone; hence, we are not concerned here with those forms which are embodied in the various non-Catholic Christian sects, whether schematically or heretical. Our documentary sources of knowledge about the origin of Christianity and its earliest developments are chiefly the New Testament Scriptures and various sub-Apostolic writings, the authenticity of which we must to a large extent take for granted here, as the much less grounds we take for granted the authenticity of "Cesar" when dealing with early Gaul, and of "Tacitus


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 1 of 3

"What am I supposed to do with this?" I handed my wife a photo of "Ground-breaking Sunday." It was a beautiful scene. Senior citizens, children, new families, and our leadership team were celebrating the start of construction on our new ministry center. She graciously smiled and said, "Frame it, and let it be a reminder of your need to be humble."

The picture that was supposed to represent a great moment in the life of our church actually represented some deeply personal lessons on how to lead a congregation through risk, uncertainty, and failure.

Four years earlier, I had cast the vision for this new facility we desperately needed. Our leadership team had determined to pursue a capital campaign that relied completely upon the gifts of our people. No debt. Our church family had given faithfully over a three-year period, and our construction estimates indicated that we finally had enough funding.

The final bids came back a few days after Groundbreaking Sunday. Much to our dismay, they were markedly higher than anyone expected. We would have to reduce the size of the project, renege on our commitment to build the facility debt-free, or ask our people for more money. Panicked, I asked our building chairman, "So, what exactly did we do on Groundbreaking Sunday?"

"I think we need to look at it as a ceremonial groundbreaking," he said.

I groaned.

Immediately, we faced two issues: our leadership team had to determine how we were going to address this problem, and we had to decide what to communicate to our church.

From the beginning, we determined that process was as important as product, especially in our situation. Eventually, we asked our church for an additional $130,000 and an extension of their previous pledge commitments for another three years. They overwhelmingly supported our direction, funded the $130,000 two months ahead of schedule, and over-committed to the remaining need. We were stunned.

God used the crucible of risk as a teachable moment for me, for our leadership team, and for our church family. My hope is that the lessons we learned will guide us through our next season of crisis or at least make us a little more confident the next time we have to say, "We don't know what to do."

Lesson 1: Take the opportunity to be humble.

I began to view our crisis differently when I chose to embrace humility. This did not come easily. In fact, the critical moment happened during a leadership meeting. Our pastors and deacons were discussing the options and how to inform the church family. I suggested we should at least do something—like removing trees or grading the property— so that our people would be encouraged that we were making progress. I was looking for cover.

One of our pastors expressed his concern about that idea.

"We should be honest with the church," he countered, "not just manage perceptions."