Faith, Leadership and Public Life. Preston Manning

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Faith, Leadership and Public Life - Preston Manning

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potentially dangerous mixture and one often found among believers operating at the interface of faith and public life?

      Significantly, he did not directly disparage the ambition of the disciples. He did not renounce it as misguided or evil. Rather Jesus sought to redirect their ambition away from the service of self and toward the self-sacrificial service of others. He did so in four ways.

      The Child in the Midst

      Fourth, Jesus offered humility as the quality most required to temper spiritually motivated political ambition. But how do you teach humility to the passionately ambitious? Well, watch how Jesus did it.

      Implications for Us

      It requires a certain amount of ambition to enter and participate in the public arenas of our day. If one is a Christian believer, that ambition may well be mixed with spiritual motivation, such as a desire to bring ethical “salt and light” to the political and public arenas and a genuine desire to serve.

      If we are to be guided by Jesus, however, we can be sure that he will constantly redirect our ambition away from the service of ourselves and our party toward the self-sacrificial service of others, as he guided the ambitious among the disciples so long ago.

      When I was leader of a Canadian political party and leader of the Official Opposition in our House of Commons, I had a small plaque on my office desk, given to me by one of my daughters, that simply read, “Whosoever would be chief among you, let him be the servant of all.”

      Some very ambitious people came to see me during those years, some of whom became cabinet ministers in the government of Canada, one even becoming prime minister. All ended up rendering genuine and substantial public service to the people of Canada, and it is not my intent to disparage that service in any way. But I wonder to this day if their service might have been more effective if I had more strongly encouraged and rewarded those who were willing to pursue the downward route to the top as Jesus did and if I had more faithfully modelled that route myself.

      Even today there is merit in employing, at least in our imaginations, the concept of the child in the midst as a means of moderating and tempering environments where partisan ambition to be the first and the greatest is the dominant characteristic.

      Imagine the House of Commons during the daily Question Period—a cauldron of mistrust, ambition, and self-aggrandizement if there ever was one. The members of Parliament, egged on by the media, are hurling loaded questions, clever retorts, and assorted insults across the floor as usual, all striving to make the evening news and secure the greatest possible attention and recognition for themselves and their parties.

      But what if we were also to imagine that the space between the government and opposition benches was occupied not by the mace and the tables of the house officers but by scores of young children representing more truly than any member of Parliament the future hopes of our country?

      How would politicians act in the face of the child in the midst? Would it be the presence and actions of the children that would be incongruous and out of place in the Commons, or would it be the words and actions of the members that would now appear inappropriate and misdirected?

      If only we would listen, Jesus of Nazareth has much to teach us—by word, by example, and through the tempering influence of the child in the midst—on the management of ambition.

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