You are receiving this e-mail because you subscribe to one or more newsletters from Strang Communications.
To ensure you continue to receive our newsletters, add us to your safe sender list.
If you have trouble seeing the content of this email, click here or copy the link at the bottom of this email into your web browser.




SIGN UP FOR OUR FREE NEWSLETTERS:

» Charisma News Online new!
» Strang Report
» Fire In My Bones
» Prophetic Insight new!
» Daily Devotionals new!
» The Ministry Today Report
» New Man eMagazine
» The Buzz new!
» Power Up! (For Women)
» Christian Etailing
» Boletín de Vida Cristiana


Friday, March 13, 2009
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

T.D. Jakes Gives Leadership Principles
by Steve Strang

I've had a lot of interesting guests this week. I've visited with Dr. Mark Rutland, the incoming president of Oral Roberts University, along with Mart Green, the chairman of the board. Later, I received a visit from Bill Anderson, the president of CBA, our industry's trade association, and we had a great meeting. And I had a wonderful time with my friend and mentor Dr. Jack Hayford, who was in town attending a meeting of the National Association of Evangelicals.

But by far the highlight of the week was an opportunity to participate in The Forum at Southeastern University in Lakeland, Florida. This is an annual event that brings in top leaders. This year the speakers included Jack Welch of GE, Dave Ramsey, Craig Groeschel, Megyn Kelly of Fox News, as well as author and consultant Patrick Lencioni, and my longtime friend Bishop T.D. Jakes.

I had the honor of conducting a 30-minute question-and-answer interview with Bishop Jakes on stage after he gave a rousing speech on "the way up is the way down," going along with the theme of The Forum—servant leadership.

Southeastern University is an incredible place. It's located in Lakeland—"the world's citrus center"—not far from my home of Orlando. I grew up in this town. In fact, my father took a position as Dean of Men and professor at Southeastern in 1962 while I was in elementary school. Ten years later, I met my wife, Joy, while she was a student there and I was studying at the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida.

So I've seen up close and personal the incredible changes and growth that have taken place at Southeastern over the last few years. When my father started working there, it had barely 500 students. Then it grew to more than 1,000. But it has exploded to more than 3,000 students under the capable visionary leadership of Dr. Mark Rutland, who has recently taken the top post at Oral Roberts University. On a beautiful spring day, it was great to be on the campus, to see the magnificent buildings, to meet the young students and several of the faculty and staff.

Southeastern uses the motto "igniting the flame of servant leadership," and Jakes certainly did that. He told the story of Jesus washing the disciples feet, showing that God Himself knew that the way up was down. He reminded us that if we exalt ourselves God has promised to humble us, but if we humble ourselves, God will exalt us.

Jakes had us laughing and crying. We marveled at the poetry of his words, the clarity of his thoughts and the passion of his delivery. Then, as is the university's style with all their speakers, I was able to interview him. I reminisced about my visit with him in West Virginia when his ministry was just beginning to emerge, and how we ran cover stories of him and his ministry in Ministry Today and Charisma. Of course, if you've read these magazines you know that he's written for them many times and that we have covered his ministry as it's grown and developed.

I remember that when I was in West Virginia Jakes showed me in his pastoral office a bullet hole in the wall where someone had fired a gunshot through the window. He left it as a reminder of the racism that undoubtedly prompted it and his vulnerability and the protection of God.

The last time I saw Bishop Jakes was last June when he and I and other Christian leaders were invited to meet with then Sen. Barack Obama. So although we did not specifically talk about politics at The Forum, I did ask him to share with the mostly white audience what it feels like to have a black man in the White House. He reminded us that the issues are a lot more than just racial or electing a black man. But he did say that many white Americans cannot appreciate the significance of realizing that the American Dream is accessible to all Americans.

Read Complete Article »

Editor's Note: Thanks for all the positive feedback you're giving me on The Strang Report. Help me get the word out to many more people by clicking the large button that says, "Tell a Friend." (Don't use the forward button on the toolbar on your computer. If you do and the person you send it to "unsubscribes," they'll unsubscribe you and we won't know it. This won't happen if you click "Tell a Friend.")

 

Copyright © 2009 Strang Communications. All Rights Reserved. 600 Rinehart Rd., Lake Mary, Florida 32746.
Click here to unsubscribe from this newsletter. Privacy Policy.

To view this email, copy and paste this link into your web browser:
#