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The
Coaching Approach to Growth
From
www.CoachingPastors.com
A
while back I was agonizing over how to fund a new ministry. Do I raise
funds, and spend the added time to form a board and do books for a non-profit?
Do I enlist investors and give up ownership in my work? Or do I take out
a personal loan (which I hated to do) and run it as a business? Several
self-imposed deadlines had come and gone, and I still couldn't decide.
Finally
I sat down with my friend Tim, a successful businessman who’s also a coach,
and asked for help. I laid out my conundrum in detail, going through the
pluses and minuses of each option, and then inquired: “What do you think
I should do?” He thought for a moment, and then responded, “Tony, I think
you know in your heart what the answer is.” Darn! I wanted him to tell
me what to do! So I steered the conversation back around, and a few minutes
later posed the same question in a different way. Again, Tim thought for
a moment—then gave me the same reply!
When
we said goodbye, I was frustrated to not have an answer, but also felt
strangely empowered to face my decision and make a choice. On the way
home, God spoke to me: “Tony, if you don't have the confidence to invest
in yourself, you'll never achieve what you are capable of.” When I talked
it over with my wife, I found that God had spoken to her, too, and we
made a great decision together.
Why
take the time to help people solve their own problems when it is so much
easier to make suggestions? It always takes longer to help people think
things through than it does to do the thinking for them. What’s the benefit
of asking instead of telling?
This
story is a great example of the power of the coaching approach. Here are
six things that Tim accomplished by asking that never would have come
from giving advice:
1. Empowerment. By not telling me what to do, Tim
sent a powerful message: “I believe in you. I believe you know what to
do. I believe you can hear God on this. You can make a great choice.”
His belief in me empowered me and gave me the confidence I needed to make
a decisive choice.
2.
Ownership. Because I made the decision, I owned it. It
was my choice. If Tim had told me what to do and it didn't work out, then
whose fault would it be?
3.
Motivation. When people come up with their own ideas and
solutions, they are most motivated to pursue them. The pivotal factor
in change isn't knowing what to do; it’s having the motivation to get
it done. Tim’s approach produced the highest possible motivation in me
to move forward—in fact, I acted within 24 hours on something I had put
off for months.
4.
Leadership Development. Tim’s approach compelled me as
a leader to take responsibility for living out my call. A leader’s sphere
of influence is directly proportional to his or her ability to take responsibility.
By pushing me to grow in responsibility, Tim helped me grow as a leader.
5.
Growth in Hearing God. Tim challenged me to hear the voice
of God for myself. His approach didn't just result in one great decision:
by strengthening my ability to hear God, he’s impacted every decision
I'll make from here on.
6.
You Could Be Wrong. I gave Tim three options: that means
any advice he gave me would have a two-out-of-three chance of being wrong.
You won't realize how often your discernment about other’s lives is wrong
until you stop giving advice and start waiting to see what God will do!
Excerpted
from The Peer Coaching Workbook by Tony Stoltzfus
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