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Leading More as Christ

Rules can correct behavior, but only compassionate leadership builds people back up, and real leaders close the gap between policy and presence.

She packed her box in four minutes.
Didn't say much.
Just nodded and walked out.

He thought he'd handled it cleanly.
Third tardy, a clear policy, no room for debate.
He followed every rule in the handbook.
And somehow still managed to miss the whole point.

She'd been living in her car with her son.
Those late mornings were runs across town to a church with working showers so her boy could walk into school with his head up.

He enforced the rule, but he broke the person.

You see, the people you lead are carrying things you can't see on a spreadsheet.
Behind every pattern of behavior is a story that policy never prepared you to read.

You've already done more than you think.
You've shown up, you've tried to be fair, you've put in the work.
That matters. And you're ready for the next layer.

Leading with compassion isn't weakness wrapped in warmth.
It's the harder discipline.
It requires you to slow down when every instinct says move fast.
It asks you to look twice when the first look already gave you an answer.

The manager didn't stop at regret; he moved.
He reached back out to make it right.
And pursued restoration with the same energy he'd put into procedure.
That's where real leadership lives:
in the gap between what you did and what you chose to do next.

People on your team don't just need your decisions.
They need to feel your presence in those decisions.
Rules can correct behavior.
But they can't build a person back up.

You won't always get it right. But when you see the gap, you can close it.

Here's your focus for today:

  • Before you decide, pause: Ask one more question about the person behind the pattern.
  • Restore where you can: If a past decision missed the human story, reach back and repair what's reachable.
  • Lead from presence: Let your team feel your attention, not just your authority.
  • Anchor your day in this truth: “A person's wisdom yields patience; it is to one's glory to overlook an offense.” (Proverbs 19:11)

The handbook will always be there.
The person in front of you won't.
Lead like that matters.

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