The NIV 365 Day Devotional
Character: Daniel Had What it Took!
Does the private life of a leader truly impact his or her public life? No question about it. Daniel illustrates why character plays such a vital role.
Daniel could have tried merely to survive his experience as a captive in a foreign land. Instead, he never left his disciplined life of character and personal commitment. Ponder the character he displayed during his times of testing under the kings of Babylon:
- His Diet: He wouldn’t compromise on ritually unclean foods, but ate only vegetables.
- His Motives: He didn’t take credit for interpreting dreams, but glorified God instead.
- His Honesty: He spoke the truth to authorities, regardless of its unpopularity.
- His Disciplines: He continued praying daily, even though it might cost him his life.
- His Integrity: He had no interest in bribes or payoffs.
- His Convictions: He stayed committed to his friends and beliefs even as he rose through the ranks.
How a leader deals with the circumstances of life tells you many things about his character. Crisis doesn’t necessarily make character, but it certainly does reveal it. Adversity makes a person choose one of two paths: character or compromise. Every time a leader chooses character, he grows stronger.
Character is the foundation on which a leader builds his or her life. It all begins with character, because leadership operates on the basis of trust. People will follow a leader only so far as they trust him or her. Character communicates credibility, harnesses respect, creates consistency and earns trust.
Every leader must know the following about character:
- Character is more than talk. Anyone can say that he has integrity, but action is the real indicator of character. Your character determines who you are and what you do. That’s why you can never separate a leader’s character from his actions. If a leader’s actions and intentions continually work against each other, look to his character to find out why.
- Talent is a gift, but character is a choice. We have no control over a lot of things in life. We don’t get to choose our parents or the circumstances of our birth and upbringing. But we do choose our character. We create it each time we make choices.
- Character brings lasting success with people. True leadership always involves others. Followers do not trust leaders whose character they know to be flawed, and they will not continue to follow them.
- Leaders cannot rise above the limitations of their character. Character will either limit or support a leader, depending on its strength. It will always determine whether a leader finishes well.
Reflect: does your private life reflect who you are in public?
Taken from The NIV Maxwell Leadership Bible.