We have been following the story of Caleb in his conquest of the city of Hebron. A city ruled by giants. Amidst a group of leaders, all confronted by the same challenges, Caleb saw differently. In so doing he offered a solution that led a nation to victory. This is the impact of one leader!
What most intrigues me about the story is not what Caleb saw, but WHY he saw it? It seems that Caleb had cultivated a different mindset to his peers. This mindset allowed him to see a ‘whole city’ in Hebron. He saw the potential, the pathway, the victory. He was undeterred by the very real giants that suppressed its light and stifled its hope.
If his ‘seeing differently’ could lead to the redemption of a city, perhaps in learning to see as he did, we too could bring life, light, and hope to our own cities.
The Thing about Giants
Conquering giants is intimidating, especially in an era of hand-to-hand combat. You must get up close and personal. The opponent with the longest reach holds a distinct advantage. They can stand far enough to evade your offenses while still being in striking distance with their own. Giants had long levers, but due to their size, could also wield larger, heavier weapons, extending their already significant reach. To make matters worse, their extraordinary length made it virtually impossible to inflict damage on any of their vital organs since their head and chest were so high off the ground. No wonder people gave up before they started. This was the default narrative. This is what hearing the word ‘giant’ meant in their heads and hearts.What Caleb Saw
Caleb had a different heuristic. His storyline was informed by a different set of underlying assumptions. All the above was true, but the geography of Hebron offered up an alternative. Since it was situated on a high place, luring the giants out to a battlefield of your choosing, on uneven terrain, would negate much of their advantage:- Lighter, smaller people could more easily navigate the mountains (Power-to-weight ratio)
- By positioning yourself on higher ground you could stare the giant in the face. His having to reach up creates an angle that reduces maximum reach.
- Giants aren’t used to looking up. Unaccustomed to this movement and posture, they would tire quickly.
SQ – Spiritual Intelligence
Enter Spiritual Intelligence. It is concerned with worldview. The underlying set of assumptions that the individual holds as absolute. These assumptions are not contextual or dependent, but the ‘independent’ variables that shape our existence. These forces are external to our locus of control but shape the very fabric of our experience. How we perceive our interaction with these forces, truths or rules plays a significant role in the way we understand ourselves as leaders:- Is our dignity and worth inherent and discovered over time, or must it be earned and proven?
- Do we have an inherent destiny/purpose/calling or do we make sense of life through our intelligence and creativity, justifying our purpose?
- Do we have the potential to offer a unique contribution to the world, or is this for a select few?
- Are these questions dichotomies or sliding scales?
The Smallest Domino to City Transformation
This is the question with which we have been grappling. If we want to see ‘Cities of Wholeness’, where do we start? What do we do? Caleb’s story suggests three critical elements.- Leadership is the greatest lever with which to change the world!
- Healthy Leadership requires high Spiritual Intelligence.
- Healthy Leaders Restore broken systems