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Reviewer's Choice:
'Executive Values: A Christian Approach to Organizational Leadership'

06/14/2003

Executive Values: A Christian Approach to Organizational Leadership
Kurt Senske
(Augsburg Fortress, 166 pages, $16.99)

Writing in the context of Sept. 11 and the corporate scandals of Enron, et al., Senske offers a solid approach to leadership development for Christians. Being a successful business leader and faithful Christian are not mutually exclusive. Rather, the two go hand in hand. He persuasively argues that Christian leaders can and do lead lives of tremendous service and significance in the workforce. Christian service is not a Sunday-only affair. It is 24/7.

The organizing principle of the book is the Golden Rule. Jesus instructs his followers in the Sermon on the Mount, "So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you ..." (Matthew 7:12). The Golden Rule of Leadership is coupled with the premise that the organization must be preserved when it is offering a product or service of value.

Drawing on personal experience and literature on leadership, Senske offers practical, concrete steps and examples on how to create a positive organizational culture, develop leadership teams, retain employees, and engage in strategic planning with vision and mission

Leadership always involves challenging and painful decisions. Do we trade short-term gains for long-term success? Would a Christian leader move the company or manufacturing plant overseas to use a less expensive labor force? Should a Christian leader lay off employees or terminate underperforming employees? How do leaders determine when it is time to leave the organization and let someone else take over the reins? Senske answers these and many more difficult questions. The issues he raises and the answers he gives are consistent with the Golden Rule of Leadership. J.Z.
—Dallas Morning News.

"In Executive Values, Kurt Senske persuades us that the wisest business strategy may simply be the decision to respect and obey Jesus Christ on Monday morning and every day of our lives."
—U.S. House Majority Leader Tom DeLay
"This book couldn't come at a better time. Self-professed Christian corporate executives have been cooking the books, breaking the law, and enriching themselves in the process. Kurt Senske's message is a powerful reminder that managing and leading with Christian values means more than just attending church on Sunday."
—Gov. Michael S. Dukakis
"Executive Values is a strong testimony to Kurt Senske's style of positive, servant leadership ministry that focuses on faith in the Lord and the gifts that god had given his people. Kurt's faith is transparent throughout this resource, which is a strong compilation of research, anecdotes, and reflections. Executive Values stands for 1) Easter Victory; 2) Energy and Vigor; 3) Enlightened Vision. Thanks, Kurt, for sharing your faith, your experiences, your faith story. It is a valuable new resource for executives and others 'doing well by doing good' throughout the world."
—Dr. Richard W. Bimler, speaker, author, and president of Wheat Ridge Ministries, Chicago
"Dr. Senske has written a very inspiring, thought-provoking book on organizational leadership. His notes indicate a serious and complete study of considerable background information on a much-needed subject for modern society. I found his treatment of the elements required for a 'balanced' life to be particularly rewarding."
—Merle L. Borchelt, energy consultant and former CEO, Central & South West Corporation (now American Electric Power)

"Dr. Senske has written a very readable book containing a rich assortment of introspective personal assessments, useful illustrations and examples, wise counsel, mature reflections based upon practical experiences, review of some of the most important current literature on the subject of leadership, and insight and guidance gleaned from biblical materials. The content of this book will help to motivate individuals to practice the Golden Rule of Leadership."
—Dr. Alan F. Harre, president, Valparaiso University

"Executive Values illustrates very well that doing the right thing is best for business. This book will help change the lives of many readers for the better."
—Ed. F. Kruse, Chairman of the Board, Blue Bell Creameries, Brenham, Texas

"This important book will move you into a different level of thinking—one of a spiritual perspective and feeling—so necessary in future leadership."
—Richard J. Leider, founding principal, The Inventure Group and author, Repacking Your Bags
"Senske has truly captured the essence of effective executive leadership by incorporating time-tested Christian values with effective current business practices. He draws upon external management research, solid biblical references, as well as his significant professional experience to create a 'must read' for the successful modern day manager."
—John P. McDaniel, CEO, MedStar Health
"In these times of questionable accounting practices and management indiscretion, Dr. Senske offers a practical, concise, Christian approach to living out our values in the workplace, while at the same time achieving balance in our personal lives. Christians who lead by practicing the Golden Rule will indeed make a difference in the lives they lead, the companies they manage, and the people they serve."
—Bruce Nicholson, president and CEO, Thrivent Financial for Lutherans
"'Do unto others as you would have them do unto you'—a simple statement of values recommended by the author to the business leaders of today. If this could have been the prevailing attitude in employer-employee relationships in the recent past . . . what a difference! A valuable and timely message for anyone who has the responsibility of managing people."
—Paul D. Schrage, Sr. Ex. VP McDonald's Corp. (Retired)
"Executive Values is a great mix of insights drawn from management literature, concrete examples garnered from a mix of industries, and Senske's own rich experience seen through the lens of his faith. When leaders root their human relationships and business decisions in enduring faith values, their work is more effective and their lives are more congruent."
—Jill Schumann, President and CEO, Lutheran Services in America.
"Here you find critical management principles made even stronger by the application of Christian values in the workplace presented by an author that practices this powerful mix every day in his own successful enterprise. This book is not just a must for managers but should be read by church leaders, pastors and teachers who minister to and counsel members of their congregations who live in the world of business."
—Roger G. Wheeler, lead director and vice-chairman, Thrivent Financial For Lutherans, a Fortune 300 company
"Kurt Senske reminds us that for organizational leaders, ethical values must be the bottom line. Drawing on his own experience and other real-life examples, Dr. Senske shows that living out the Golden Rule at the personal and organizational level is not only the right thing to do, but it can also provide a steady and powerful course through the turbulent waters of change. All who seek God's guidance in applying Christian faith to daily workplace decisions will find a nutritious meal of food-for-thought in this book."
—Kathryn Wolford, president, Lutheran World Relief, Baltimore
Publishers Weekly Review

http://www.kentucky.com/mld/heraldleader/living/religion/6181870.htm

Posted on Sat, Jul. 05, 2003
BOOKS: 'Executive Values: A Christian Approach to Organizational Leadership'
'Executive Values: A Christian Approach to Organizational Leadership'
By Kurt Senske (Augsburg Fortress, 166 pages, $16.99).

Writing in the context of Sept. 11 and the corporate scandals of Enron, et al., Senske offers a solid approach to leadership development for Christians. Being a successful business leader and faithful Christian are not mutually exclusive. Rather, the two go hand in hand. He persuasively argues that Christian leaders can and do lead lives of tremendous service and significance in the work force. Christian service is not a Sunday-only affair. It is 24/7.

The organizing principle of the book is the Golden Rule. Jesus instructs his followers in the Sermon on the Mount, "So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you," (Matthew 7:12). The Golden Rule of Leadership is coupled with the premise that the organization must be preserved when it is offering a product or service of value.

Drawing on personal experience and literature about leadership, Senske offers practical, concrete steps and examples of how to create a positive organizational culture, develop leadership teams, retain employees, and engage in strategic planning with vision and mission.

Leadership always involves challenging and painful decisions. Do we trade short-term gains for long-term success? Would a Christian leader move the company or manufacturing plant overseas to use a less expensive labor force? Should a Christian leader lay off employees or terminate underperforming employees? How do leaders determine when it is time to leave the organization and let someone else take over the reins? Senske answers these and many more difficult questions. The issues he raises and the answers he gives are consistent with the Golden Rule of Leadership.

http://www.elca.org/scriptlib/dcs/jle/article.asp?aid=41

A review of "Executive Values: A Christian Approach to Organizational Leadership."

[1] The claim of this book is quite clear. "We will be successful, whatever we do and wherever we go, if we faithfully follow the Golden Rule of Leadership, and live our life for an audience of one - Jesus Christ." (p 158) This claim is stated in a variety of ways throughout the book. Personal satisfaction and financial success are both possible if a corporation and its leadership follow the Golden Rule. "With the golden rule at its heart, it is quite simple and has allowed me to inculcate Christian values within my organization in order to achieve our shared vision and goals." (p 26) According to author Senske, CEO of Lutheran Social Services of the South, the Golden Rule of Leadership is what God wants and it works. Although it is not assumed that doing the right thing will be easy, there is an underlying optimism that Christians will "naturally desire" to "do well by doing good." The Golden Rule of Leadership, according to Senske, is not only the appropriate Christian response; it makes good business sense.

[2] An effective Christ-based organizational culture and Golden Rule Leadership as Senske will be visible in a number of ways. It will hire individuals who share its values in order to enhance the organization's culture for a long time. A Christ-based leader will foster transparency in the organization and treat all individuals with respect and dignity. Although Senske believes that the organization all comes first in decision-making, actions will be guided by nonnegotiable Christian values of mercy and compassion for all persons. The meaning of "Golden Rule Leadership" is more assumed than defined except for a reference to the theme from a Spike Lee movie Do the Right Thing. Doing the right thing means acting with integrity. And acting with integrity means that one has determined what is right and what is wrong in a given situation. [3] Kurt Senske writes with passion and from the heart and out of his own experience. This is a readable book full of lively illustrations from companies and leaders who have done well by doing good or who have done good and succeeded. So, for example, a Christ-based leader will seek to stretch employees to greater achievement while at the same time helping employee achieve balance in their lives. "When the Golden Rule of Leadership is entwined with a passionate and purposeful career, the result is a marriage that reaps spiritual and earthly blessings." (p 152) There are also wise aphorisms sprinkled generously through book such as "strategy flows from values" or "work hard, have fun, get results" or "the only true fulfillment comes from building a better world" or "leadership, like life, is not a destination but a journey." It is clear that the author has an internalized value system informed by his understanding of the Christian faith.

[4] One can only applaud an effort such as Executive Values that seeks to connect faith and life in a comprehensive manner. It is a solid text about what is required to exercise responsible leadership that clearly counters the newly invoked "Bush model" of authoritarian leadership. My difficulty with the book centers on the author's rendition of the faith as a "deep relationship and constant dialogue with our Lord and Savior" that is at the same time a comprehensive framework of Christian principles or values. "The Scriptures lay down sound principles for our personal and professional lives, but give us the freedom to make individual choices about how we apply those principles in order to improve ourselves and benefit our organization." (p 149) Senske is more sophisticated about his references to material written from the business or leadership perspective than he is about Christian theology. The golden rule is regarded as the pragmatic norm of faithful living without any discussion of its meaning in the biblical text and without any reference to what ethicists like Paul Ricoeur have written about it. The golden rule does have a kind universal appeal across many religious traditions that makes it a workable principle to invoke in the public sphere. However, because Senske intends to develop a Christ-based approach to leadership and corporate life, he needs to make the case for using the golden rule as the foundational principle for a distinctively Christian or Christ-based leadership.

[5] There are three things that trouble me about Senske's argument. 1) While he does acknowledge in one paragraph (p 152) that being a business leader and a Christian does not guarantee success, the dominant message of the book is that doing the right thing is good for business. Religion works. Because most of his business and leadership principles are sound, it is difficult to know for sure whether good business practice and sound leadership skills are what matters and Christian faithfulness is a pious afterthought 2) It may be that as CEO of the Lutheran Social Services of the South, Senske can expect that all employees embody a Christ-based servant leader model. In a pluralistic culture, however, the golden rule will work more easily than explicit Christian values as a corporate norm. It is intriguing to imagine a style of leadership developed out of a carefully nuanced ethical understanding of the golden rule. 3) It is commonly understood, at least in Lutheran thought, that the word 'Christian' is used sparingly as an adjective. One would hope that that are more people like Kurt Senske would seek to understand what it means to be a Christian in leadership without making the claim of being a Christian leader.

—Review of Kurt Senske's "Executive Values" article by Herbert Anderson
The Reverend Herbert Anderson, Ph.D. is the Director of Pastoral Care & Congregational Life at St. Mark's Cathedral in Seattle, Washington.

(c) June 2003 Journal of Lutheran Ethics (JLE) Volume 3, Issue 6

 

 

Dr. Kurt Senske
LSS
P.O. Box 140767
Austin TX, 78714
512-706-7514
senske@senskevalues.com

Copyright 2002 Executive Values. All rights reserved.

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