Two cowboys
bought a couple of horses that they used to make some money during the summer.
But when winter came, they found it cost too much to board them. So they turned
the horses loose in a pasture where there was plenty to eat and made plans to
pick them up the next spring. “How will
we tell yours from mine when we pick them up?” one guy asked. “Easy,” replied the second. “We’ll cut the
mane off mine and the tail off yours.”
But by spring, when the men returned, the mane and tail had grown back
to normal length. “Now what are we going
to do?” asked the first. “I have no
idea,” the second guy said, “So I guess I’ll take the black one and you can
take the white one.”
We all
have choices to make in life, but unfortunately not all of them are as clear as
black and white. Many decisions are just
plain tough.
Arnold
Schwarzenegger recently revealed, “Running for governor was the most difficult
decision I've made in my entire life, except the one I made in 1978 when I
decided to get a bikini wax.”
In the
past year, I faced some extremely hard decisions as Lead Pastor of Discovery
Church. Here are some of them:
-
Hiring a family member as Youth Pastor
- Hiring staff, firing staff and seeing some staff resign
- Replacing long-term staff members
- Letting go of land we’d been in contract on for 3+ years
- Buying another piece of land
- Remodeling the house on that land
- Adopting a multi-site approach
- Hiring our first multi-site campus pastor
- Moving from a hotel to a theater
- Hiring an architect/contractor for our land development
- How to finish one and start another giving campaign
As I
dealt with those decisions I began to realize that so much of the leadership
role is tackling tough decisions. Church
planters, pastors and ministry leaders seemingly are always facing hard choices. So, how do we face the hard choices?
Judge
Ralph Currin of Pendleton, Oregon recently came up with a unique way of making
tough decisions. For one entire day in
his traffic court, Judge Currin listened to officers and defendants present
their cases. Then the judge would flip a
coin in the air and ask the defendants to call it. Interestingly enough, in all but one case,
the defendants called the coin flip correctly and were found not guilty. A stunned review panel now faces the tough
choice of what if any action to take against Judge Currin.
When
we’re facing tough choices is there a better way to decide than to flip a coin?
Recently
I was studying through the book of Proverbs looking for help in decision
making. Here are seven strategies from
Proverbs on how to face the tough choices in life.
Strategy
number one for facing tough choices is Humility.
“When pride comes then comes
disgrace, but with humility comes wisdom.”—Proverbs 11:2
“Do you see a man wise in his own
eyes? There is more hope for a fool than
for him.”—Proverbs 26:12
“He who walks trusts in himself is
a fool, but he who walks in wisdom is kept safe.”--—Proverbs 28:26
Solomon
suggests that the really tough decisions have to be met with a humble attitude. Sure, we need God-confidence, but if we think
we know-it-all, we’ll be in trouble.
Money magazine reported a while back
about a group of people who were asked which is longer, the Panama Canal or
Suez Canal. Then they were asked how
certain they were about their answer.
Among those who were 60% certain, 50% got the answer correct, so that
group was 10% too certain. But among
those who said they were 90% certain, only 65% got the answer right—they were
25% too sure. The report made the point
that the more convinced we are of our knowledge, the bigger the gap between
what we think we know and what we actually know. The more we think we know the less wise we
may actually be. Wisdom comes through
humility.
John
Wooden put it this way: “It’s what you
learn after you know it all that counts.” In his book, “Good to Great” Jim
Collins uncovered a common denominator on great leaders. He calls it, “extreme personal humility.” When
we face tough choices, adopting a humble spirit helps.
Strategy
number two for facing tough choices is Homework.
“The plans of the diligent lead to
profit.”—Proverbs 21:5
“The wisdom of the prudent is to give
thought to their ways.”—Proverbs 14:8
“The wise look ahead to see what
is coming, but fools deceive themselves.”—Proverbs 14:8 (NLT)
“The prudent see danger and take
refuge, but the simple keep going and suffer for it.”—Proverbs 27:12
Solomon
encourages us to do our homework before pulling the trigger on a big decision.
An
aspiring politician gave the speech his best shot. When he finished the candidate looked out on
the crowd and asked, “Are there any questions?”
Someone in the back yelled out, “Who else is running?”
Patrick
Morley wrote, “When do we make poor decisions?
When we don’t have our facts straight…Keep collecting data. Write it down so you don’t forget it. Talk to wise counselors, get other people’s
perspective. Talk to experts who have
skill.”
We need
to do the hard homework as we face big choices.
Strategy
number three for facing tough choices is Patience.
“It is not good to have zeal
without knowledge or to be hasty and miss the way.”—Proverbs 19:2
“A patient man has great
understanding.”—Proverbs 14:29
In my
early ministry days I made a few bad choices simply because I had “zeal without
knowledge.” I’m starting to realize that
slowing down, taking some time, getting away from the decision for a bit, and
going slow make for better decisions.
Les
Parrot, in his book, “3 Seconds” makes this observation: “If you’ve ever taken a multiple-choice exam
like the SAT, you’ve probably been told not to change your first choice, even
if, on second thought, you think an alternative answer is probably
correct. The common wisdom here is that
your initial instincts are the best. But
research actually shows this isn’t a good strategy. In fact, thirty-three studies over seventy
years suggest that sticking with your first instinct is not a smart
approach. Researchers found that when
test-takers second-guess and change their answers, it’s most often from incorrect
to correct,” --Les
Parrot
A Chinese
proverb says, “One moment of patience may ward off great disaster. One moment
of impatience may ruin a whole life.”
A Dutch
proverb added, “A handful of patience is worth more than a bushel full of
brains.”
It doesn’t
matter if we’re Chinese or Dutch or whatever, if we’re impatient we will tend
toward making bad choices. Tough
decisions need time, distance and prayer.
Strategy
number four for facing tough choices is Stability.
“A wise man keeps himself under control.”—Proverbs
29:11
“A crushed spirit who can
bear?”—Proverbs 18:14
Years ago
I ran across what is known as the “Peak to Peak Principle.” This principle basically says that we should
make the major decisions in life when we’re at an emotional peak, rather than
when we’re at an emotional valley.
When
we’re depressed, disillusioned, discouraged and down we should avoid making
major life-changing decisions. We will
probably make a bad decision because of our emotional state. The time to make major decisions is when
we’re up, when we’re at a peak—because from that peak we can see the next
peak. We will have a better perspective.
I’ve seen
too many colleagues make disastrous decisions when they are down. That
helped me this past year. I had my share
of tough days and weeks. But I wouldn’t allow myself, actually m,y
wife wouldn’t allow me to make big decisions when down. Wait until the peak to make the tough
choice.
Strategy
five for making tough choices is Discernment.
“The mocker seeks wisdom and finds
none, but knowledge comes easily to the discerning.”—Proverbs 14:6“
A discerning man keeps wisdom in
view…”
—Proverbs 17:24
The word
“discern” is used fifteen times in the book of Proverbs.
Discernment
is clearness of mental sight. It’s the
ability to see clearly enough to make tough calls. It’s an inner knowing.
And
discernment comes in three different ways.
First, discernment is a personality trait. Have you ever taken the Myers/Briggs type
indicator? One of the grids that tool
uncovers is a discernment grid. Some
folks are naturally a bit more discerning, a bit more intuitive than others.
Second, discernment
is a spiritual gift. 2 Corinthians
12:10 talks about the “gift of discernment.”
Some people supernaturally have discernment.
Third, and
this is critical, discernment is a learned skill . Paul prays in the book of Philippians that we
would be more discerning. John
encourages us to “discern the spirits” in 1 John and Proverbs tells us to grow
in discernment. So even if it isn’t
natural to us or supernatural to us we can develop it.
How do we
develop it? By facing tough
choices! Perhaps the real tough decision
we’re facing is not this one, but the next one.
We simply need to keep growing and growing and as we do, we’ll get better
at this.
The sixth
strategy for facing tough decisions is Advice.
“Wisdom is found in those who take
advice.”—Proverbs 10:8
“The way of a fool seems right to
him, but a wise man listens to advice.”—Proverbs 12:15
“Listen to advice and accept instruction
and in the end you will be wise.”—Proverbs 19:20
“Plans fail for lack of counsel,
but with many advisers they succeed.”—Proverbs 15:22
Bill
Cosby quipped, “A word to the wise ain't necessary, it's the stupid ones who
need the advice.”
An C. K.
Chesterton admitted: “I owe my success
to having listened respectfully to the very best advice, and then going away
and doing the exact opposite.”
Taking
advice is not easy. An article in The
Chicago Tribune, entitled, “Most People
Immune to Sound Words of Wisdom” said: “It’s a shame really, that human beings
are so lousy at taking advice. There
must be some sort of biological nerve ending in our brains that send s off an
alarm whenever advice filters into our consciousness and tells us, ‘Reject,
blunder on your own.’”
One of
the keys to the effectiveness of GHC and the GHC Network is our mentoring and
coaching systems. We don’t have to face
tough decisions alone. There is someone,
or even a group of someones, who have probably already faced a similar choice
in their life and ministry. If I can get
connected and stay connected to them, I’m going to be much better off when I
face the biggies.
One last
strategy number for facing tough choices is Prayer.
“There is no wisdom, no insight,
no plan that can succeed against the Lord…for victory rests with the
Lord.”—Proverbs 21:30-31
“Trust in the Lord with all your
heart and do not lean on your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge him and he will
make your paths straight.”—Proverbs 3:5-6
Roberta
Hestenes hit it on the head when she said, “When the fear of God is gone, the
decisions of daily life are threatened.”
Perhaps
God is allowing me to face the tough decisions because he really wants me to
turn to Him and rely on Him more. We
can’t do it without him.
Its been said that we’re not born winners and
we’re not born losers, we’re all born choosers.
And if we take Solomon’s suggestions and work on humility, do our
homework, have some patience, move toward stability, develop discernment, listen
to advice and make sure we’re praying …we’ll chooses wisely—even in the tough
choices.