Developing Emotionally Mature Leaders: How Emotional Intelligence Can Help Transform Your Ministry
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About this ebook
In this practical book, church leadership expert Aubrey Malphurs shows church and ministry leaders how to assess, understand, and improve both their own EQ and that of their followers, so that they can inspire the very best in their churches and organizations.
Aubrey Malphurs
Aubrey Malphurs (Th.M., Ph.D., Dallas Theological Seminary) is president of Vision Ministries International and chairman of the Field Education Department at Dallas Theological Seminary. He has served as a pastor and church planter and is the author of numerous books in the areas of leadership, vision, and church ministry, including Ministry Nuts and Bolts: What They Don’t Teach Pastors in Seminary; Doing Church; and Developing a Dynamic Mission for Your Ministry.
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Developing Emotionally Mature Leaders - Aubrey Malphurs
© 2018 by Aubrey M. Malphurs
Published by Baker Books
a division of Baker Publishing Group
PO Box 6287, Grand Rapids, MI 49516-6287
www.bakerbooks.com
Ebook edition created 2018
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—for example, electronic, photocopy, recording—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.
ISBN 978-1-4934-0615-9
Scripture quotations are from the Holy Bible, New International Version®. NIV®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.™ Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved worldwide. www.zondervan.com
Emotional intelligence is a popular leadership topic, but no one has explored it from a biblical worldview with as much depth as Aubrey Malphurs. In Developing Emotionally Mature Leaders, Malphurs examines the relationship between emotions and maturity and why both are significant to effective leadership. For anyone called to influence the thinking, behavior, and development of others, this will cement your understanding, help you understand where you are, and give you what you need to develop into an emotionally mature leader.
Tami Heim, president and CEO, Christian Leadership Alliance
Emotions are a powerful force that are often overlooked until it is too late. Finally, here is a biblical and practical approach to understanding emotional intelligence and maturity for greater leadership effectiveness. Read this book to take your personal and team ministry to the next level.
D. Scott Barfoot, ThM, PhD, director of the Doctor of Ministry Program, Dallas Theological Seminary
Aubrey Malphurs has masterfully explained emotional intelligence in a manner that is grounded in Scripture and applied to Christian leaders. I have taught emotional intelligence to students, managers, and employees in multiple settings, and I wished I’d had this book for my Christian seminar attendees. Developing our awareness and application skills can help us be more effective leaders and followers, which will lead to improved organizational performance. This book is a must read for all Christian leaders, managers, and employees.
Bruce E. Winston, PhD, professor of business and leadership, Regent University
In this book, Aubrey Malphurs has addressed an overreaction to emotionalism that has gripped many Christians and churches in our day. While the reader may not accept every point made, they will not be able to escape Malphurs’s reasonable attempt to outline a biblical theology of emotions from which to frame a discussion of the role that emotions play in the life of the leader. Emotional intelligence, or emotional quotient, matters in the attempt to become a mature, self-aware believer. A thoughtful review of Malphurs’s book will help the reader come to a balanced understanding of the significance of the emotional side of the genuine biblical leader.
Mike Stallard, director of International Ministry, Friends of Israel Gospel Ministry
Aubrey Malphurs has written another very practical and insightful book to help churches and pastors become more effective in their ministry. You can find other books on emotional intelligence, but Malphurs includes scriptural insights and develops a theology of biblical emotions. This sets his book apart from the others. Any pastor will find that this book will help them be more effective in leading their congregation.
Bob H. Dean, executive director of Dallas Baptist Association
As we talk about raising up leaders in our churches, it’s easy to overlook developing emotional maturity as a part of the formation process. When it comes to emotions, we often err toward either stoicism or over-reliance, resulting in an unhealthy view. Christian maturity must involve emotional maturity, and Dr. Malphurs’s book is helpful in exploring a true biblical perspective on emotion.
Kevin Peck, DMin, lead pastor of The Austin Stone Community Church and coauthor of Designed to Lead
I’ve known for a long time that struggling church leaders often manifest emotional intelligence deficiencies. Dr. Malphurs’s new book Developing Emotionally Mature Leaders bridges the resource gap for those who want to improve their EI for the cause of Christ and God’s glory. The fourteen skill-building exercises offered in the appendix are a virtual development laboratory in emotional intelligence, and there is nothing like this book in print today. This will be my go-to resource from here on out for helping leaders grow in their emotional intelligence.
Dr. Charles Revis, executive minister, Mission Northwest
Developing Emotionally Mature Leaders is a masterpiece. The emerging field of knowledge called emotional intelligence, or EI, holds significant insights for ministry. Dr. Malphurs is a faithful guide. He instructs, illustrates, and applies significant truths simply and straightforwardly. His insights will empower leaders to improve their leadership and relationship skills exponentially. This is a wonderful gift to seminarians, pastors, and other ministry leaders, as well as key lay leaders. You will return to this volume again and again.
David Bowman, DMin, PCC, executive director of Tarrant Baptist Association
Dr. Aubrey Malphurs has delivered a masterpiece on the subject of emotional intelligence. Dr. Malphurs summarizes the thoughts of leading figures so that the reader gets a feel for the landscape of this subject. He also relates information on tools and assessments for ministry practitioners, helping them self-assess and be able to assess others. It would be difficult to overstate the value of Dr. Malphurs’s fine work.
Lin McLaughlin, PhD, professor of educational ministries and leadership
All you have to do is read today’s headlines to see the importance of emotional intelligence in leadership. Becoming an emotionally mature leader who understands one’s own emotional responses and can also respond appropriately to the emotional responses of others is a key to true servant leadership. While there are plenty of books on the topic of emotional intelligence, there are very few books that look at this topic from a biblical, Christ-centered lens. Aubrey Malphurs has made a major contribution to the field of emotional intelligence with this book.
George M. Hillman Jr., PhD, vice president of student life and dean of students, Dallas Theological Seminary
Emotional health and maturity is one of the most important qualities of a leader. Aubrey Malphurs has written a fantastic book with helpful advice and practical suggestions for identifying your level of emotional health and working to improve it—for the sake of the leader and the team. I would highly recommend this book to any church or ministry leader.
Robert Jeffress, DMin, senior pastor of First Baptist Church Dallas and author of Not All Roads Lead to Heaven
Contents
Cover 1
Title Page 2
Copyright Page 3
Endorsements 4
Acknowledgments 7
Introduction 9
Part 1: Introduction to Emotional Intelligence 13
1. Six Basic Assumptions of Emotional Intelligence 15
2. A Brief History of Emotional Intelligence 19
3. The Importance of Emotional Intelligence 25
Part 2: Understanding Emotional Intelligence 33
4. The Definition of Emotional Intelligence 35
5. The Definition of an Emotion 41
6. The Primary, Core Emotions 47
7. A Biblical Theology of the Emotions 1 67
8. A Biblical Theology of the Emotions 2 81
9. Assessing Emotional Maturity 89
Part 3: Becoming an Emotionally Mature Leader 97
10. Developing Emotional Maturity Models 1–3 99
11. Developing Emotional Maturity Model 4 109
Appendixes 141
A. Basic Emotions Audit 143
B. Emotional Disorders 147
C. Listening Skill Builder 156
D. Conflict-Resolution Skill Builder 162
E. Networking Skill Builder 168
F. Decision-Making Skill Builder 172
G. Risk-Taking Skill Builder 180
H. Problem-Solving Skill Builder 185
I. Confrontation Skill Builder 192
J. Encouragement Skill Builder 197
K. Trust-Building Skill Builder 203
L. Motivation Skill Builder 210
M. Team-Building Skill Builder 217
N. Name-Recognition Skill Builder 225
Notes 229
Index 235
Back Ad 240
Back Cover 241
Acknowledgments
We all walk with a limp, only some of us limp more than others. I have written this book for all of us admitted limpers
who’ll take the challenge to address our limps that result in growth and emotional maturity. This includes my pastoral and leadership students at Dallas Seminary and the pastors I have worked with over the years with the Malphurs Group.
Introduction
I spotted him walking across the campus. He was a gifted student and leader that I had in class over a period of two to three years at Dallas Seminary. He took several of my courses that addressed such areas as biblical leadership, church planting, and church revitalization. When he graduated, he opted to go on the international mission field and lead a team he recruited to plant churches. But that was only a year or two ago. What was he doing back in Dallas so soon? I decided to find out. I greeted him and engaged him in small talk. Then I popped the question, Why are you back in Dallas? Is everything okay?
His response troubled me. As the leader, he had recruited and formed a team of like-minded church planters; however, the whole thing had imploded. The gist of it? They simply couldn’t relate to one another and get along together. So after a short time, they went their separate ways, wondering what they could have done to keep it together and become a successful church-planting team. Instead, they had failed to realize their dreams and had paid dearly from an emotional perspective. They viewed themselves as failures who possibly were not cut out of the leadership bolt of cloth. Since then, I have encountered too many others as well.
So the question begs an answer. What could they have done from the very beginning to assure that they would not only stay on target but keep the whole venture together? What’s more troubling is that their experience mimics that of countless others who fail and quietly fade into oblivion. They start with a bang only to end with a whimper. I didn’t have an answer to the question back then but I do now.
The answer is emotionally intelligent leadership, or as I like to refer to it, emotionally mature leadership. What we haven’t realized for many years, and far too many don’t get it today, is how critically important our emotions are to effective ministry in general and leadership in particular. What I know now is that how you feel impacts how you lead and how followers feel about themselves when around and led by you affects how well they follow your leadership. It takes emotionally intelligent leadership to inspire the best in us, to arouse passion, and to keep us motivated to serve our Savior as leaders in Christ’s church and beyond. Yes, effective leaders cast vision and design powerful strategies to help the church advance. And they do this at least on a regular basis. However, highly effective leaders move us. They are in touch with and lead through the emotions, and this takes place much of the day every day.
My experience is that not many churches have in place a pathway for developing leaders at every level in their churches. Some talk about it but more often than not fail to deliver. And seminaries are not much better. Very few seminaries address how to develop leaders, and those that do emphasize a more formal cognitive, intellectual approach that includes training in Bible knowledge, languages, theology, church history, homiletics, and Christian education, most of which takes place in a classroom environment. Not that these are bad in themselves, but they need to be balanced with the more noncognitive, relational skills that are vital to excellence in leadership. It’s not intellectual versus emotional, but the two working together. What we desperately need is training that intentionally seeks to bolster the leader’s emotional side, which deeply impacts their relationships with those whom they lead or desire to lead. Consequently, this is a work about emotionally intelligent or emotionally mature leadership that seeks to do just that.
This book is seminal. At the time of this writing, I’m aware of few in the Christian leadership world who are exploring the importance of emotionally intelligent leadership to effective ministry except for an occasional doctor of ministry dissertation. Much of the work on emotional intelligence is being done by those who make no profession of the Christian faith. I’ve also found a few dissertations in the world of higher Christian education, but they’re not readily accessible. Hopefully this work will serve to inspire you and others to discover the importance of emotional resonance and to lead accordingly.
Simply stated, the purpose of this book is to come up with a process or pathway that challenges Christian leaders to become more aware of, understand, and manage their emotions and those of others so that they can be emotionally mature leaders who relate well with and truly inspire their followers. And this can take place in a formal or informal context that includes both parachurch and church ministries.
I have divided this work into three parts. Part 1 provides an orientation to the world of emotional intelligence. It addresses the basic assumptions I bring to this study, provides a brief history of emotional intelligence, and seeks to convince you that emotional intelligence is important to the world of Christian leadership.
Part 2 serves to help leaders understand emotional intelligence. It drafts a definition of emotional intelligence and a definition of an emotion for the purpose of clarity. It establishes what I believe are seven primary or core emotions found in the Bible. It addresses how the brain functions in emotional intelligence, and it provides a biblical theology of the emotions that answers the question, what does the Bible teach us about the emotions? This latter portion is worth the price of the book as little work has been done in the Christian community on a theology of the emotions. It also guides leaders in assessing or measuring their emotional maturity. How are they doing? Where are they in their emotional development? It will briefly present three widely accepted assessments along with an assessment that I’ve developed called the Basic Emotions Audit.
Part 3 provides three widely accepted models for developing emotional intelligence and will address the question, Is it okay to use material and research developed by people who may not be Christians or even open to the Christian faith? Finally, it will present my leadership model that consists of four skills to be developed by the Christian leader: the leader’s emotional self-awareness, the leader’s emotional self-management, others’ emotional awareness, and others’ emotional/relational management.
I have included questions at the end of the chapters to facilitate reflection and discussion. I would suggest that first you read the chapters and reflect on them on your own. Then you would be wise to work through the same material with your leadership team, getting their input and thus enriching the entire process.
1
Six Basic Assumptions of Emotional Intelligence
Emotional Foundation Stones
I bring six basic assumptions to this material on emotional intelligence. They will serve as emotional foundation stones on which the book rests.
1. Emotionally mature Christians are spiritually mature believers. The popular term for this concept of emotional maturity is emotional intelligence (EI), also referred to as emotional quotient (EQ). Perhaps a better term is emotional maturity, which is a reflection of one’s spiritual maturity. To be spiritually mature is to be emotionally mature. And to be emotionally mature is to be spiritually mature. While not the same, like twins they are inseparable. You don’t have one without the other. So those Christians who believe they are spiritually mature persons, but who evidence little emotional maturity, are mistaken.
2. The Godhead is characterized by emotions. An aspect of who God is—his identity—has to do with the fact that he’s an emotional God. What I mean by that is he is a God who experiences emotions such as love, anger, joy, and hope. And most important to this book, he has created us in his image (Gen. 1:26–27). That means we too are emotional beings—that is a part of our identity. I’ll say more about this in the sections on the theology of emotions in part 2.
3. The hope of the world is an emotionally mature church. Bill Hybels once said that Christ’s church is the hope of the world. What he means is that every church exists to bring Christ’s message to a lost and dying world. Churches are vehicles of grace, and that message is their mission. Therefore this book will reflect a love for Christ in general and his church in particular. In its pages a high view of God’s church will be seen. When functioning as Christ designed it, the local church can be a wonderful, God-honoring entity that reaches lost, unchurched people while edifying those who have embraced the Savior. This is an emotionally mature church and what Christ intended. It is his desire to build this kind of church (Matt. 16:18). However, when not functioning as Christ intended—emotionally immature—the local church can be ugly. Currently the latter seems to be more the case, as many churches are in decline (some say as many as nine of ten), and a large number of their young people are walking away from them.
4. Emotional intelligence is critically important to God-honoring leadership. Most important, after professing that Christ’s church is the hope of the world, Hybels added that leadership is the hope of the church. A church can’t function well—it can’t accomplish its mission—without godly, servant leadership. And emotionally mature leadership is key. If