Bible, Leadership, OT

6 Ways a Faithful Leader Obtains Faithful Followers

King Josiah was one such leader.

Reading through 2 Kings, there is a string of unfaithful kings who displayed poor leadership. Then finally, comes King Josiah who truly raises the bar.

Up until this point, there have been kings who “did evil in the eyes of the Lord.” But we have also had those who “did what was right in the eyes of the Lord.

Moving into chapters 22 and 23, Josiah is a king who not only does “what is right in the eyes of the Lord,” but who also walks “in all the ways of his father David, not turning aside to the right or to the left.” (2 Kings 22:2)

Finally, God’s people have a king who sees the bigger picture! Once we start unpacking these two chapters we find six ways that King Josiah showed faithfulness to God, which in turn, led him to great leadership success and faithful followers.

1. VISION (2 Kings 22:3-7)

King Josiah had the desire and/or the inner calling to repair the Temple. Little did he know that this calling to repair the Temple would lead to a huge movement within God’s people. Why? Because it was ultimately pointing to a great vision of restoration with God. The Temple was the method or means, but restoration was the greater mission and vision.

Many times, a revival or a movement back to God begins with one man or woman. They have been given a desire for some ministry-related project or plan. This project or plan often points to a great vision for change and restoration.

2. REPENTANCE (2 Kings 22:11-13)

King Josiah hears the Word and repents it personally before he addresses his people. Any leader who feels called to bring God’s people into a large movement must first seek God’s Word and humbly repent.

It’s important to note that later in the chapter, we see God’s response to King Josiah’s authentic repentance.

Because your heart was responsive and you humbled yourself before the LORD when you heard what I have spoken against this place and its people, that they would become accursed and laid waste, and because you tore your robes and wept in my presence, I have heard you, declares the LORD.” (2 Kings 22:19)

The vision may come from God, but our concentration on God’s Word and repentance moves Him to bless that vision.

3. COMMUNICATION (2 Kings 23:1-2)

Before King Josiah starts assigning tasks for his vision, he calls the people together to communicate what the Lord has taught him. Furthermore, to publicly renew his commitment to God’s Word.

Many times, we leaders neglect this vital step. It’s easy to get caught up in the vision that is about to take shape. We end up neglecting to effectively communicate our commitment to God’s Word, prior to communicating our vision. As leaders, we must put ourselves on the line, openly sharing our hearts. In turn, sharing our commitment to God before we start initiating the procedures and processes of our vision.

4. RESPONSE (2 Kings 23:3)

After King Josiah renews his commitment to God and His Word, the people respond:

Then all the people pledged themselves to the covenant.” (2 Kings 23:3b)

As leaders, we must humbly gauge our success by the response of our followers. If we are committed to God and communicate that humbly through word and deed, the people will commit to our leadership. In turn, they will commit to the vision.

Leadership requires followers — someone who chooses to be influenced. Leaders cannot lead unless followers choose to follow.” (Walter C. Wright, Jr.)

5. FOLLOW-THROUGH (2 Kings 23:4-20)

This is where King Josiah proves that he’s a man of his word. Once he communicates his commitment to God and the people join in his commitment, he puts his vision into action and starts ‘cleaning house’. Task after task, project after project, King Josiah gets to work, fulfilling the words he spoke at the Temple. This is a vital step for us as leaders!

We must fulfill our commitments! Too often we neglect this last step of follow-through and finish poorly. In the end, we leave our followers feeling hopeless and visionless. Missing this step can seriously hinder future success.

6. CELEBRATION (2 Kings 23:21-23)

This is a remarkable piece of King Josiah’s story. His initial vision was to repair the Temple, but it became a huge movement to bring the people of Israel back to God. After he had completed numerous tasks and projects to see his vision through, the work stops and we read the following:

The king gave this order to all the people: ‘Celebrate the Passover to the LORD your God, as it is written in this Book of the Covenant.’ Not since the days of the judges who led Israel, nor throughout the days of the kings of Israel and the kings of Judah, had any such Passover been observed.” (2 Kings 23:21-22)

As leaders, we not only need to take time for celebration and remembrance, we need to do it well. It is vital to know where we came from, what we have accomplished and most importantly, what has been accomplished in us. Therefore, celebrate success like it’s as vital as the vision itself.

Neither before nor after Josiah was there a king like him who turned to the LORD as he did—with all his heart and with all his soul and with all his strength, in accordance with all the Law of Moses.” (2 Kings 23:25)

As leaders, may we leave this kind of faithful legacy, leading our faithful followers to restoration with the One True King of Kings.

4 thoughts on “6 Ways a Faithful Leader Obtains Faithful Followers

  1. Doctrine and Theology are so important. So many of today's “christians” don't want anything to do with either of those subjects. All though the New Testement, Paul constantly stated how we need to stay true to the doctrines. That we need to study them, and know them, and be ready to defend them. Why does he say that? He says that because good, sound doctrine is how you can tell a false teacher, with the spirit of anti-christ, from a teacher bringing light and teaching the true things of Christ. Without sound doctrine, you can easily be sent astray by a our lusts and itchy ears (2 Tim 4:3). What the church of today needs to do, is get back to being a biblical church, much like Acts 2:42. Our job as a church is the prepare the bride of Christ (the church) for her groom (Christ). EVERYTHING a church does should be to glorify God, that is it. Why do churches do a lot of the things we do now? To bring in the lost people. Does not the bible speak about being friends with the world, mean enmity with God? (James 4:4) I am not saying we shouldn't witness, because we absolutely should, but it is OUR PERSONAL responsibility, not the churches. The church is here to glorify God, by teaching the doctrines, theology and training the man of God.

    My two cents…..

    BTW, keep trucking on the blog. It's great.

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