I attended a breakfast meeting recently with
the president of St. Mary’s Hospital in Madison. Once a month he invites two
dozen community leaders to meet for conversation, coffee and croissants.
A few decades ago, “community leaders” likely
would have meant CEOs, bank executives and Chamber of Commerce presidents.
Today, “leaders” also include:
The founder of 100 State, a non-profit “co-working”
cooperative where building tenants not only lease space but collaborate on
creative ideas regardless of their particular business.
The owner of Madison-based Red Star Pictures, which provides mobile lighting for President Obama's public appearances.
A Merrill Lynch financial adviser who also
happens to be an Air Force pilot with a law degree and who travels regularly to
Germany to advise the U.S. military on developing five-year plans to deal with
emerging geopolitical conflicts in Africa.
Frank Byrne [pictured], St. Mary’s president, sees the
value in bringing these seemingly disparate interests together: Synergy.
Today, leadership is not just about in-house
technical knowledge – although that’s critical – but about meeting challenges
holistically by inviting all sorts of thinkers and problem-solvers together to
dream and strategize.
Church folk often see themselves as protectors
of tradition instead of entrepreneurs. But this creative synergy is a
biblically sound concept.
We are one body with many parts, as Jesus said,
so we can bring different perspectives to modern challenges. We face many:
poverty in the midst of societal affluence, cynicism toward organized religion
in the midst of spiritual hunger, self-interest in the face of Jesus’ prayer
that we would all be one.
Rather than following the crowd, I pray the
church might seize its power to creatively face the world and find new ways to
energize it with peace, joy and promise.
Shalom!
ReplyDeleteI like your comments (most everything in blog and elsewhere, for that matter) about "creative synergy" and agree wholeheartedly that we would do better with a diverse mix(ing) of folks, getting to know one another better and musing about the state of the world.
Shalom!
dave