Kingfisher Leadership
1st December 2019
Kingfisher Leadership news What is the soul?
The soul is the core of our being - the ‘real us’. Our soul is our character, which develops as it interacts with God, the world, or satan. It is not immortal, and can be killed (see Matthew 10:28). • Old Testament: ‘nephesh’ (used over 750 times), meaning to breathe or have life. The nephesh departs at death (see Genesis 35:18). Nephesh can be variously described as: a soul, living being, life, self, person, desire, passion, appetite, emotion. Both human and animals can have a nephesh (e.g. Genesis 1:21) • New Testament: ‘psuche’ (used over 100 times) - broadly comparable to nephesh. Both words can also mean ‘life’ or ‘living being’. Whilst the soul (nephesh/ psuche) describes the human being, the spirit is different. In Hebrew, the word is ruach (meaning wind, breath or sprit), and in Greek it is pneuma. God is able to look into the ruach of a person and to examine his or her inner motives (Proverbs 16:2). This implies that the "spirit" of a person is synonymous with the "place" of a person’s innermost thoughts.
The soul-damaged leader Some years ago, I met Steve, a soul-damaged pastor. As we talked, he recounted an all-too-familiar tale: he was experiencing opposition from certain key leaders in the church. There had been a church split, with those who had left now presenting themselves as super-spiritual, with an air of ‘We love you and are there are no problems’, which only made the rejection felt worse. He felt beaten-up, alone, isolated, misunderstood, bitter and increasingly cynical. I tired to support him as our relationship developed over the next couple of years, but in the end the unresolved pain got too much for Soul him and he finally informed me that he had resigned from being a damage is pastor and was no longer all-tooattending church.
common for leaders and can have a devastating impact
This tale of a soul-damaged pastor is far from isolated - I have met may over the years. Soul damage is all-too-common for leaders and can have a devastating impact. Because leadership is a calling that has the potential to isolate, many leaders don’t feel able to be honest and open, even with their peers. As such, they move from grace to performance orientation, from community to isolation, from a genuine relationship with Jesus to something that looks good on the surface, but is, in fact, just faking it. The longer this goes on, the less able the leader feels to ‘come clan’ and admit their ‘soul damage’. How does this soul damage happen?Here are what probably constitute the top ten reasons:
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