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![]() by Dr. Lester Hutson
Chapter
17
True Leaders Are Consistent
By
Dr. Lester Hutson I Corinthians 15:58
"Therefore, my beloved
brethren, be ye steadfast, unmovable, always abounding in the
work of the Lord, forasmuch as ye know that your labor is not in
vain in the Lord." Oh, consistency, thou art
a rare jewel! It is extremely hard to be consistent, and it is
doubtful that any of us are fully consistent. Very few people
follow for long those who often and unpredictably reverse
themselves without rhyme or reason. Consistency is a basic
component of all good leaders. It should be noted that we are
speaking here of consistency in a good sense. One can
consistently do wrong and keep things in trouble. One can be
consistently inconsistent. A broken clock is very consistent,
and there's amazing consistency in a graveyard. So, this
discussion is about consistency in a Godly approach and holy
lifestyle. I'm saying Godly leaders
must be consistent in right things and that inconsistency in
right living is a great enemy to leaders. It will undermine
effectiveness right away. Faithfulness and
dependability With the idea of
consistency comes the idea of faithfulness and dependability.
When someone or something is consistent, you know what to expect
and can conduct yourself accordingly. The rotation of the earth
is very consistent. It takes twenty-four hours for the earth to
make one full revolution on it's axis. Because of this
consistency the whole world conducts its affairs upon the basis
of a twenty-four hour day. Watches are built to reflect this
consistency, mathematical calculations depend upon its
exactness, astronauts go in and out of space depending upon this
consistency, television networks schedule accordingly, and
business and industry operate upon its strength. Likewise, the earth
revolves around the sun once every 365 1/4 days. Again, the
whole world banks on this consistency. Light travels at fixed
rate of speed, as does sound. Study an atomic table. You'll find
each basic element has a fixed weight as well as other
never-varying characteristics. Elements in various unions all
have very predictable characteristics. The fixed laws of science
are based on total consistency in the natural universe.
Suppose periodically,
without warning or predictability, the earth rotated fully on
its axis in ten hours. Suppose it took ten hours one day, 30
hours three days later, and 23 1/2 hours every now and then.
Think what such erratic behavior would do to the whole system of
world activities. Clocks would become useless. Plans involving
time would be a joke. If years were not exact in their length,
the four seasons would soon be destroyed. Should atomic weights,
the speed of light, and other scientific facts start to vary,
you could never be sure that two plus two would equal four.
Physics, biology, chemistry and all the exacting sciences could
exist no more. Consistency means
faithfulness, trustworthiness, uniformity, sameness and
continuity. People who are consistent are not always reversing
themselves and acting in odd, illogical ways. People who are
consistent are predictable. They can be depended on. One of the great qualities or
aspects of our God is His consistency and faithfulness.
I Corinthians 1:9 says God is faithful. That's why we
know that every one who believes on the Son is saved. That's why
we know that all of His children who confess their sins are
forgiven of their guilt. That's the basis of all our future
hopes, His return, our new bodies, our eternity with Him.
God says, "I change not," in
Malachi 3:6. Hebrews 13:8
declares "Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and today, and
forever." Even ancient King Darius, the Persian, said, "He is
the living God, and steadfast forever," in Daniel 6:26.
His love never varies. His justice is without contradiction. His
laws are always the same. Psalms 119:86 says,
"All thy commandments are faithful." Every attribute of God is
100% consistent, and He is the greatest example of all in what
every child of His, especially leaders, should be. Scriptural examples
In scripture, God's most
effective servants were always very consistent people. You can't
miss the consistency in Daniel. For example, he was a man of
consistent prayer. Everybody knew it. Because his enemies knew
his regular prayer life, they knew that could entangle him by
getting a law passed against prayer, which they did in
Daniel 6:4-9. Yet Daniel 6:10 says,
"Now when Daniel knew that the writing was signed, he went into
his house; and his windows being open in his chamber toward
Jerusalem, he kneeled upon his knees three times a day, and
prayed, and gave thanks before his God, as he did aforetime."
Note well the last four words of
verse 10, "as he did aforetime." We're talking
consistency, folks. What a testimonial to Daniel you'll see in
Daniel 6:16! The king of Persia said to Daniel,
"Thy God whom thou servest continually, he will deliver thee."
Not only did the king respect Daniel's God, he did so because of
the consistency he'd seen in Daniel for so long. Galatians 3:9
tells us Abraham was faithful. Even God gave testimonial to his
consistency in Genesis 18:19 when he said, "For
I know him, that he will command his children and his household
after him, and they shall keep the way of the Lord, to do
justice and judgment; that the Lord may bring upon Abraham that
which he hath spoken of him." Paul referred to Timothy, "who is
my beloved son, and faithful in the Lord," in I
Corinthians 4:17. He also called "Tychius, a beloved
brother, and faithful minister in the Lord," in
Ephesians 6:21. Even the runaway slave, Onesimus,
gained such consistency in the Lord that Paul called him "a
faithful and beloved brother," in Colossians 4:9.
Look at all the great
Bible heroes and heroines, and you'll see that the more
consistent they became, the more useful they were to God:
Joseph, Moses, David, Paul, Simon Peter and all the rest.
Reality sets in Compare what we are
discussing here with the preachers, dads and other Christian
leaders you know. Sad to say, but in far too many instances,
there's an enormous gap. Pastors are hot and cold, on and off.
Sometimes they preach good sermons; sometimes they preach duds.
Their attitudes are often unpredictable. Week after week and
month after month it's hard to find a consistency. Things go
along pretty well for awhile, then there's a big blow-up. Their
disposition changes. In other cases, they're
downright whimsical with the church. They never seem to get on
any definite course of development, numerical or spiritual, and
stay with it. They never develop a consistent missions ministry,
or music program or system of administration. Things stay in a
state of flux. A sort of fickleness and frivolous spirit
prevails. Things are always out of step. Yet, many pastors
wonder why folks don't want to follow them, and they blame
everything and everybody but their own inconsistent selves.
Likewise, the
inconsistency within homes has led to the demise and ruin of
many a child: no consistency in discipline, inconsistency in
honesty in parents, double standards at church versus home, no
consistent financial policy at home, inconsistencies in
interpersonal relationships, erratic support of the Lord's
church, and the list could go on a long time. Similar applications
could be made with departmental church leaders, teachers, older
brothers and sisters in the Lord, Christian businessmen and all
areas of leadership. Fixed positions Consistency or
faithfulness is the product of true commitment to fixed
positions. To be consistent, a Godly leader must have
convictions that certain things are absolutely right because God
says they are, and he must be committed to God's positions
trumping or overriding him regardless of the circumstances.
We're talking here about people believing in the fixed positions
of God and yielding to them. For example, when one is
truly committed to honesty because it is of God and right,
you'll find consistent honesty in that person. His fixed
position on honesty will make for consistent honesty in his
speech and practice. A young boy is reported
to have been on a witness stand in a very important trial. The
cross-examining attorney was trying hard to break down his
testimony, but to no avail. Finally he looked the ten year old
right in the eye, and with an intimidating stare asked,
"Boy, did your daddy tell
you what to say when you came here?" The little fellow said,
"Yes, sir, he did." The cocky attorney
gleefully said, "Ah ha! Just what did he tell you to say?"
The little boy meekly
replied, "Sir, he just told me to tell the truth." Commitment to fixed
positions produces a consistent testimony, consistent answers to
scientific problems and consistency in every other area where
such commitment exists. If you believe in pure math, you can get
consistent answers to math problems. If you are committed to a
good compass, you can consistently navigate the world. If you
are committed to truth, you'll be consistently honest. If you
are truly committed to Biblical principles of finance, you'll
have a consistent economic policy. If you really believe in what
the Bible says about forgiveness, you'll never hold a grudge and
consistently work out your problems with others. Once you come to God's
fixed position on authority, you'll find yourself uniformly
submitting and humble and constructive, be it in church
government, home government or political government. Once you
believe honest work is God's way, you'll never be lazy and
slothful and a waster, but you'll be consistently trying hard.
Finally, commitment to the true
God above will bring you eternal life. Yes, consistency comes
out of commitment to fixed positions, and for a Christian, those
positions are God's positions, as set forth in the Bible, the
Word of God. A firm faith in the unchanging Word of God is the
only way to bring real stability and consistency to your life.
David said, "I thought on my ways, and turned my feet unto thy
testimonies," in Psalms 119:59. True commitment to
forgiveness, humility, truth and integrity begins to put you in
a predictable mold. People learn what to expect and are not
afraid to follow. Ephesians 4:11-16
illustrates this truth particularly well. Verse 14
says, "That we henceforth be no more children, tossed to and
fro, and cast about with every wind of doctrine, by the sleight
of men, and cunning craftiness, whereby they lie in wait to
deceive." The phrase "tossed to and fro" is the Greek word
kludonizomai (kloo-de-nid'-zom-ahee) literally meaning "to
surge; to fluxuate." The idea is that of the mighty seas in a
storm. The destructive powers of a surging, raging sea is
enormous. The ever-beating wave action is so erratic and
unpredictable. Unpredictable surges of
any type can be disastrous. Just ask a computer operator who has
experienced a sudden surge of power right in the middle of data
work. The question is, how can a believer avoid the "tossing to
and fro" or the erratic, conflicting inconsistency in his life?
From Ephesians 4:11-12
you will see that before the completion of the scriptures, God
gave certain men special gifts to stabilize the saints. Then, in
verse 13, you will see that once the scriptures
were completed, they became the source of unity, faithfulness,
or consistency among believers. Commitment to the scriptures
keeps people from inconsistently being "tossed to and fro, and
carried about with every wind of doctrine." Commitment to the
fixed positions of God in the scriptures puts people on a firm,
straight, consistent course in life. II Timothy 3:15-17
says the scriptures will "thoroughly furnish"
God's people "unto all good works." These scriptures were called
by Jude, "The faith which was once delivered unto the saints,"
verse 3. That faith, once delivered, is
precisely what Paul was predicting in Ephesians 4:13
when he said the early Christians would have specially empowered
men for stability only until "we all come in the unity of the
faith." The "unity of the faith" in Ephesians 4:13
is the same as "the faith once delivered" in Jude 3.
Today, if one is going to
have consistency in his life, he is going to have to commit to
the faith once delivered, make it his own guiding code for life,
and submit to it through thick and thin, regardless of the
circumstance. The more he does that, the more consistent,
dependable and predictable he'll be. The people who reject and
refuse to embrace fixed principles cannot possibly be
consistent. Relativity is the opposite of absolute, and people
who make decisions relative to the situations they face will
constantly be reversing and contradicting themselves and be
about as consistent as a twig tossed to and fro by a raging sea.
I'll tell you, inconsistent
pastors are smiting themselves. So are inconsistent dads and
bosses and others. Inconsistency says the heart is not fixed on
unchanging principles, for out of the "abundance of the heart"
come the words and deeds of life, which will either be
consistent or inconsistent. It's only when the heart is fixed on
the sovereign, unchanging truths of God that the life is
consistently right. No wonder Peter wrote of resisting the
devil, "steadfast in the faith," in I Peter 5:9.
That's the only way anybody is going to be steadfast.
There is no steadfastness
outside "the faith once delivered to the saints." Get in the
Word. Let God, through it, be your master. Once you let Him
guide you through His Word, your life will come into a straight,
consistent line that anyone can see, just as the Persians knew
what to expect from Daniel at prayer time.
Taproot of trust Consistency is the
taproot of trust, which is the most vital ingredient of all in
the leader-follower relationship. Once people begin to see you
repeatedly responding right under situation after situation,
they begin to believe that's the way you'll respond the next
time. Trust! It's a delicate thing. It can be crushed with one
inconsistent blow, and it may take years to rebuild it to even
half of what it was. Trust cannot be bought nor demanded. It
must be earned, and only genuine consistency earns it.
You can't lead people if
they don't trust you. You may as well face it. Intimidation
won't get you a true following. It may get you what you want for
a little while, but the followers will sooner or later bolt on
you if they do not follow because they want to follow. That's
the reason pulpit whippings are so foolish. That's the reason
parents who control their children only by force are already in
trouble even if they don't know it. That's why bosses who
intimidate never get good production. People don't really follow
and support those they don't trust. Nothing destroys trust
like inconsistency. You let a preacher pay most of his debts,
but get turned into the credit bureau over one he didn't pay,
and that one bad debt will make him an untrustworthy risk to
every other merchant and to all his church members who hear
about it. Let parents ignore the wrongs of their kids until they
get mad, then give a beating, and I'll show you kids who don't
trust their parents and who won't long follow their leadership.
When people in a church learn you are treating them royally to
their face, but talking against them behind their backs, that
inconsistency will destroy their trust or confidence in you.
Why do people trust cars?
Consistency! Why do people expect the sun to rise every morning?
Consistency! What makes mates trust mates? Consistency! They've
learned over the years to trust because of the consistent
faithfulness they've seen. Oh, Christian leaders, be
faithful! Be consistent! Your people must see it, or they won't
follow. They must learn to trust you, to depend on you, and only
consistency on your part will convince them. Your promises won't
do it. They must see consistency in you. As a faithful or
consistent servant, you have this promise in Psalms
31:32, "The Lord preserveth the faithful." God's call God knows that consistency or
faithfulness is vital to leadership, so over and over, He calls
on his servants to serve Him faithfully and consistently. He
says in I Corinthians 4:2, "Moreover it is
required in stewards, that a man be found faithful." Hear Him in I Corinthians
15:58, "Therefore, my beloved brethren, be ye
steadfast, unmovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord,
forasmuch as ye know that your labor is not in vain in the
Lord." He warns against our becoming
erratic and inconsistent in II Peter 3:17, when
He says, "Ye therefore, beloved, seeing ye know these things
before, beware lest ye also, being led away with the error of
the wicked, fall from your own steadfastness." Paul said the main reason God
called him into the ministry was his faithfulness or
consistency. Listen to I Timothy 1:12, "And I
thank Christ Jesus our Lord, who hath enabled me, for that he
counted me faithful, putting me into the ministry." When it came to who should be
entrusted with leading the work of God, Paul told Timothy, "And
the things that thou hast heard of me among many witnesses, the
same commit thou to faithful men, who shall be able to reach
others also," in II Timothy 2:2. God tells us to be always
consistent, "faithful unto death" in Revelation 2:10.
Then, this great promise of God is made in Psalms 101:6,
"Mine eyes shall be upon the faithful of the land, that they may
dwell with me: he that walketh in a perfect way, he shall serve
me." The ones who consistently do
right are the ones He lets serve. If you want to gain His
approval as a leader, you'd better quit acting like a trick
knee. You'd better become consistent and trustworthy. We already
know that when the servants of God stand before Him to receive
rewards for their service, it will be those who served Him
consistently who will hear Him say, "Well done, thou good and
faithful servant," as in Matthew 25:21. Both at
the judgment and now while we serve as mortals, consistency pays
off with huge dividends. Do you want to be a good
leader? If so, among other things, get consistency into your
system. You'll never make it as an effective leader if you
don't.
"It Does Make a Difference What You Believe"
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