Leadership Thought: Let's Be Party Animals for the Kingdom of God.
Dear Friends,
Those who know me know that I enjoy laughter.
I think laughter is a very important part of leadership, and one of the
leader’s responsibilities is to create an environment where laughter and joy
are always present realities shared among the team.
Oswald Sanders, author of Spiritual
Leadership, writes about the importance of humor. He quotes a brief comment
by the late German theologian and preacher Helmet Thielecke who asks, “Should
we not see that lines of laughter about the eyes are just as just as much a
mark of faith as are the lines of care and seriousness? Is it only earnestness
that is baptized? Is laughter pagan?... a church is in a bad way when it
banishes laughter from its sanctuary and leaves It to the cabaret, nightclub,
and the toastmasters. Spiritual Leadership, Oswald Sanders, P. 68.
His comments made me think of a message given
by the late North Carolina State basketball coach, Jimmy Valvano in 1993
shortly before his death.
Coach Valvano was one of the premier college
basketball coaches of his time who was sadly struck down by cancer during the
prime of his coaching career. He loved life, and he loved to make people laugh.
Coach Valvano gave a famous speech at a time
when his body was filled with tumors, and he was so weak that he had to be
helped to the podium by his good friend and colleague, Dick Vitale.
His remarks were moving and there was hardly
a dry eye in the audience. To this day I can summarize his simple but powerful
message. He taught that there are three things that everyone should do each
day: “laugh, think, and cry.”
It was his first point that especially
captured my attention. Every day we should take time to laugh.
All this made me think of what Duffy
Daugherty, a colorful Michigan State football coach of years past once said. He
remarked that “Everyone needed three bones to journey successfully through
life: a wishbone, to dream on… a backbone, for strength and courage to get
through the tough times… and a funny bone, to laugh at life. along the way.”
(Day by Day, Chuck Swindoll, P. 37)
Not bad advice. How important laughter is to
the human soul. The scripture put it this way: “A cheerful heart is good
medicine, but a crushed spirit dries up the bones.” (Proverbs. 17: 22.)
One of the qualities that endears others to
us is our ability to laugh and to make others laugh. How important it is to not
be afraid to laugh at ourselves, or in a loving way to even help others to be
comfortable in laughing at themselves.
The famous preacher Charles Spurgeon really
loved life. His favorite sound, it was said, was laughter, and he would
frequently lean back in the pulpit and roar over something that
struck him funny. His laughter was a winsome aspect of his personality.
One of my favorite speakers is Tony Campolo,
a speaker, pastor and author who taught for many years at Eastern College in
Philadelphia Pa.
He shares the following story in his book The
Kingdom of God Is a Party. He writes, “One day I got on an elevator in the
World Trade Center in New York City. It was one of those express elevators that
goes fifty floors without making a stop. The elevator was filled with
briefcase- bearing, somber businessmen on their way to heavy meetings.”
“As I got on the elevator, a feeling of fun
ran through me. And, instead of turning and facing the door, as we all are
socialized to do, I just stood there facing the people. When the elevator doors
closed, I smiled coyly and announced, ‘we’re going to be traveling together for
quite a while, you know.’ And then, I added, 'what do you say we all sing?’”
“The reaction was wonderful. They did! You should have been there as dozens or so businessmen threw aside their seriousness and joined in a ringing rendition of You Are My Sunshine.”
“By the time the elevator got to the 50th
floor, we were all laughing.
Being a Christian on that elevator was turning some men made numb by the affairs of the world, into party animals.” The Kingdom of God is a Party, P.P. 118-119.
It seems to me that if the Bible can use such
words as celebrate, rejoice, and Hallelujah, then our lives should exude the
same biblical vitality.
So, let’s ‘party hearty’ you party animals
for if the Kingdom of God is a party, I don’t want to miss the fun.
Yours and faith and friendship
Tom.
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