Leadership Thought: How to Become a Trustworthy Person
Dear Friends,
The explorer named Ernest Shackleton set out with
27 men on his crew to cross Antarctica, but before they got very far, their
ship that was called Endurance, was trapped in ice and for 10 months they
drifted on the frozen seas. Eventually the ice crushed the
ship, and that ship would sink. The men were stranded on shifting ice in
subzero temperatures with no rescue in sight for nearly two years.
But here's what's remarkable. Shackleton
didn't lose a single man. Not even one. Why? Because his crew trusted him. He
ate the same rations they did. He took the worst shifts, and he lived the same
way his crew did. When morale was the lowest, he never asked his men to do
something that he wasn't willing to do himself. The men didn't follow
Shackleton because of his title, but because of his faithful
testimony, one which was built on the foundation of trust. People don’t follow
leaders because of a title. They follow a leader because of
trust. And that is always earned in small and little
increments performed day after day.
Trust develops the way you build your house,
one brick at a time. Every time you do something that is honest, every time you
do what you say you are going to do, or show up on time, or fulfill a
commitment, you put another brick in the house that will eventually
become your home
Being trustworthy is a tremendous
responsibility, and one that must constantly be guarded, for it can be lost in
a moment by some small failure.
Trust develops over time and building it is
one of the most valuable resources a leader can possess.
When someone approaches you to be a part of
your team there are three things they will have in mind. “Can you help me?”
Will you care for me?” And most importantly, “Can I trust you?” Trustworthiness
will become one of a leader's most important assets.
“Many people claim to be loyal, but it is
hard to find a trustworthy person.” (Proverbs 20:6)
Jesus taught “That whoever can be trusted
with very little can be trusted with much" (Luke 16::10). Today, people
want to serve God in obvious and showy ways. But God says you build your trust
by doing little, even insignificant things, and doing them faithfully again and
again. You do them even when no one is watching you. And God reminds us,
"If you are faithful in doing those little things, He will give you
greater and greater responsibility."
Do you want people to trust you? You can
build that trust by always being honest, sincere, faithful and
reliable.
Yours in faith and friendship,
Tom
P.S. "The best way you can find out if you can trust a person is to trust him"
Ernest Hemingway



