Winning Versus Remaining Faithful 

The desire to win is natural to humans; we can see this trait from the early stages of childhood.

Toddlers fight because they need to win, although they do not know that is what they are doing. We become adults and continue to fight to win, but we tend to be subtler about it now that we can rationalize why we need to win.

Whether vying for a toy, a position, a desired outcome, or just being right, we want to come out on top; we want to win.

As adults can be manipulative: we may lie or deliberately withhold the whole truth. We may use power to control or words to cut down others. Some may use physical intimidation or abuse to win.

Sometimes winning is covert. We do things so others will not get ahead of us. We can be passive-aggressive toward them so we can win. Sometimes it is the withholding of information so they will not succeed. Sometimes it’s deliberately showing up late for a meeting, knowing our being late will slow down the progress of the person who is depending on our contribution to succeed.

As followers of Jesus Christ, we are called to focus on remaining faithful to Him rather than winning. This is challenging for the follower of Jesus because it would appear that the desire to win at all cost is in our DNA.

Though it may be challenging, it is possible not to allow the need to win to overtake our faithfulness to Jesus. This challenge is especially true for leaders.

Much of the literature, seminars or conversations on leadership focus on winning. This is not bad in and of itself. The problems come when we are willing to pursue winning at all cost.

As leaders, we win or succeed in the right way when we make remaining faithful to Jesus and our call to lead the key factors in our winning strategy. Faithfulness to Jesus Christ means that when we have succeeded – or won – it will be fulfilling and rewarding to us and honoring to the Lord Jesus Christ.

How do you keep your desire to be faithful from being overtaken by your desire to succeed or win on your own terms?

Clarify your values. Take time to know what you believe and why. Then ask yourself this important question: Am I willing to compromise on any of these values so I can win? As a follower of Jesus, your values should be based on your relationship with Him.

Seek others input. Ask family, friends, and those with whom you work closely how they perceive you in light of your values? If the responses show disparity between what you believe and what they perceive, you need to ask if your desire to be faithful is being overtaken by your desire to win.

Honor the Lord. When making tough win or lose decisions always ask the question: What is the next right thing to do that will honor the Lord? It is not a whether you “win” or “lose” that really matters, but whether your decisions are honoring to the Lord.

Are you tempted to choose winning over being faithful to Jesus Christ? If that is where you are, I suggest you take some time to clarify your values before moving forward.

If you would like help in achieving your goals as a leader or in any area of your life, call us at 208-880-0307 or email us at errol@errolcarrim.com to schedule a complimentary coaching session. To read Errol’s other posts, visit Christ-Centered Life Coaching.