The Centurion Law Enforcement
FCPO Newsletter and Bible Study
The "thin blue line " covered by the blood of Christ.
Fellow  Sheepdogs  & Supporters:

Praying that this week finds you staying the course as we lead and serve behind Christ our Captain in terms of your work and ministry (yes, EVERY Christian is called to ministry of one form or another). 

Speaking of service and leadership, this week's Bible study centers on a subject very close to my heart. Whether it is in law enforcement, the business world and even in ministry, if you're in a position of leadership, you MUST be serving and pouring into your people: scroll down to " Five Marks of a Servant Leader." 

Miss last week's newsletter and study? While I always re-post them on our Facebook, Twitter feeds (and our website as well), here again is Resolving Conflict God's Way.

Finally, please take a moment to review the prayer requests below (you are always encouraged to let me know if you have a prayer request I can post for you here...of if you just need prayer in general), along with some outstanding resources and news about our  upcoming events around the country.

Again, stay safe on the street while being radically bold ("Code 3" sense of urgency) in leading with a servant's heart while sharing the hope we have in Christ with others!

MC



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RESOURCES

(1) Here's a great resource and follow-up to last week's Bible study on conflict resolution (I quoted the author in our study): The Peacemaker: A Biblical Guide to Resolving Conflict.

(2) We are fully committed to a wholly biblical counseling model. Accordingly, this is a terrific resource (resources within resources) on that very subject:   Biblical Counseling Coalition.


PRAYER REQUESTS
 
(1) Please be in prayer for Philly PD Sgt. Kevin Bernard reference his upcoming knee replacement surgery (now set for NEXT week).     

(2)  We appreciate your prayers reference our upcoming outreach to our own in DC during Police Week 2017.  

(3) On Saturday I had the honor of visiting with wounded Wichita (KS) Officer  Brian Arteburn ( critically injured in the LOD ) here in Colorado Rehabilitation Hospital. Brian will undergo major surgery on Friday and both he and his wife CC (also a WPD officer) covet your prayers. I'll see him again on Thursday to pray with them and will try to keep you posted.

(4) Prayers are requested for Independence (MO) Officer Tim Wagstaff who remains in critical condition after being shot in the head on a burglary-in-progress call.  

Have a prayer request or announcement you would like included here? Need prayer?   Email me !  I also post prayer requests on my Facebook page ("friend" me).  


UPCOMING EVENTS

(1) Here's the upcoming   Sheepdog Training Seminar Schedule Highly recommended! 

(2) It is not too early to start planning for/praying about Police Week 2017. Here's our preliminary 411: Police Week 2017 Schedule.  In addition, our RISE colleagues will be hosting a night of prayer and worship on Friday, May 12: RISE Night of Worship Honoring Law Enforcement.

(3) The 2017 Breaching the Barricade Law Enforcement Conference and National Peace Officer Appreciation Day events are set for October 6 and 7 in Elkhart, IN. This year's outstanding lineup of speakers are J. Warner Wallace, Stacy and Martha Ettel, Brent and Vicki Newman, and Kristi Neace. Jim Bontrager will have more 411 soon -- stay tuned!  



The Centurion Law Enforcement Ministry

The Centurion Law Enforcement Ministry is a FCPO-affiliated, evangelical Christian outreach to our own in law enforcement. These newsletters and Bible studies are part of this effort and past editions can be found on our website and on social media  ( Facebook and Twitter ) pages. Feel free to adapt these messages for your own individual or group use and please share them with others. 

In addition, I regularly speak at both law enforcement and civilian conferences and events around the country -- please shoot me an email if I can be of service to your church, agency or organization.  
 
Fellowship of Christian Peace Officers
FCPO-USA exists to provide biblical support ("backup"), accountability and iron sharpens iron fellowship to Christian officers first in the U.S. and throughout the world as well. My chapter -- FCPO #217/-((FCPO Metro Denver and Aurora), typically meets every 2nd and 4th Thursday at Calvary Aurora (High School Room, 7 PM) for "cop church" Bible study, prayer and servant-warrior fellowship . Spouses are both welcome and encouraged to attend with their LEO! Our next meeting is set for Thursday, April 14th (we will be in Room 138 again for this meeting). Hope to see you there!     

Information on the other FCPO chapters meeting around the country (including the new chapter in Arvada, CO) can be found on the Chapter Locator pages on the FCPO-USA website.

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Five Marks of a Servant-Leader

Luke 22:25-26

I speak/teach and write on servant-leadership all over the U.S. and it is no surprise to anyone that I am 100 percent sold on Christ's model for leadership (especially for us in law enforcement and government). Accordingly, this powerful piece from Jon Bloom on the topic is outstanding and a "must share." I'll have some closing comments at the end. Here's " Five Marks of a Servant Leader":

All professing Christians agree that a Christian leader should be a servant leader. Jesus couldn't be clearer:
" The kings of the Gentiles exercise lordship over them, and those in authority over them are called benefactors. But not so with you. Rather, let the greatest among you become as the youngest, and the leader as one who serves." ( Luke 22:25-26)
Where there's not always agreement is how servant leadership should look in a given situation. Sometimes servant leaders wash others' feet, so to speak ( John 13:1-17), but other times they rebuke ( Matthew 16:23), and even discipline ( Matthew 18:15-20). Sometimes they serve at their own expense ( 1 Corinthians 9:7), but other times they issue strong imperatives ( 1 Corinthians 5:2; 11:16).

Wading into Muddy Waters

Other factors muddy the waters even more for us. To begin with, all Christian leaders have indwelling sin, which means even at the height of their maturity, they will still be defective servants. Add to this the fact that most leaders have not yet reached their height of maturity. Add to this the fact that all Christian followers also have indwelling sin and most haven't reached our height of maturity either. Add to this the fact that different temperaments, experiences, giftings, and callings influence both how certain leaders tend to serve, and how certain followers tend to perceive that leadership - a leader's genuine attempt to serve might be interpreted by a genuine follower as an attempt to "lord it over" them ( 2 Corinthians 1:24). And then there are wolfish, self-serving leaders who, while deceiving their followers, appear for a time to behave in ways similar to servant leaders.

So, determining whether or not a leader is acting from a heart of Christlike service requires charitable, patient, humble discernment. It's not simple. There's no one-size-fits-all servant leader description. The needs and contexts in the wider church are vast and varied, and require many different kinds of leaders and gifts. We must guard against our own unique biases when assessing leaders' hearts. Each of us is more or less drawn to certain kinds of leaders, but our preferences can be unreliable and even uncharitable standards.

Marks of a Servant Leader

Still, the New Testament instructs us to exercise due diligence in discerning a Christian leader's fitness (see, for instance, 1 Timothy 3:1-13). What traits do we look for in a leader that suggest his fundamental orientation is Christlike servanthood? This list is by no means exhaustive, but here are five fundamental indicators.

1. A servant leader seeks the glory of his Master:

And his Master is not his reputation or his ministry constituency; it is God. Jesus said, "The one who speaks on his own authority seeks his own glory; but the one who seeks the glory of him who sent him is true, and in him there is no falsehood" ( John 7:18). A Christlike leader is a bondservant of Christ ( Ephesians 6:6), and demonstrates over time that Christ - not public approval, position, or financial security - has his primary loyalty. In this he "swears to his own hurt and does not change" ( Psalm 15:4).

2. A servant leader sacrificially seeks the highest joy of those he serves:

This does not conflict with seeking the glory of his Master. Jesus said, " Whoever would be great among you must be your servant . . . even as the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many" ( Matthew 20:26, 28). Whatever his temperament, gift mix, capacities, or sphere of influence, he will make necessary sacrifices in order to pursue people's "progress and joy in the faith," which results in the greater glory of God ( Philippians 1:25; 2:9-11).

3. A servant leader will forgo his rights rather than obscure the gospel:

Paul said it this way: " I have made myself a servant to all, that I might win more of them" ( 1 Corinthians 9:19). What did this mean for him? It meant sometimes he abstained from certain foods and drinks, or refused financial support from those he served, or worked with his own hands to provide for himself, or went hungry, or dressed poorly, or was beaten, or was homeless, or endured disrespect inside and outside the church ( 1 Corinthians 4:11-13; 9:4-7). And he decided not to marry ( 1 Corinthians 9:5). This all before he was martyred. Paul's servant bar may have been set extraordinarily high, but all servant leaders will yield their rights if they believe more will be won to Christ as a result.

4. A servant leader is not preoccupied with personal visibility and recognition:

Like John the Baptist, a servant leader sees himself as a " friend of the Bridegroom" ( John 3:29), and is not preoccupied with the visibility of his own role. He doesn't view those with less visible roles as less significant, nor does he covet more visible roles as more significant ( 1 Corinthians 12:12-26). He seeks to steward the role he's received as best he can, and gladly leaves the role assignments to God ( John 3:27).

5. A servant leader anticipates and graciously accepts the time for his decrease:
All leaders serve only for a season. Some seasons are long, some short; some are abundant, some lean; some are recorded and recalled, most are not. But all seasons end. When John the Baptist recognized the ending of his season, he said, " Therefore this joy of mine is now complete. He must increase, but I must decrease" ( John 3:29-30).

Sometimes a leader is the first to recognize his season's end, sometimes others recognize it first, and sometimes God lets a season end unjustly for purposes a leader can't understand at the time. But a servant leader graciously yields his role for the good of Christ's cause, because his identity and trust are not in his calling, but in his Christ.

Be Gracious with Your Leaders

No earthly Christian leader is the perfect incarnation of these five fundamental marks of servanthood. Jesus alone bears that distinction. The vast majority of our leaders are imperfect servants trying to be faithful.

So, some of the greatest gifts we can give our leaders are 1) our explicit encouragement when we see any of these graces in them (loose our tongues), 2) our quiet patience with their stumbling (hold our tongues), and 3) our charitable judgment and gracious feedback regarding decisions that raise questions and concerns (bridle our tongues). And all three can be as easily applied in speaking about our leaders as in speaking to them.

If a leader needs help recognizing the ending of his season, let his faithful friends bring a loving, gracious, gentle, and patient encouragement, and if necessary, reproof.

But sometimes, like Diotrephes ( 3 John 9), a leader's sinful defects are too damaging, or like Judas ( Luke 6:16), they prove to be a wolf. At that point a gracious response looks like appropriate, godly, mature followers taking the servant initiative to rebuke ( Matthew 16:23), and even discipline ( Matthew 18:15-20). We'll know we've reached that point because, after a season of observation, it will become clear that these five marks are conspicuously missing in that leader.


I hope this touched you.  As I continue to preach, ours is a profession and a nation desperate for biblical servant-leadership.  This is why I continue to press Christians to seek positions of authority and to then lead as Christ-like servants (to wit, asking God for opportunities to lead biblically). Our "dirty little secret" as a God-ordained ( Romans 13:1-4) profession in terms of stress is not so much what we deal with on "the street" as it is the fallout from poor leadership ( "bosses" instead of true, servant-leaders) within.  Beyond that, a lack of servant-leadership plagues the ministry as well...wonderful teachers who are anything but when it comes to pouring into ( discipleship, mentoring) or otherwise taking care of their staff.  

With that, HOW then can we be the servant-leaders God has called us to be? Folks, it is all but impossible unless we are first radically born again in Christ. It is only then that we can lead and serve under the inspiration and direction of the Holy Spirit. Is that you? Consider the following:

(1) Jesus' first words in His earthly ministry were: " Repent and believe in the Good News " ( Mark 1:15 ). To " repent " is a 180 -- a radical change of mind and heart as it relates to our sin. To " believe " as God intends it to  completely and radically surrender to Him in faith  ("believe" and "faith" have the same Greek root meaning) in the same way you have faith that your body armor will stop the rounds it is designed to stop! The two words are synonymous in meaning and intent. And the Good News?  That is the Gospel

(2) In John 3:1-21, Jesus said, "... you must be born again." Note our Lord's emphasis on " must" (not "may" or "should"): this is the " life-saving/life-changing" personal relationship (not "religion") with Christ that I stress so often. See " What does it mean to be a born again Christian." 
 
AND then...

(a) Take the " Good Person Test" and see how you do (as shown in this study, you can't ever be "good" enough without Christ). Then go to...
(c)  Cops and Salvation (a powerful, short message from police Commander Travis Yates of Ten-Four Ministries and Law Officer Magazine ).
(d) Got saved?  Now what?

More questions? Please contact me!

Let's step out in radical faith to be the servant-leaders God has called us to be!

MC
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