In today’s episode, we explore a profound leadership crisis facing our world and trace its origins through spiritual and historical insights. Drawing from scripture, we delve into the idea that leadership, much like other divine gifts, is distributed by God—and often to those least expected. As we take a journey through various biblical accounts, you will discover how these seemingly random acts of divine generosity challenge our understanding of merit and virtue in leadership.
SPEAKER 02 :
The CEM Network is pleased to present Ronald L. Dart and Born to Win.
SPEAKER 03 :
By now, everyone realizes that we have a leadership crisis. And it’s not only in our country. It’s in the world at large. And I wonder, how did we get to this place? Where does leadership come from? And maybe more important, where does it go? I believe that leadership is a gift from God. And if you want to spare me a little time, I’ll explain to you why I think that. First, two statements about gifts from God, one of them from the Apostle James, the other from the Psalms. The Apostle James said this in chapter 1, verse 17. Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above and comes down from the Father of lights with whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning. So we don’t need to look anywhere else for good, perfect gifts that come into the world. They come from God. The psalm is 68.18, which says this, You have ascended on high and led captivity captive. These are taken by many commentators to be a reference to Jesus Christ. You have received gifts for men, yea, for the rebellious also, that the Lord God might dwell among them. Blessed be the Lord who daily loads us with benefits, even the God of our salvation. Now, for some reason, we would tend to assume that God only gives his gifts to people who deserve them, right? We would think that God would give a gift to a righteous man. I used to think that. I would have told you that God gave his gifts to Christian people and to good Christian people at that. He didn’t give them just willy-nilly to anybody. But the psalmist says that he gives his gifts to the rebellious also. Now what are we to make of that? Well, we know that God causes it to rain on the just and the unjust. He doesn’t make the rain run down the property line with one man’s field getting a good wetting down and the other man’s getting dry and dusty, right? That the good man’s field gets the rain, the evil man’s field gets a drought. No, it doesn’t work that way. That would be a very effective technique for promoting righteousness, but God doesn’t work that way. Now, there’s a curious incident in the gospel accounts that I think may give us a hint as to the mind of God and the working of God into this very complicated subject I’m talking to you about. In Jerusalem, there was a pool called in Hebrew Bethesda. It had five porches. Bethesda, by the way, is the name of the major naval hospital in Washington, D.C., and it’s connected to this pool of Bethesda where people were healed. There’s an irony in it that may pass over some people. But anyway, at this pool, there was always a great multitude of impotent folk, of blind, halt, withered limbs, and so forth, waiting for the moving of the water. For at a certain season of the year, an angel went down into the pool. This is John telling us this, and he tells us not that it is rumored that it happened. John tells us this is what happened. An angel went down at a certain season into the pool, and he troubled the water. I don’t know how, just, I guess, stuck his hand in it and stirred it. Whoever then first, after the troubling of the water, stepped in was made whole of whatever disease he had. Now, you’ll have to admit this strange story. It’s an odd thing to consider this, because the guy that got healed on this occasion would not be the most righteous man of those waiting around the pool. It would not be the most deserving. It would not be the most crippled. It does, in fact… In most cases, it would be the least crippled man that was healed, right? Because the most crippled man couldn’t get there. This establishes something profound, if you can see it. What it establishes is that God’s gifts are not given for merit. They’re not given because you deserve them. They’re not given because you’re better than someone else. They’re not given because you’re smarter, brighter, wittier, or anything of the sort. In fact, the implication of this is God’s gifts are given at random. Now, what are these gifts? What form do they take? And why in the world would God give them this way?
SPEAKER 02 :
Stay with me and I’ll explain that after I come back. What do you do when life has dealt you a bad hand? Where do you turn when everything seems to have turned against you? Write for a free CD of a message entitled Beyond Adversity. Learn what lies on the other side of adversity. Write to Born to Win, Post Office Box 560, White House, Texas 75791. Or call toll free 1-888-BIBLE-44. Well, last night I went to a concert by the Aspen Wind Quintet.
SPEAKER 03 :
The first piece they played was by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. The second piece was composed by a member of the quintet. And it was really very good. Very good indeed. But the man had more nerve than I did. I mean, to put your own composition right after Mozart? The piece by Mozart? Well, that was pure genius. I don’t know if you saw the movie Amadeus or not, but it was about the life of Mozart or a part of the life of Mozart. And it developed an interesting theme as a man named Salieri, I believe, a court musician, who had worked hard all of his life, studied diligently, and he’s a composer. He has asked God to bless his work and has made certain promises to God. If God would give it to him, that he would always glorify God with his music. And along comes the young Mozart. who is crude and vulgar and hardly religious, but a man who plainly has received the gift that Salieri wanted so very much, and Mozart had the gift as a child. It seems he was born with it, that God at random decided to drop this gift that Mozart had on this kid, and bypassed all sorts of devoted, deserving, hardworking people. And Salieri came to hate God because he thought that God had been unfair. And it would seem so. Some thinking that God could not possibly give such a gift to a crude and vulgar man. And yet seeing the miraculous genius of the man, well, they have actually argued in some cases that that gift was, that Mozart and other men like him had was demonic. It’s just not possible for a normal human being to have that gift. So maybe a demon has come upon him, and a demon has given him this gift of music. But remember what James said? Every good and every perfect gift comes down from the Father of lights, and it was no variableness, neither shadow of turning. There’s nothing in the Bible to suggest that demonic powers can convey gifts like that that Mozart had. And there’s everything to suggest that they cannot. God gives gifts to men. And remember what the psalmist said? He gives them to the rebellious also. When the angel stirred the waters at the pool of Bethesda and healed the first poor devil that entered the pool, he gave periodic testimony to the gifts of God. And when you listen to Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony, you encounter a great gift of God given to a man who was deaf and couldn’t even hear it himself. Now, why does God do this? Are you ready to look a gift horse in the mouth? Why does anyone give a gift? There’s a line in the movie Chariots of Fire, which I always remember. It just hit me like a ton of bricks when I saw the movie the first time. And I saw it again not long ago and was moved by it again. The young Scottish missionary, who’s the star of the movie, who is preparing to run in the Olympics, is getting a little bit of flack from his friends about doing something so worldly. It would be far better for him to go ahead and get out in the mission field and get to work. Why is he fooling around with the Olympics? Why is he trying to run this way? And he answered, he said, God made me fast. I run for his pleasure. You know, it may be hard to imagine God watching a track meet, but why not? You and I enjoy watching men strive for the mastery in a sport, and we’re made in the image of God. And God gives some men strong bodies. God gives some men fast bodies. And here was a young man who was very fast and who wanted to run for the pleasure of God, which I had almost understood the idea of running for the honor of God, but to run for his pleasure was a new thought. Now, if that’s hard for you, maybe is it hard for you to imagine God listening to Handel’s Messiah? Is it hard to imagine him listening to Mendelssohn’s Elijah? Is it hard to imagine him listening to some of Mozart’s greatest music? Actually, I think it’s very kind of God to share these gifts with us. And they seem to fall at random on the children of men. So you may ask me now, what does all this have to do with leadership? Well, I think leadership is one of those gifts that God rains down at random on among men. And there’s a prophecy in Isaiah that gives a hint. It’s found in the third chapter. For behold, the Lord, the Lord of hosts, does take away from Jerusalem and from Judah the stay and the staff, the whole stay of bread and the whole stay of water. Well, Jerusalem and Judah have become rebellious. They have forgotten God. They have drifted away from God. They have become immoral and corrupt. And God says, well, the time has come to administer a little chastisement. So we’re going to do without bread and we’re going to do without water for a while. But that’s not where he stopped. The Lord, the Lord of hosts, does also take away the mighty man. the man of war, the judge, the prophet, the prudent, the ancient, the captain of fifty, the honorable man, the counselor, the cunning artificer or the artist, and the eloquent orator. Now this is a devastating blow to a country. Because they’re mighty men and men of war, this is your general, the joint chiefs of staff, chairman, the people who actually control your armies. And your judges, he said, he’s going to take away the wisdom from judges. He’s going to take away the gift of prophecy, the prudent, the ancient, the honorable man, the great speaker. How does he do it? Simple. He stops handing down the gifts that enable men to do these things. And he said, as a result, I’ll give children to be their princes, and babes shall rule over them. And the people will be oppressed, every one by another, every one by his neighbor. The child shall behave himself proudly against the ancient, and the base against the honorable. Now, if you haven’t picked up on this, this is a description of a nation with a leadership crisis. And they got there because of a loss of moral character. And God said, as a result of that, you’re going to lose the gifts of leadership. Now, we need to understand this. It’s interesting that we refer to men who have the gift of leadership as charismatic. The word charismatic comes from the Greek, and it means anointed. And it may be a very appropriate choice of words because there are men on this earth who have that kind of power. It’s amazing. They almost radiate that power when you’re close to them and when you’re talking to them. The men who have it have incredible powers of persuasion. They have a knack for making people like them, of making people want to do things for them, of making people want to please them. In fact, oftentimes of getting people to do things that they don’t really want to do, but they do it because of the powers of persuasion of a man who has charisma. I have met a few people like this in my time. They are remarkable people. One of them was probably the best salesman I have ever known. They are people you can’t help liking. You want to buy things from them. You want to be with them. You want to be talking with them and exchanging ideas with them. You like to be around people like this. Some of these men use their gifts to persuade men in the ways of peace. They use their gift to marshal great armies together and to defeat enemies like Hitler and Stalin. Some men use them to pull a nation out of depression and to give people hope. Others? Others use them for seduction. And there are many kinds of seduction. They used their great power to seduce young girls, or they used that power to amass huge fortunes, or to steal money from the weak, in all manner of use for the self. Or, like Hitler, like Stalin, like Mussolini, they used that great power to control and to destroy. The great men of generations past are men who had this gift and used it for the greater good instead of for their own lusts. The great failures are men who used the gift of God to feed their own appetites. God gives this gift for the good of mankind, but it does not fall on everyone, only a select few. And if the few to whom this great gift is given use it for evil, then our end is at hand. Hitler was a man like that. Hitler was enormously charismatic. He was a powerful persuader. He had a knack for pulling people around him who would follow him no matter what, go no matter where he wanted to go. But they were evil men. Hitler was a man who had a gift, a charisma. But then so was Winston Churchill. So was Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Now, in history, what if the balance had been different? What if instead of Franklin Roosevelt, we had had, say, Joseph Kennedy as president? And what if instead of Winston, Britain had continued with Neville Chamberlain into World War II? Winston Churchill said early on in the war that it was a very close-run thing as to whether Britain was going to survive or not. Without the kind of charisma that Winston Churchill had, without the kind of charisma that Franklin Delano Roosevelt had to be able to pull America into this thing, the world would be a very different place today. So do you suppose we should care about the character of the most powerful man in the world? That we would be willing to put a man in charge of a nuclear arsenal that while he was able and intelligent and active, charismatic, lovable, a man who did not have the character needed to have that kind of power? Think about that for a moment. I’ll be right back.
SPEAKER 02 :
For a free copy of this radio program that you can share with friends and others, write or call this week only. And request the program titled Leadership in Crisis. Write to Born to Win, Post Office Box 560, White House, Texas 75791. Or call toll free 1-888-BIBLE44. And tell us the call letters of this radio station.
SPEAKER 03 :
Let me tell you about another man in history who had this gift that fell upon him from heaven, that he was, in his day, the most powerful man in the world. His name was David, the son of Jesse. And you’ll find his story in the first book of Samuel in the Bible. You ought to read it from front to back, because he was truly a remarkable man. He was actually the second king of Israel. Saul, who was king before him, had the same kind of charisma, in fact. God selected him initially because he had the gift, and he then, in addition to the gift, gave him his spirit. It came upon Saul in such strength that Saul even prophesied. But the problem with Saul was he was very much into himself, and the decisions that he made were very self-centered decisions. And on two separate occasions, with very clear instructions about what he was supposed to do directly from God, he went his own way and did his own thing. He abused the gift that he had. The result was the Spirit of God departed from Saul, and left him a mental wreck. Saul, even though the Spirit of God departed from him, he still had the charisma, he still had the gift, but he was crazy. And so it is that the gift, without the balance, without the character, is a recipe for disaster. Saul, in his last days, was not unlike Hitler in a way. Because in the initial stages of Hitler, he was a very charismatic man. He was quite a leader. He made the trains run on time. You remember, you may forget this from time to time, but Hitler came to power in a democratic election. The people of Germany chose him. So Saul, just like Hitler, became crazy. Now, David was a man whom Samuel described as being of beautiful countenance. And this oftentimes goes with the men who have the gift. They have the gift in all of its different forms, in all of its packages, in all of its attributes. They’re intelligent. They’re good-looking. They have the style. They have the communication. They have the persuasion. David had the gift of leadership, the personal charisma. He had the knack of making men and women love him. He had courage. He had faith. And David inspired the loyalty of gifted men. There’s a passage in 2 Samuel that illustrates, I think, in a way, what I mean. It’s in chapter 23. And it is, of all things, or begins at least, with the last words of David. Now these be the last words of David. David the son of Jesse said, And the man who was raised up on high, the anointed of the God of Jacob, and the sweet psalmist of Israel, said, The Spirit of the Lord spoke by me, and his word was in my tongue. The God of Israel said, The rock of Israel spoke to me, He that rules over men must be just, ruling in the fear of God. Well, isn’t that the truth? David saw that. David saw that with sterling clarity. He that rules over men must be just, and he must rule in the fear of God. And David went on to say, The man like that will be as the light of the morning when the sun rises, even a morning without clouds, as the tender grass springing out of the earth by clear shining after rain. Although, David continued, my house be not so with God. Yet he has made with me an everlasting covenant, ordered in all things and sure. For this is all my salvation and all my desire, although he makes it not to grow. You know, David was a man of great honesty. And while he had not always measured up, he knew what God required, and he knew that he had not. And he didn’t try to pretend. There was no spin in David. He realized that God required that the man who rules over men has to be just, and he also knew that he had not always been. This statement is followed by a roster of David’s mighty men and their exploits. You might want to read this sometime because it’s really fascinating. You can oftentimes tell a lot about a man by the men he attracts, by the quality of men who follow him, by how loyal they are, by what they will do. David’s men, well, they are a remarkable group of people. In verse 8 of chapter 23, these are the names of the mighty men whom David had. The chief among the captains, the same was Adino the Esnite. He lifted up his spear against 800 whom he slew at one time. Now, you know that 800 men would overpower one man no matter how good he was, and this is probably talking about a battle. Battles back in those days were a series of one-on-one conflicts. In other words, the armies rushed at one another, and men fought one another one-on-one. And when you knocked this man down, you went and helped somebody else with the man he was fighting. And what this is saying is this man, in the course of one day’s battle, managed to kill 800 of the enemies. After him was a man named Eliezer, one of the three mighty men with David. When they defied the Philistines, they were gathered together to battle, and the men of Israel were running away. This man rose and smote the Philistines until his hand was weary and his hand clave to the sword. When this battle was over, they had to get a hold of this man and somehow pry his fingers off of his sword. It had locked in place. He had fought all day long. And the Lord wrought a great victory that day. The people returned after him only to take the spoil, because this man led them into battle. These were men with the bark on. These are warriors of the first water, strong, fearless, and absolutely devoted to David. After this man, there was a man named Shammah, the son of Agi. And the Philistines were gathered together into a troop. They had a platoon of them. There was a piece of ground full of lentils, and the people ran away from the Philistines. But this one man stood in the midst of the ground and defended it and slew the Philistines. And the Lord wrought a great victory. One man against a troop of men. And three of the thirty chiefs went down and came unto David in harvest time to the cave of Adullam. And the troop of the Philistines pitched in the valley of Rephaim. Now David was in the hold, and the garrison of the Philistines was then in Bethlehem. Bethlehem, remember, is the city of David. It’s his place. And David longed and said, Oh, I wish someone would give me drink of the water that’s by the well of Bethlehem by the gate. He’s just reminiscing around the campfire. Boy, that’s good sweet water down there. Well, three of these guys broke through the whole garrison of the Philistines, drew water out of the well, and took it and brought it to David. That’s the kind of man that David had. But look at the kind of man David is once they brought him the water. He wouldn’t drink it. He poured it out as an offering to God. And he said, Be it far from me, O Lord, that I should drink this. It’s the blood of those men that went in jeopardy of their lives. Therefore he would not drink it. These things did these three mighty men. And you can see the character of this man who was not selfish, who wasn’t self-oriented, who poured out the water. Bear in mind, these are three guys. David had a whole platoon of these men. Think of what kind of man it took to lead men like these. The whole kingdom loved David. He was the darling of everybody. The man must have had incredible charisma. But he abused it in the case of Bathsheba, another man’s wife. He called, she came. She could not resist the charisma, the power of the man, David. It was a terrible lapse of character on David’s part. And he even tried to cover it up. And in the covering of it up, he killed an innocent, brave man, one of those 30 who were totally loyal to him. It was a shameful act, and it was known. It was known all through the palace. It was known in the army what he did. And God sent his own version of a special prosecutor, Nathan the prophet. And Nathan came to David and accused him of what he had done. And David was all through covering up. He said, I have sinned. And he wrote a magnificent 51st Psalm in which he said to God, you desire truth in the inward part. In the end, Israel had a man who, in spite of his sins and in spite of his mistakes, had the character to own up to what he had done to repent. David was a winner. Saul was a loser, and he stands as a perpetual reminder of what can happen when charisma goes bad. I’m astonished at how people will follow a leader wherever he takes them without any consideration of his character or his morals. They’ll follow him wherever he goes, even to hell.
SPEAKER 02 :
Until next time, this is Ronald Dart. The Born to Win radio program with Ronald L. Dart is sponsored by Christian Educational Ministries and made possible by donations from listeners like you. If you can help, please send your donation to Born to Win, Post Office Box 560 White House, Texas 75791. You may call us at 1 888-BIBLE44 and visit us online at borntowin.net Stay in touch with the new Born to Win with Ronald L. Dart app.
SPEAKER 01 :
This app has all of your favorite Ronald L. Dart radio messages, sermons, articles, and it even has a digital Bible. Simply search on the iOS or Android app store to download it for free today.