Providing resources for assisting like-minded fathers in understanding and performing their God-given responsibilities in fatherhood


Showing posts with label leadership. Show all posts
Showing posts with label leadership. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 1, 2016

Authoritative vs. Authoritarian

Do you know how to be authoritative without becoming authoritarian?
An AUTHORITATIVE Parent or Teacher. . .

  • Respects and is accountable to higher authorities; is secure and confident in his relationships with higher authorities
  • Communicates warmth and love for those under his authority
  • Talks to the children, not at them, and also takes time to listen to them.
  • Makes clear rules with clear consequences, and follows them consistently
  • Sets a good example for children, both in and out of their presence
  • Keeps informed on the interests and activities of the children; monitors their lives, communicates concerns and stays with their problems long enough to resolve them
  • Is imaginative, with a vision for what the children can become; finds creative ways of helping them reach these goals
  • Produces children who are socially responsible, competent and capable of social initiative, and who have positive feelings about authority that make them willing to trust the ultimate authority of God.
An AUTHORITARIAN Parent or Teacher. . .

  • Avoids accountability to higher authorities and is often critical of them; OR uncritically accepts and supports higher authoritarian structures
  • Scores low in both warmth and communication;
  • Sets high demands with high controls for children, but is either abusive or inconsistent in enforcing them; instills fear in children
  • Has a private life that violates what he professes publicly; OR is rigid or excessively disciplined and demands the same from others
  • Distances himself emotionally and physically from children by escaping into his job or other pursuits; may compensate for this by indulging children with material gifts
  • Produces children who are hostile, negative and defiant; OR children who feel inadequate and pressured and believe no one will love them unless they do something good for them.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Lead Me


Ok, I'm a little behind the curve on this one, but I just heard Sanctus Real's song "Lead Me" for the first time a few days ago...and man did it blow me out of the water!

Funny because recently we did our traditional family New Year's "areas I want to grow in" chart. It is basically 4 circles labeled: Spirtual, Emotional, Mental, and Physical.

In each circle we write the things we want to improve in or change about ourselves for each category. In the center of the entire diagram is a small space for us to write one central, over-arching thing that we want to work on for the year that impacts everything else.

Mine just happened to be: "Be a better leader".

Imagine the impact of hearing the song after that!

Here are some of the lyrics and links to find out more if you haven't yet heard the song...

So Father, give me the strength
To be everything I am called to be
Oh, Father, show me the way
To lead them
Won't you lead me?

To lead them with strong hands
To stand up when they can't
Don't want to leave them hungry for love
Chasing dreams that I could give up

I'll show them I'm willing to fight
And give them the best of my life
So we can call this our home
Lead me, 'cause I can't do this alone

Listen on Playlist.com

The Story Behind the Song


Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Respect for the Office

So I'm doing two things I try not to do:

1. Make a post on my blog with a link to a post in another blog (I link to other blogs, just not to specific posts)

2. Make a post about politics

However, this post from Graced Again summed up what I've been thinking for awhile now. Because he threw in a father/son analogy, I feel empowered to send you over there!

Romans 13 is clear that our responsibility is to submit to authorities. This doesn’t mean we have to agree with everything they do or even work to change their policies. It certainly doesn’t mean we have to reelect them in four years. It does mean that we are to show them respect as we criticize them and as we disagree, because they are the elected leader of our nation.

My best example of this is in my own family. My boys may not always agree with me. I am certainly not always respectable. They are expected, because of my position, to always respect me. They don’t have to agree with me. As they become adults they may not even have to obey me, but my position as their father should garner their respect. (I hope they are reading!)



Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Learship Quotes


Leadership is the activity of influencing people to cooperate toward some goal which they come to find desirable. -- Ordway Teal

Leadership is a matter of having people look at you and gain confidence, seeing how you react. It your are in control, they are in control. - Tom Landry

A leader has been defined as one who knows the way, goes the way, and shows the way. -- Franklin P. Jones

Skill in the art of communication is crucial to a leader's success. He can accomplish nothing unless he can communicate effectively. -- Norman Allen

The final test of a leader is that he leaves behind him in other men the conviction and the will to carry on.
-- Walter Lippman, in Roosevelt Has Gone (April 14, 1945)

No man ruleth safely but he that is willingly ruled. -- Thomas A. Kempis