The Biblical Leadership Show

Biblical Leadership Lessons From Philemon

32 min · 13. mai 2026
episode Biblical Leadership Lessons From Philemon cover

Beskrivelse

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2253126/fan_mail/new] Someone on your team blows it. Maybe it’s careless, maybe it’s repeated, maybe it crosses a line and damages trust. The real question is what happens next, because your response becomes a leadership moment your whole organization remembers. We dig into the New Testament book of Philemon, a short letter with big implications for Christian leadership, workplace leadership, and conflict resolution. Onesimus wrongs Philemon and runs, then meets Paul and becomes a Christ follower. Paul sends him back with a daring appeal: welcome him as family, and if there’s a debt, “charge it to my account.” From that one story, we unpack what accountability and forgiveness look like when you are a CEO, manager, pastor, or parent trying to lead with integrity and compassion. Along the way, we talk through practical tools: how to gauge the severity of a problem, how to handle someone who admits the mistake versus someone who denies it, and why documenting patterns can protect both the leader and the employee. We also break down a simple communication framework for hard conversations, affirmation, challenge, affirmation, plus why toxic attitudes can hijack a team if you do not set boundaries early. The deeper takeaway is this: great leaders do not excuse wrong, but they also do not freeze people forever in their past. If you care about biblical leadership principles, faith at work, forgiveness, and healthy accountability, press play, then subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review. What’s the hardest part for you, consequences, coaching, or offering a real second chance?

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til å kommentere

Registrer deg nå og bli medlem av The Biblical Leadership Show sitt community!

Prøv gratis

Prøv gratis i 14 dager

99 kr / Måned etter prøveperioden. · Avslutt når som helst.

  • Eksklusive podkaster
  • 20 timer lydbøker i måneden
  • Gratis podkaster

Alle episoder

125 Episoder

episode Perseverance, Hope, And Follow Through From Hebrews 10 And 11 cover

Perseverance, Hope, And Follow Through From Hebrews 10 And 11

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2253126/fan_mail/new] One sentence can reshape a life, and sometimes it can even reshape a nation. Hebrews 10:31 says, “It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God,” and we trace how that verse fueled Jonathan Edwards’ 1741 sermon and helped spark the First Great Awakening. Then we bring it right back to the ground level: what does conviction look like when you’re leading a team, raising kids, running a business, or trying to stay faithful when life gets messy? Our guest, Tim Johnson, shares his journey into ministry and apologetics and helps us unpack the flow of Hebrews 10 into Hebrews 11. We talk about why the old covenant sacrifices were never the finish line, why Jesus “sat down” at the right hand of God as a signal that redemption is complete, and what that teaches leaders about training people well enough to release responsibility. We also dig into the three exhortations in Hebrews 10: draw near, hold fast, and consider one another, and we ask a pointed leadership question: do the people around us actually feel safe drawing near, or do we only claim an open door while keeping a closed heart? Hebrews 11:1 takes us to the core: faith is assurance and conviction, and biblical hope is not wishful thinking but a confident expectation. That becomes a mirror for leadership credibility too. If we want people to trust our vision, we have to back words with action, build consistency, and keep running when the hurdles hit. We also share details about the Fortify Apologetics Conference and how to connect with Tim’s campus ministry work. Subscribe so you don’t miss what’s next, share this with a leader who needs endurance, and leave a review if the show helps you, what’s one promise you want to keep this week?

7. juli 202648 min
episode Hebrews 9 And The Leadership Lesson Behind The Tabernacle cover

Hebrews 9 And The Leadership Lesson Behind The Tabernacle

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2253126/fan_mail/new] We open Hebrews 9 and quickly run into a leadership tension you have probably felt at work: what do you do with a system that still has meaning, but is not meant to last? That is the heart of the chapter, and it becomes a surprisingly practical guide for biblical leadership, Christian leadership, and anyone responsible for people, process, and purpose. We walk through the tabernacle in detail, including the courtyard, the Holy Place, the Holy of Holies, and why the Ark of the Covenant mattered so much to Israel. Then we tackle a question that sparks curiosity: if God gave precise specifications for the furnishings, why are some details left out? That turns into a conversation about leadership standards, clear expectations, and the difference between “do whatever you want” and instructions that protect quality. If you lead teams, build things, coach people, or manage operations, this is where Hebrews 9 feels like a leadership manual. From there we connect the temporary nature of the old covenant to modern organizational life. We talk mission statements people cannot remember, how routines can replace purpose, and why good leaders respect the past without worshiping it. Finally, we land on “once for all” and what it means for guilt, forgiveness, and accountability, including the difference between being sorry for wrongdoing and being sorry you got caught. If this helped you rethink your leadership, share it with a friend, subscribe, and leave a review so more people can find the Biblical Leadership Show.

30. juni 202639 min
episode Hebrews 7 And 8 Leadership Lessons For Building What Outlasts You cover

Hebrews 7 And 8 Leadership Lessons For Building What Outlasts You

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2253126/fan_mail/new] If your team can’t function without you, that’s not loyalty, it’s dependency and it will eventually break. We get real about that tension while working through Hebrews 7 and 8, where the writer contrasts temporary priesthood with Jesus’ permanent, complete work and then calls Him the mediator of a better covenant. Along the way, we keep it honest, practical, and yes, we sprinkle in the dad jokes that have become part of the show’s rhythm. We start by setting the context for Melchizedek and why Hebrews uses him to spotlight authority that doesn’t rely on a normal lineage or a borrowed title. That opens the door to a leadership conversation about what is temporary in every organization: our role, our influence, and our time. We talk succession planning, building long-term momentum, and why the best leaders train people so well they can finally sit in the “rocking chair” and watch others lead with confidence. Then we shift from Scripture to a very human story: Dr. Posey’s bicycle accident and the surprising diagnosis behind the pain. The leadership parallel is immediate. Treating symptoms feels productive, but diagnosing root causes is what actually solves problems, whether it’s supply chain delays, late reporting, or a team that keeps getting stuck. We also dig into transformational leadership from Hebrews 8, the power of explaining the why, and the difference between compliance and conviction, because conviction holds even when no one is watching. If you want biblical leadership principles you can apply at work today, listen now, then subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review so more leaders can find the show. What’s one area where your team needs a clearer why?

23. juni 202644 min
episode Leading Through Drift And Doubt cover

Leading Through Drift And Doubt

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2253126/fan_mail/new] Hebrews 6 can stop you mid-sentence. It’s one of those passages that forces real questions about drifting, maturity, and what happens when someone has had genuine spiritual exposure and still chooses to walk away. We sit with that tension without turning it into a two-verse slogan, because leadership and faith both break down when we build our whole worldview on clipped lines instead of the full story of Scripture and redemption. We also connect the warning in Hebrews to what we see every day in leadership: people don’t usually quit in a single moment, they drift. Sometimes it’s burnout, sometimes it’s bitterness, sometimes it’s just a slow loss of joy. We talk through practical leadership habits that protect focus and reduce chaos, like batching phone calls, setting clear response windows, and putting responsibility back on the person who says they “need” a meeting. Healthy time management is not about being unavailable; it’s about being present on purpose. Then we bring it home with leadership principles pulled straight from the tone of Hebrews itself. We explore the difference between perfection and direction, and why accountability works best when it’s paired with hope. Bad leadership avoids correction, harsh leadership corrects without hope, and biblical leadership corrects with purpose. We close with Hebrews’ anchor imagery and ask the question leaders hate to dodge: what actually anchors your life and your business when the pressure hits? Subscribe, share this with a leader who’s running on fumes, and leave a review so more people can find the show. What’s your anchor right now, and has it been tested lately?

16. juni 202634 min
episode From Milk To Steak The Leadership Diet- cover

From Milk To Steak The Leadership Diet-

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2253126/fan_mail/new] Some leaders hesitate because the task is too big. More often, they hesitate because something inside feels too heavy: fear of failure, shaky confidence, or the quiet worry that they are not ready. We take Hebrews 5 and put it right on the ground where leadership actually happens, connecting spiritual maturity to the daily decisions leaders make at work, at home, and on teams. We talk about what it looks like when people want the benefits of leadership but avoid the sacrifice it requires, and why repeating the basics is not the same as building on a foundation. Hebrews 5 gives us a sharp picture: milk is for infants, but solid food is for the mature, and maturity comes through constant practice. That becomes a practical leadership development challenge: train discernment, seek wise input, and choose growth on purpose instead of drifting. We also dig into authority and humility. Jesus is appointed rather than self-appointed, and that frames leadership as stewardship, not ego. We unpack why insecure leaders feel the need to control, announce themselves, or delay hard decisions, and why healthy leaders invite feedback, learn fast, and stay steady when pressure hits. If you want Christian leadership that is practical, honest, and workable, hit play, then share this with a leader who needs a push toward maturity. Subscribe, leave a review, and visit biblical leadership show.com to send us your dad jokes or a prayer request.

9. juni 202637 min