Are you a witch doctor? I bumped into Mike Frost over dinner the other week when he raised this interesting question, but first let me explain, I get enough people reading my stuff out of context as it is.
I thought I’d have a wander down to the food hall at Morling College, where I am studying Christian counseling, before the start of the evening lectures. I wanted to catch up with Kalessin to talk shop and found him already there, in conversation with Mike Frost. In the course of the conversation the three of us eventually came round to issues of missional leadership and I shared some of the stuff I had been working through, in terms of me thinking through taking up leadership of the discipleship ministry at Pendle Hill Baptist Church next year, and my struggles with this given I prefer to work from the periphery, not the centre.
This was when Mike raised the interesting question. Apparently he’d been reading this missional book where it differentiated between two types of leaders, the tribal elders who lead from the centre, and the witch doctors who lead from the periphery. Sociologically this is not unlike the distinction between the priests and the prophets in Israel I expect. It instantly struck a chord with me as you might imagine. And I wonder how many missional leaders are the “witch doctors” of the wider Christian movement. The crazies who ask interesting questions that help the tribe to rethink their position in the world.
The question before me now is, how can the witch doctors and the tribal elders work closer together, given we both have the interests of the tribe at heart.







Leave a reply to Peggy Cancel reply