Rather, whoever
wishes to be great among you will be your servant;
whoever wishes to
be first among you will be the slave of all.
For the Son of
Man did not come to be served
but to serve and
to give his life as a ransom for many."
Mark 10:43 - 45
Pope Gregory I, in an attempt to
out-manoeuvre John IV, archbishop of Constantinople (who claimed for himself
the title of Ecumenical Patriarch), called himself
the Servant of the Servants of God. It remains a title of the Roman Pontiff.
The desire for power or self-aggrandizement
has accompanied humanity on its journey through history, and it has produced
extraordinary, ordinary, disappointing and disastrous leaders. Some are acutely
aware of their charisma, of their responsibility, of the effect their actions
have on others, while others walk all over others in the process of achieving
their goals.
What we do know, is that the model of
leadership that places service to others as its priority is, on the whole, rare
to see. Its proponents have tended to be deeply committed to an ideal: Aung San
Suu Kyi, Mahatma Gandhi, Mother Teresa of Calcutta, the Dalai Lama, Martin
Luther King, Dag Hammarskjöld,
Desmond Tutu, John Paul II, Nelson Mandela, Mary MacKillop. Their service for
others is driven by compasson and empathy, a desire to improve and transform
lives, a willingness to listen, to draw others into a new vision and to manage
resources with wisdom for the benefit of all. They may wield enormous power,
political, religious and sometimes economic, but in essence the ideal must be
achieved with a persistence, energy and strength that can only be the result of
a lifetime’s effort.
While the concept of servant leadership
has its beginnings in the market place of the 1970’s it was Robert Greenleaf
who explored the need for a new leadership that would value autonomy and human
dignity. The Christian servant leader goes further to model themselves on the
person of Jesus. The scriptures are a rich in images of Jesus washing the feet
of his disciples, as the good shepherd, Jesus breaking open the Word on the
road to Emmaus, being welcoming, challenging.
We have our share of
disappointments with elected leaders, no doubt, and there are some we may note
whose ambition for leadership has not been realized in office. But I firmly
propose that while there are some great international exemplars of servant
leadership, we meet servant leaders every day, and these people require no
title, no honorific in order to serve those in need. They labour for Vinnies,
Gran’s Van, Camp Quality, Eddie Rice Camps, Youth Off The Streets and a myriad
of other causes.
No comments:
Post a Comment