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Mark Batterson

Episode: 82

Today on the Servant Leadership Podcast, we welcome Mark Batterson, the Lead Visionary of National Community Church in Washington, D.C. Mark is a New York Times bestselling author of over 20 books, including The Circle Maker, Win the Day, and Gradually then Suddenly, which have impacted millions of people. Under his leadership, NCC has become one of the most innovative and influential churches in America, famous for its “marketplace” approach to ministry. NCC owns multiple properties near “Capitol Hill” and operates Ebenezers Coffeehouse, the largest fair-trade coffeehouse in D.C. Mark’s journey is a masterclass in holy curiosity and the power of dreaming big while staying humble. He also shares the concept of the “Double Blessing”—the radical idea that God doesn’t bless us just to raise our standard of living, but to raise our standard of giving. Join us as we talk about building a culture of innovation, the importance of long-term stewardship, and how to lead with a posture of service in the heart of the marketplace.

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quit living is that the purpose of life

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is to arrive safely at death. Live your

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life in a way that's worth telling

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stories about. I just I think some

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people so busy climbing the ladder of

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success, they fail to realize it's

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leaning against the wrong wall. If you

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succeed at the wrong thing, you failed.

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Today on the Servant Leadership Podcast,

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we welcome Mark Batterson, the lead

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visionary of National Community Church

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in Washington, DC. Mark is a New York

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Times best-selling author of over 20

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books, including The Circlemaker, Win

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the Day, and Gradually Then Suddenly,

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which have impacted millions of people.

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Under his leadership, NCC has become one

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of the most innovative and influential

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churches in America. Famous for its

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marketplace approach to ministry, NCC

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owns multiple properties near Capitol

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Hill and operates Ebenezer's Coffee

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House, the largest fair trade coffee

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house in DC. Mark's journey is a

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masterclass in holy curiosity and the

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power of dreaming big while staying

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humble. Mark, thank you so much for

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joining the Servant Leadership Podcast.

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Hey Chris, great to be with you.

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This is an absolute treat for me. Uh

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because I told you this, but I first

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bumped into you in 2017

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and heard you give a talk that

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absolutely rocked my world and I have

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consumed so much of your content. So to

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have you here, I'm like, how are we

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going to fit this into 30 minutes? But

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we're going to make it work.

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Listen, we'll talk fast. How does that

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sound?

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So, okay, give people a little bit of

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backstory before we dive into details.

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You run one of the largest churches in

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DC and have been doing this for a long

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time. Talk about how you got to where

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you are and what your journeys looked

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like.

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Yeah. Well, the first attempt failed uh

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at the ripe old age of 22. Uh it's

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amazing how much you think you know at

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22. So, we actually tried to start a

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church in the Chicago area. It failed.

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But one of the best things that ever

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happened to us, the cure for the fear of

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failure is not success. It's failure in

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small enough doses that you build up an

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immunity to it. And so we ended up like

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just packing everything into a 15 foot

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U-Haul U-Haul and starting over in DC

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and we started with a core group of 19

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people. 30 years later um you know we we

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reaching thousands of people and uh

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really that's my my day hat. So I

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pastored this church from 19 people to

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where we are today for 30 years. But

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then I write books. Uh 26 books. Um

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that's kind of my side hustle, my early

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morning hustle. And uh and then you know

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I have a little entrepreneurial itch. So

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we've got a coffee house on Capitol Hill

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and an event venue and we can talk about

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some of those things. But actually that

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whole description, Chris, just sounds

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like I have attention deficit disorder.

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That's what it sounds like. But I I like

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going in a lot of different directions.

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You're still figuring out what you do

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for a living is what I'm getting.

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It is like I I'm still not sure what I

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want to do when I grow up. And uh but

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we'll find out.

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Uh I mean, you got into book writing and

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uh I want to hear about that journey.

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I'll preface it with in my real life,

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like outside of recordings and stuff, I

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quote the Bible a lot, but the number

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one thing I quote is actually a quote

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that is from you that I heard back in

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2017 and I've continued to say all these

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years, and I want to know how you even

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got to this point. So, talk about your

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book writing. And then the quote that I

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steal from you all the time, I sometimes

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credit you, sometimes not. Um, is work

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as if it fully depends on you and pray

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as if it fully depends on God. And I

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know you write a lot about prayer.

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You've written a lot about a lot of

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stuff. But yeah, how did your journey

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start with writing?

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Yeah, I I felt called to write at 22,

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but I had also taken the GRE. It showed

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a low aptitude for writing. In other

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words, whatever you do, don't write

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books. So, Chris, I I'm not naturally

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gifted as a writer. Uh what I did is I

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read 3,000 books over 13 years and kind

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of reverse engineered them. I figured

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out, you know, how other people write

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that that I enjoy. And I I leverage my

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35th birthday as a deadline. And

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honestly, a dream without a deadline is

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called a wish. So, at some point, you

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have to kind of throw down the gauntlet

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and uh wrote a book titled In a Pit with

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a Line on a Snowy Day. Very long title.

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Um but uh that that book over 20 years

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uh man about half a million copies and

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that was kind of the first one out of

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the gate and then uh and then book six

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the circle maker and book seven draw the

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circle those are the books that just

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started kind of impacting um multiples

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of that and uh and so I just I I don't

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know I I when I when I sit down at my

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writing desk I literally take off my

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shoes because I feel like it's holy

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ground. And I I don't type on a

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keyboard. I feel like I worship God with

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26 letters of the English alphabet. And

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I I really feel like I'm doing what I'm

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called to do. But again, I would

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reiterate, not a natural gifting. I

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really did have to work like it depends

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on me. Um and then God God has blessed

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it. And so we we actually formed a

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prayer team and uh we always pray Lord

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put those books in the right hands at

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the right time. So Chris, for me uh a

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book sold is not a book sold, it's a

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prayer answer. And so that's that's the

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short version of uh the writing side of

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the equation.

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You've talked a lot about prayer in some

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of those books. How have you seen prayer

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show up for our audience? Because some

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of our audience is going to be allin and

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like, man, I love praying every day. and

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others are going to be like, "What the

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heck is he even talking about?"

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I know. And there are so many different

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kinds of prayer. There's more

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contemplative centering prayer. Uh

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there's kind of interceding for other

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people. Um there's a form of prayer. I

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think prayer is a form of dreaming.

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Dreaming is a form of praying. Uh but I

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do think prayer is how we write history

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before it happens. Uh I I think prayer

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is the difference between the best we

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can do and the best God can do. So maybe

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I can share just one story. And uh in

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August of 96 when when the church was

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like 19 people, I was reading Joshua

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1:3. It says, "I'll give you everywhere

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you set your foot." And I just felt like

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God was calling me to pray a perimeter

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around Capitol Hill. And it turned into

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a 4.7 mile prayer walk. And I need to

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put this out there that I wasn't praying

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for property. I was just praying for

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people like, "Lord, let your kingdom

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come. Let your will be done in DC as it

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is in heaven."

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But 30 years later, we own seven

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properties on that prayer circle worth

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about $100 million, including a city

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block that uh we have renovated the 1891

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Navyyard car barn about 100,000 square

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feet, not far from the cap. And that is

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kind of our base of operations. But but

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wow, I just gave the long version in two

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minutes because we were in rented

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facilities at eight campuses for 20

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years. So, but if you lead something

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long enough, you're not leading the same

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thing. Even if it has the same name, you

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have to kind of continue to adapt and

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evolve and grow. And when the leader

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stops growing, I think the organization

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stops growing. So I I really think

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leadership is all about self leadership

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and if you keep leading yourself well

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God has a way of entrusting kind of more

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and more to you and uh so again just a

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little snapshot of uh of prayer and the

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role that it's played uh at NCC.

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One of the things I'm curious about and

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and I don't know the right way to ask

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this without offending some people but

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that self leadership is so important.

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Um, and I want to hear how you think of

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self leadership for you and how others

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should think about it. A lot of people I

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think the first thought is self

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leadership is important because I want

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to get somewhere and be bigger, better,

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whatever. And those aren't bad things

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necessarily on their own, but untapped

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or un uh unhinged, they could turn into

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bad things. How do you view that self

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leadership and growth and and all of

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that?

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Yeah. Well, I think the goal of going

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after a a goal is not achieving the

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goal, it's who you become in the

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process.

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And that's kind of with my pastor hat on

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that sometimes we think the great

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commandment commandment and by the way I

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mean Jesus brilliant with a British

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accent like unbelievable. He takes 613

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kind of dos and don'ts. This the Torah

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and then some of the laws that have been

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added to it and he comes up with a

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singular great commandment. But that

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great commandment is three-dimensional,

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not two-dimensional. It's not just love

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God and love people. It's love God

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heart, soul, mind, and strength. Uh and

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love your neighbor as yourself.

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So Chris, the battle always begins in

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our mind, in our heart. Like the hardest

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person to forgive is the person that

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looks back at me in the mirror every

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morning. And what I've got to do is uh

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lead myself well with certain

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disciplines. Um and I we probably don't

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have time to unpack that, but a few

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years ago wrote a book called Win the

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Day. And that book in particular is

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about cultivating kind of daily dis uh

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uh habits that destiny is not um a

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mystery. Destiny is daily decisions.

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Don't worry about outcomes. Focus on

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inputs. And so it's that growth mindset,

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that learning posture. Uh in the words

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of Albert Einstein, never lose a holy

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curiosity. It's kind of this approach to

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life that I'm going to keep learning,

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keep leaning in. And one of our core

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values is if you stay humble and stay

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hungry, nothing God can't do in you or

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through you. But I think at the end of

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the day, Chris, like I I don't know. I

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kind of love this that God cares more

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about you than what you do. Uh cares

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more about me than a resume. it it's

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always about us becoming the kind of

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person uh well and I'll just put my

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cards on the on the table at the end of

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the day. I want to be just like Jesus. I

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want to treat people the way he treated

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them. I want to think like he thought. I

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want to navigate very difficult

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situations with grace and truth. And

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Jesus was full of both of those things.

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So I think at the end of the day it's

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kind of who are you becoming in the

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process? But I do think God gives uh big

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dreams to make big people. Show me the

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size of your dream, I'll show you the

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size of your God because it keeps you on

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your knees. Um you really have to stay

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dependent upon him.

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I love that. Well, one of the things

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that I have been impressed about from

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the outside by you is how you come up

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with so much content. Not just like

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being a pastor, which that already is

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overwhelming, like preaching a ton and

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speaking a ton, but the books like the

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content is very different and you're

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coming up with a ton of content. You

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you've had a recent book um gradually

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then suddenly and I want to hear what

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was the journey like from writing 20ome

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books to now getting to this book. And

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how do you keep the energy alive where

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they're like they might not all be

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bestsellers? I know a bunch are, but

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it's like they all seem right on point

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with like just the people that are

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reading them, myself included.

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Well, can I can we do a quick hack and

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then maybe maybe I can answer that

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bigger question?

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Yeah.

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So, you know, some of those 3,000 books

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I read uh are over my shoulder. Um but I

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never read a book without a pen. What's

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the point? So when I read kind of five

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things I do with a book that this and

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come up with your own system, right?

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Like this is just one of my rules of

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life is let God be as original with

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others as he was with me. So this isn't

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prescriptive, but you do have to read

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very intentionally. So for me, Chris,

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level one is underline something in a

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book. Level two is an asterisk in the

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margin. Level three is circling it on

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the page. Level four is an upper dog ear

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and level five is a lower dog ear. So,

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I've been doing this for 25, 30 years.

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Every book I read, I can pull it back

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off the shelf and I can reaccess the

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good stuff, the meat, you know, in a

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matter of minutes. And so I think the

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only way that I've created, you know, as

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much content as I have is I just am

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really good at cataloging things. And so

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um the idea for gradually then suddenly

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it comes from a 1926 Ernest Hemingway

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novel. Uh a character says, "How did you

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go bankrupt?" And the rather famous

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reply is two ways. gradually then

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suddenly which I I think is pretty

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funny. Um but then the book really flips

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it and that's also how you get out of

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debt. It's how you run a marathon, write

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a book, start a business, build a

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marriage. It's how everything happens

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like it's going to happen gradually.

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Then suddenly you're going to

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overestimate what you can do in a year

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or two. You're going to underestimate

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what God can do in 10 or 20 or 30. That

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book in particular, I felt like I want

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30 years of leadership under my belt

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before I write it. So, I was intentional

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with that one. Let's keep that one

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tucked away until I have enough scars

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and failure stories to be able to uh

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speak with any level of authenticity.

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So, that's kind of where that that book

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came from. And much of it is about self

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leadership, about long vision, long

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obedience in the same direction and then

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long legacy. And I would just throw this

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out there. Legacy is not what you

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accomplish. Legacy is what others

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accomplish because of you. So I think

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there's this mindset of let's do what we

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do uh for the third and fourth

00:14:47
generation. Um, and I think I think that

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mindset is really important. Uh,

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especially in a day and age where we

00:14:54
want things to happen at the speed of

00:14:55
light, but they generally happen at the

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speed of a seed that has to take root

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before it can bear fruit.

00:15:01
Wow, that's so good. I I love that

00:15:04
concept of legacy being like the wake

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you've left around you. Not even behind

00:15:08
you, but like around you, how you've

00:15:09
lifted other people up. It's not just

00:15:11
about what you leave behind. Um, one of

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the things that hit me about this book,

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and maybe it was intentional, maybe it

00:15:17
wasn't, or maybe it's just been how

00:15:19
God's worked in your life. Uh, you

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started a lot about like, and maybe not

00:15:24
started, I don't know the order of all

00:15:25
your books, but you talked a lot about

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calling. You've talked a lot about

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prayer. You talk a lot about risktaking

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and then and then all of that is leading

00:15:33
into this gradually then suddenly. Talk

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about why you even got into kind of

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talking about some of the big risks

00:15:38
you've taken. Maybe you could share one

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story here about how you've seen risk

00:15:42
show up and maybe it pays off, maybe it

00:15:45
doesn't.

00:15:46
Well, listen, I'm wearing my Ebenezer's

00:15:49
coffee house hat and uh it's one of the

00:15:52
biggest risks we ever took.

00:15:54
We uh I was walking by what was a crack

00:15:57
house. It was a dilapitated property.

00:16:00
Um, the crazy thing, and this is 25

00:16:03
years ago, Chris, but it was five blocks

00:16:06
from the Capitol, but it was just this,

00:16:08
I mean, there were center blocks in the

00:16:10
doors and windows, and I was walking by

00:16:14
and I just felt like that still small

00:16:17
voice said, "Mark, this crack house

00:16:19
would make a great coffee house." And

00:16:21
long story short, five years of circling

00:16:25
it in prayer. And and we didn't have the

00:16:28
greatest business plan. In fact, we sent

00:16:30
our office manager to work at Starbucks

00:16:33
for six months to um steal their green

00:16:36
apron book and get a few ideas.

00:16:40
But uh here we are about to celebrate

00:16:42
our 20th birthday and every penny of

00:16:45
profit we give to kingdom causes. So we

00:16:48
have funded a lot of things including uh

00:16:51
our DC dream center in Ward 7 uh which

00:16:54
is an incredible ministry to youth and

00:16:57
to kids and uh and so the Lord has

00:17:00
blessed this coffee house and it's

00:17:03
become this place where church and

00:17:06
community can cross paths and so um but

00:17:09
it was a quantum w risk because

00:17:13
uh it was a $3 million price tag when it

00:17:16
was all said and done. And that's and

00:17:19
and we got the vision when we were like

00:17:21
less than a hundred people and our

00:17:23
income as a church was less than

00:17:24
$100,000. So it was crazy sauce. It was

00:17:28
just But Chris, it was just crazy enough

00:17:33
to think that maybe, just maybe, because

00:17:36
we can't do this uh in our own wisdom or

00:17:39
with our own resources, maybe God's in

00:17:41
this. And so uh it wasn't even zone

00:17:44
commercial, it was zone residential. So,

00:17:46
we had to literally get the property

00:17:48
reszone. So, it was a $3 million risk.

00:17:53
Um, that I look back in on it and it

00:17:55
feels a little naive. If we knew then

00:17:57
what we knew now, I wonder if we would

00:17:59
have done it. Um, but I think there are

00:18:02
moments where um and and well, let me

00:18:05
lean in here and this is a word for

00:18:07
someone. You can't just count actual

00:18:10
cost. You have to count opportunity

00:18:12
cost. And so we could have said, "Hey,

00:18:15
actual cost 3 million. It's not a risk

00:18:17
we're willing to take." But man, we

00:18:21
would have cost ourselves millions of

00:18:24
customers millions of dollars and we

00:18:28
would have left an opportunity on the

00:18:30
table. And at the end of your life, I

00:18:33
think the greatest regrets are going to

00:18:34
be the inaction regrets. the

00:18:36
opportunities that we would have, could

00:18:38
have, should have, and we just didn't

00:18:40
have the guts um to go after it. And so,

00:18:44
I do think you have to be you have to do

00:18:47
your due diligence. I'm not asking

00:18:49
anybody to go out and quit their job

00:18:50
tomorrow, like like come up with the

00:18:54
business plan, do the homework, but then

00:18:56
at some point, faith is taking the first

00:18:59
step before God reveals the second step.

00:19:02
Wow. I love that. One thing that I

00:19:05
wonder is what happens because people,

00:19:08
they might have something on their heart

00:19:10
and they're willing to take the risk.

00:19:12
They're willing to take that first step

00:19:13
and it doesn't work out. It doesn't turn

00:19:15
into a 20-year run of a coffee house. It

00:19:17
doesn't turn into a great church

00:19:19
impacting millions of people. It it just

00:19:22
is a dream that dies. Talk about that.

00:19:25
Yeah. Well, National Community Church

00:19:30
is our second chance. This was our

00:19:31
second attempt. So, I'd put that out

00:19:33
there first that our first attempt

00:19:35
didn't work. And I will say this, it was

00:19:38
scarier going, you know, trying it for

00:19:40
the second time, Chris, because if you

00:19:43
fail once, it might be an anomaly. If

00:19:45
you fail twice, it might be saying

00:19:47
something about you. So, it was scary

00:19:50
giving it a second chance. And the other

00:19:53
thing I would say is I I I don't bat a

00:19:56
thousand. I don't bat a thousand in

00:19:58
prayer. I don't bat a thousand. Like we

00:20:01
we I remember remember when the iPod

00:20:03
came out and it was kind of all the

00:20:05
rage. Um this is so embarrassing, but we

00:20:08
started uh a business called God iPod

00:20:13
that would preload iPods and but but can

00:20:17
I just say this? Just because it rhymes

00:20:20
doesn't mean it's a God idea. So we we

00:20:23
failed to calculate in our business plan

00:20:27
that you can just download by streaming

00:20:30
it. Um you don't need us to download it

00:20:33
for you. And so the funny thing is that

00:20:35
thing went belly up and my my wife and I

00:20:38
fortunately we were the only investors

00:20:41
so all the money that was lost was ours.

00:20:44
But I don't regret it. I listen you're

00:20:47
you're not going to bat a thousand. uh

00:20:49
you're going to have some failures, but

00:20:52
uh I think uh generally speaking,

00:20:55
failure is poorly managed success and

00:20:57
success is well-managed failure. And so,

00:21:00
are you kind of learning from those

00:21:03
experiences and then taking those

00:21:06
learnings into whatever that next

00:21:08
attempt is?

00:21:10
Wow. on the success is I I forget how

00:21:13
you phrased it right there, but like

00:21:14
just the it's some forms of failure

00:21:17
coming together and working out. Yeah.

00:21:19
Uh talk about the real estate stuff you

00:21:21
have going on because people might not

00:21:22
realize from the outside when they just

00:21:24
see you on stage, oh, there's a pastor

00:21:26
with a successful church.

00:21:28
That's a that's a portion of it, but

00:21:30
there's a whole different side to you

00:21:32
and what you've got going on.

00:21:34
Yeah. Well, and I I better preface this

00:21:36
by saying it's not about brick and

00:21:38
mortar. It's about flesh and blood,

00:21:40
hearts and souls. And I I I the if I'm

00:21:43
in a business, I'm in the father's

00:21:45
business. And the father's business is

00:21:47
loving people and redeeming people and

00:21:50
growing people and

00:21:53
um turning beauty into ashes, giving the

00:21:55
oil of joy for mourning and the garment

00:21:58
of praise for the spirit of heaviness.

00:21:59
So at the end of the day, it's about

00:22:01
people. Um, we never thought we would

00:22:04
own property because it it was going for

00:22:07
five million an acre 30 years ago. And

00:22:11
guess what? That price has gone up. Um,

00:22:14
so we never thought we would own

00:22:16
property, but uh after that prayer walk,

00:22:20
we started, man, we just started

00:22:23
acquiring some properties and miracle

00:22:26
after miracle. But right now I'm in my

00:22:30
office which is one corner of that

00:22:32
prayer circle at 8 and M Street right

00:22:35
across from the Latroe gate which is the

00:22:38
original gateway to DC. It's the

00:22:40
entrance to the Navyyard and this city

00:22:43
block. It was the 1891 Navyyard car

00:22:46
barn. So it was the street car building

00:22:48
100,000 square feet and we bought it for

00:22:52
29.3 million. We put about 20 million

00:22:55
into it. It's where we have church on

00:22:58
the weekends. It's where we do house of

00:23:00
prayer on Thursday nights. But you know,

00:23:02
last year 150 rental events coming in

00:23:05
and using our venue revenue streaming 2

00:23:08
million a year. And you can start doing

00:23:10
the math. 15 years it starts paying for

00:23:13
itself. A and we get to serve our

00:23:16
community. We get to people have people

00:23:18
come in and be in our space. And so I

00:23:22
think there are ways of doing church no

00:23:23
one's thought of yet. I I think there's

00:23:25
something about not getting I if you

00:23:28
want to repeat history, do it the way

00:23:30
it's always been done. If you want to

00:23:31
make history, dare to be different. And

00:23:34
so we really think that the church

00:23:37
belongs in the middle of the

00:23:38
marketplace. A church that stays within

00:23:39
its four walls isn't a church at all. So

00:23:42
along with the coffee shop, we've got a

00:23:44
a movie theater, the only movie theater

00:23:46
on Capitol Hill. Um and um different and

00:23:50
we own an art gallery. We just bought an

00:23:52
art gallery. Um, like and I know I I

00:23:56
some people might be saying like, "Oo,

00:23:57
you're getting outside your lane." And

00:24:00
and that's where I would say you're

00:24:02
probably right. Like I mean, I don't

00:24:04
know that we're qualified for any of

00:24:06
this stuff. But I would say this that

00:24:09
God isn't interested just in revival in

00:24:12
the church. He's interested in the

00:24:14
redemption of all things and creating

00:24:16
outpost of Eden. Whatever it is that you

00:24:20
do, it's about doing it, exercising your

00:24:23
time, talent, and treasure, which are

00:24:25
gifts from God, and stewarding those in

00:24:28
a way that is a blessing to other

00:24:31
people. So, we we got our hands in a few

00:24:34
things. Um, but kind of fun. They're

00:24:37
they're fun endeavors. And I I think

00:24:41
Jeremiah 29 says, "Seek the peace and

00:24:44
prosperity of the city." And uh if it

00:24:47
prospers, you will prosper. And this was

00:24:49
a message to the Israelites when they

00:24:51
were in captivity in Babylon. And so

00:24:55
we're not just trying to build a church.

00:24:56
We want to bless a city to the third and

00:24:58
fourth generation. And so th those are

00:25:01
kind of some of the endeavors that we're

00:25:03
involved in. And we also know in a

00:25:06
generation this will be worth 2x 3x and

00:25:10
uh you know we gota we got to steward

00:25:14
whatever the Lord entrusts to us. So

00:25:16
yeah.

00:25:17
Yeah. What are some things like this?

00:25:19
Like you've clearly wrestled with a lot

00:25:21
of stuff like Lord what do you want me

00:25:23
doing? What do you think from the

00:25:25
outside are things that people on this

00:25:27
podcast should be wrestling with that

00:25:30
maybe they aren't wrestling with right

00:25:32
now? Oh man. Well,

00:25:37
you know, I have a life goal list, 100

00:25:40
goals. And

00:25:43
I felt so good about my original list. I

00:25:46
did this in my 30s. And then I realized,

00:25:49
Chris, like, man, some of these goals

00:25:53
are pretty selfish, Mark.

00:25:56
They're more about you, uh, than kind of

00:25:59
a higher a higher purpose. So I I I

00:26:03
think you have to be careful that are

00:26:06
you living for the applause of people or

00:26:08
are you living for the applause of nail

00:26:10
scarred hands? Um quit living is that

00:26:13
the purpose of life is to arrive safely

00:26:15
at death. Live your life in a way that's

00:26:17
worth telling stories about. I just I

00:26:20
think some people so busy climbing the

00:26:22
ladder of success they fail to realize

00:26:24
it's leaning against the wrong wall. If

00:26:26
you succeed at the wrong thing, you

00:26:29
failed. Like I would rather fail at the

00:26:32
right thing knowing that hey I'm trying

00:26:35
to do something that even if I fail I'm

00:26:38
gonna feel pretty good about the

00:26:39
attempt. So I I just think sometimes you

00:26:42
have to step back and take a long hard

00:26:44
look in the mirror and just make sure am

00:26:48
I doing the right things for the right

00:26:50
reason. So back to those life goals uh I

00:26:53
I did two things um when I felt a little

00:26:56
bit convicted. One is I started adding a

00:26:59
relational element to every life goal.

00:27:02
So instead of instead of doing a

00:27:04
triathlon, let me do it with my

00:27:07
13-year-old son as a right of passage.

00:27:10
Um and I started like I don't want to

00:27:13
just go up the Eiffel Tower. I want to

00:27:15
kiss my wife at the top of the Eiffel

00:27:18
Tower. That's twice as good. Um so I

00:27:21
started adding relational elements. And

00:27:23
then Chris, the other thing that I did

00:27:26
was I turned some of those financial

00:27:28
life goals that were getting goals and I

00:27:31
turned them into giving goals and it

00:27:33
changed the motivation. Now, you have to

00:27:37
make money to give money.

00:27:39
But one one of our goals is to reverse

00:27:42
tithe, to live off of 10% and give 90%.

00:27:46
We're not there yet. But man, a lot of

00:27:49
those book contracts, what a joy to go

00:27:52
5050 or even 2080. And we just we play

00:27:57
what we call the giving game. Like I I

00:28:00
just my wife and I, we love to give. and

00:28:05
you know so I think wow that was a long

00:28:08
answer to your question but I just I

00:28:10
feel like there's something there for us

00:28:12
to wrestle with like just to make sure

00:28:16
that we are doing the right things for

00:28:18
the right right reasons. So I I'm going

00:28:20
to trust that uh folks who are listening

00:28:24
there'll be some takeaway there. Well, I

00:28:27
was even thinking and and you went here,

00:28:29
but what are some of the things you

00:28:31
focused on that you realized were the

00:28:32
wrong things, you know, and I love that

00:28:34
shift from uh achieving financial what

00:28:38
might be look like financial success to

00:28:40
generosity. Um what are other things you

00:28:42
see people focusing on that are like

00:28:45
some of those like, man, this is a great

00:28:47
goal and it sounds really good, but

00:28:48
maybe there's a better goal.

00:28:49
Yep. Then let me lean in right here

00:28:52
because this is for someone. This is for

00:28:54
someone. Um, when I when I wrote that

00:28:57
first book, I started getting

00:28:59
invitations. People think you know more

00:29:01
than you know when you write a book. And

00:29:04
every opportunity, Chris, was an amazing

00:29:07
opportunity. I got spread so thin that

00:29:11
my family was getting the leftovers. And

00:29:13
there was a moment that my wife said to

00:29:16
me, and this is embarrassing. It

00:29:18
shouldn't come to this, but this is when

00:29:20
our kids were were smaller. and she

00:29:24
said, "This isn't what I signed up for."

00:29:26
And I'm like, "Oh,

00:29:29
you're right. And it's not what I signed

00:29:31
up for. At the end of the day, I want to

00:29:34
be famous in my home." And you can't be

00:29:36
famous in your home if you're never

00:29:37
home. And so I I started doing hard

00:29:40
work, Chris. Two things. I'm like, I

00:29:43
better define success. And it doesn't

00:29:46
have anything to do with how many people

00:29:48
I pastor or how many books I sell.

00:29:51
Success is when those who know me best

00:29:54
respect me most, and that's my wife and

00:29:56
my kids. And then the second thing I did

00:29:58
was start establishing boundaries. So

00:30:02
eventually, I worked myself all the way

00:30:04
back to I won't do more than seven

00:30:06
overnight speaking trips a year. It's

00:30:08
just a boundary I put in place. And so

00:30:11
that means I'm saying low no to a lot of

00:30:13
opportunities, but saying yes to one

00:30:16
thing is saying no to something else.

00:30:18
And so really what I'm doing is making

00:30:22
predecisions

00:30:24
based on priorities

00:30:26
so that I don't get into situations and

00:30:29
I'm like overextending myself because I

00:30:32
have a hard time saying no and uh and so

00:30:36
there there are some people listening

00:30:37
that right now you need to reorder some

00:30:41
priorities and establish some

00:30:43
boundaries. I mean, there was a time

00:30:45
where I was coaching little league

00:30:48
basketball and gota help with homework

00:30:51
and I'm like, I'll give the church one

00:30:53
night a week, but I I got to give my

00:30:56
family the other nights. And so, what

00:30:58
you have to do is just at different

00:31:00
seasons in life, you've got to put those

00:31:04
boundaries in place um so that that you

00:31:07
don't end up with a lot of regrets.

00:31:09
You'll make some mistakes. It's okay.

00:31:12
But you got to learn from those mistakes

00:31:14
and then put put those boundaries in

00:31:16
place.

00:31:18
Well, I mean it kind of comes full

00:31:20
circle with the self leadership. One of

00:31:21
one of the things that you've talked a

00:31:23
lot about both in your writing and your

00:31:25
speaking, you talk a lot about habits

00:31:27
and the importance of habits, right?

00:31:30
Talk about how you even realize the

00:31:31
importance of habits and just a little

00:31:34
bit there that the audience might find

00:31:35
beneficial based on where you're going

00:31:37
with this.

00:31:38
Yeah. Well, I I played a little bit of

00:31:40
college basketball and it wasn't big

00:31:42
league basketball. It was D3. I want to

00:31:44
keep it real. Uh because the older you

00:31:47
get, the better you were, Chris.

00:31:52
So, um you know, I think what I learned

00:31:55
from that is you need certain

00:31:57
disciplines. You you've got to put you

00:32:00
you got to work on your skills and you

00:32:03
do it with drills. And that that's true

00:32:06
if you're a musician or whatever it was,

00:32:08
you know, academically, athletically.

00:32:11
Um, you know, you get out what you put

00:32:13
in generally speaking. So, what I've

00:32:16
tried to do is just establish certain

00:32:19
habits. And maybe maybe this is

00:32:22
predictable, but you know, one of them

00:32:24
for me would be a Bible reading habit.

00:32:27
Um, you know, I'm asking the question

00:32:29
these days, what percentage of your

00:32:32
thoughts and ideas, actions and

00:32:33
reactions, attitudes and opinions are a

00:32:37
regurgitation of news media and social

00:32:40
media? And what percentage is a

00:32:42
revelation that you're getting from

00:32:44
God's word? I I think if you're

00:32:46
consuming the news more than the good

00:32:48
news, good luck with that. Like, you got

00:32:51
to stay dialed into the story of God.

00:32:55
And for me, like that's a Bible reading

00:32:58
plan. So that's one of those habits that

00:33:01
I think pays dividends. And there are

00:33:04
physical habits, you know, whether it's

00:33:06
exercise or diet. There are uh

00:33:09
intellectual habits of just reading

00:33:12
really good content to keep your mind uh

00:33:16
stimulated. Um and then there there are

00:33:19
relational habits. It might be a date

00:33:21
night if you're married or, you know,

00:33:23
with your kids, you know, h how do you

00:33:26
prioritize that relationship? What are

00:33:28
those habits look like? Is it leveraging

00:33:31
dinner time for question time? You know,

00:33:35
um so there I I I think you have to come

00:33:38
up with your own ideas. Um because a

00:33:41
person convinced against their will is

00:33:43
not of is of the same opinion still like

00:33:46
it's not outside in. But I think you do

00:33:48
have to begin to identify here are

00:33:50
priorities, here are habits that are

00:33:52
going to get me there and uh and then

00:33:55
you go to work.

00:33:58
As you think about where you are today

00:34:01
as a leader, like just personally in

00:34:03
life, what God is putting on your heart,

00:34:05
what's something you're wrestling with

00:34:07
or working through right now that might

00:34:09
be something other people are also

00:34:11
wrestling with and trying to figure out?

00:34:13
because I know you would be the first to

00:34:15
admit from everything you've written and

00:34:16
said like you don't have it all figured

00:34:18
out and you're still wrestling with a

00:34:20
lot of these things.

00:34:21
Yeah. Well, 2 Corinthians 8:2 says, "He

00:34:24
who thinks he knows does not yet know as

00:34:26
he ought to know." So, Chris, the

00:34:28
reality is you and I, we don't know what

00:34:31
we don't know. And the more you know,

00:34:33
the more you know how much you don't

00:34:35
know. And so, I think recognizing like

00:34:38
you're a data point. I'm a data point.

00:34:41
And so really operating I think in a

00:34:43
spirit of humility. I will I will throw

00:34:46
out in that light. I've got a friend,

00:34:48
you know, when you pastor in DC, you get

00:34:50
interesting people who come to church.

00:34:52
And so uh there's a guy, a good friend

00:34:54
of mine, uh Admiral, um who was the

00:34:57
former, uh deputy homeland security

00:35:00
counterterrorism advisor to the

00:35:01
president. And so, you know, he would

00:35:04
spend half of his day in the situation

00:35:06
room trying to manage crisis. That's

00:35:08
what he did for breakfast, lunch, and

00:35:10
dinner. And so I remember during COVID

00:35:13
asking him like, "Help a brother out."

00:35:15
Like, "How do we do this?" Because we

00:35:16
went a year and two weeks by DC

00:35:19
government mandate, not able to gather

00:35:21
as a church. And uh and I I'll never

00:35:25
forget what he said. He said, "Here,

00:35:26
here is my singular leadership mantra."

00:35:30
He said, "I reserve the right to get

00:35:33
smarter

00:35:35
later."

00:35:36
And I think there's something there that

00:35:39
some of us like we want to pretend that

00:35:41
we have it all figured out. I would ask

00:35:44
when was the last time you changed your

00:35:46
mind? like even on a significant issue

00:35:49
like I think some of us we're so

00:35:51
entrenched we're in our echo chambers

00:35:53
we're so binary in our thinking that

00:35:56
there's a great risk these days that man

00:36:00
we just kind of retreat to our corners

00:36:04
and and then where in the world is civil

00:36:07
discourse or human decency or even

00:36:10
agreeing to disagree I I think

00:36:13
leadership

00:36:14
is setting a tone and a posture

00:36:17
And that's what and maybe this is the

00:36:19
moment just to point back to Jesus. Like

00:36:23
what did he do? He washed feet. Like

00:36:26
that's what he did. And so Chris, I feel

00:36:29
like this is a cultural moment where uh

00:36:32
the church unfortunately has let

00:36:34
celebrity culture into the church. And

00:36:36
when you put people on a pedestal, it

00:36:38
never ends well. I think that when you

00:36:41
reach the highest level of leadership in

00:36:43
the kingdom and uh we're talking about

00:36:46
servant leadership, right?

00:36:48
That that what what it gives you is the

00:36:51
right to relinquish your rights and wash

00:36:54
feet just like Jesus. And when you begin

00:36:57
to lead that way, man, I think there's

00:37:01
something that is so

00:37:04
magnetic. It's why you couldn't keep

00:37:06
people away. It's why people went for

00:37:08
days without food just to listen to him

00:37:11
tell stories. It's why people would walk

00:37:14
around the Sea of Galilee and fight

00:37:16
through crowds just to touch the hem of

00:37:18
his garment because

00:37:20
Jesus was holy, but he wasn't holier

00:37:22
than thou. Um there was something about

00:37:25
him that just

00:37:28
um man, may we be more and more like

00:37:32
Jesus. And I think a big part of that is

00:37:34
the servant leadership. Wow, I love

00:37:37
that. Uh, I knew starting this podcast I

00:37:40
could talk to you literally all day

00:37:42
about this stuff. I want to finish with

00:37:44
60 seconds of rapidfire questions.

00:37:46
Okay.

00:37:47
Just say the first thing that comes to

00:37:49
mind and there will be 10 questions. No

00:37:50
wrong answer.

00:37:51
Boom.

00:37:52
Who's the first person you think of when

00:37:54
I say servant leadership?

00:37:57
My grandfather, Elmer Johnson.

00:38:00
Wow. Five words that most describe you.

00:38:04
So,

00:38:07
five words. Um,

00:38:08
five words.

00:38:09
I'm an ideiator.

00:38:12
Um, I'm an activator.

00:38:16
Uh,

00:38:18
I I'd like to think that uh

00:38:23
that I'm a helper. I I love lifting

00:38:26
other people's arms up. Um,

00:38:30
I I think I am an intercessor. I love to

00:38:33
pray. I love to stand in that gap.

00:38:35
Um, and then I' I'd like to think maybe,

00:38:38
just maybe, that I'm trying to give more

00:38:41
than I take, trying to add value. I

00:38:44
think those are five descriptors. And by

00:38:46
the way, some of those do come uh from

00:38:49
the um uh strengthfinder. So, yeah,

00:38:53
positivity might be one more.

00:38:55
Yeah. No, I love that. and and to pause

00:38:58
on the 10 questions, but for those

00:39:00
listening, uh your content on prayer has

00:39:04
absolutely rocked my prayer world and

00:39:06
since 2017, I know it's not your

00:39:08
content, but it happens to be written in

00:39:09
a lot of the stuff you write, a lot of

00:39:11
the stuff you talk about, and I would

00:39:13
encourage anyone who's interested in

00:39:15
that topic to check out your content.

00:39:17
Um, all right. Favorite food?

00:39:19
Mexican.

00:39:21
Oh, that's good. All right. Favorite

00:39:22
thing to do in your free time.

00:39:24
You know what? I bike centuries. I like

00:39:26
hopping on a bike.

00:39:28
Wow. What's a surprising fact about you?

00:39:33
Oh, I'll just pull one out. I'm a an

00:39:37
Olympic gold medalist. Um the Awana

00:39:41
Olympics in the three-legged race when I

00:39:43
was 10 years old.

00:39:46
Favorite place you've been?

00:39:49
You know what? I did the 4-day hike on

00:39:51
the Inca Trail to Machu Picchu. That was

00:39:53
pretty epic. Um although rimto rim Grand

00:39:56
Canyon would be right up there too.

00:39:59
Top place you'd want to go that you have

00:40:01
not been to yet?

00:40:02
Huh? You know

00:40:06
maybe I've been to Rome but I wouldn't

00:40:08
mind hitting Florence, Italy.

00:40:12
All right. Best advice you've ever

00:40:14
received.

00:40:17
You know, and that's man that's a tough

00:40:20
tough one. Um,

00:40:23
but I have all of these life rules. I'm

00:40:26
trying to think of which one. Wow. The

00:40:29
best. Oh, man. Chris, uh, that is a hard

00:40:35
question. I think I would say um,

00:40:40
just long obedience in the same

00:40:42
direction. And it wasn't someone saying

00:40:45
that to me. It was me watching people

00:40:48
who ended their their lives, their

00:40:52
ministries, their leadership with their

00:40:55
integrity intact.

00:40:58
Um, but they fought the good fight. They

00:41:01
ran the good race, had some grit along

00:41:04
the way, and uh, finished strong. So, I

00:41:08
think that's that's what comes to mind.

00:41:11
Favorite book or author?

00:41:13
Uh, I might go with Awtoer. I like the

00:41:16
old-timers uh knowledge of the holy

00:41:18
pursuit of God. Such incredible books.

00:41:22
All right. And finally, this is a

00:41:24
podcast on servant leadership. Why

00:41:27
should people care about becoming better

00:41:29
servant leaders?

00:41:30
Well, I don't think you can become like

00:41:33
Jesus if you don't become a servant

00:41:35
leadership uh a servant leader. So, I

00:41:38
mean, right right there uh I think it's

00:41:41
part and parcel of disciplehip. I I

00:41:44
think disciplehip and leadership are

00:41:46
kind of hard to they're almost like a

00:41:48
double helix DNA. Um and uh at the end

00:41:52
of the day, Chris, can I just share a

00:41:54
little litmus test? I, as you can

00:41:57
imagine, I bumped into a lot of leaders

00:41:59
over the years from a lot of different

00:42:01
arenas. You know what? Number one thing

00:42:04
I'm looking for is just someone who's

00:42:07
down to earth,

00:42:09
uh who checks their ego at the door.

00:42:12
They're not about their agenda or their

00:42:15
brand or anything else. Just really

00:42:18
trying to point people back uh to Jesus.

00:42:22
And so I think I think

00:42:26
yeah, servant leadership is how you how

00:42:29
you steward any kind of responsibility

00:42:32
or opportunity that God God has given to

00:42:35
you.

00:42:36
Wow. This is so good. Uh Mark, I just

00:42:39
want to say thank you for being on the

00:42:41
podcast. Thank you for being an

00:42:42
inspiration to me even on this journey

00:42:45
with the podcast and uh I'm excited for

00:42:47
people to listen to this and have

00:42:49
learned from you. Hey Chris, absolute

00:42:51
joy and uh uh maybe next time I'm in the

00:42:57
Chicago area, we'll get some deep dish

00:43:00
pizza together.

00:43:01
I would I would love that. My treat.

00:43:04
All right, God bless.

00:43:05
Thank you for listening to this episode

00:43:07
of the Servant Leadership Podcast. If

00:43:10
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