Built For Greatness
Built For Greatness isn’t just another platform—it’s a movement designed to inspire, equip, and empower you to step into your full potential. Whether you're seeking faith-driven motivation, personal development insights, or practical strategies for success, we bring you content that fuels your mind, strengthens your spirit, and challenges you to rise higher.
In a rapidly changing and increasingly divided world, the need for a renewed focus on faith, truth, and unity has never been greater. The BFG Podcast offers a compelling and transformative path for those who feel called to participate in the New Evangelization, a mission to spread the Gospel with a new ardor, expression, and method.
Our commitment is to restore the truth, not just as a historical or doctrinal concept, but as a living and active force that shapes how we live, serve, and interact with others. The BFG Handbook we offer at www.builtforgreatness.com presents the Gospel in a fresh way, making it relevant to today’s challenges while staying true to the eternal truths of Christ. This is not a new gospel but a renewed and vibrant expression of the Good News that invites all to encounter Jesus in profound and meaningful ways.
Built For Greatness
Humble Leadership: BFG Handbook Chapter 68 (Surrender Is Strength)
Discover the highlights of this chapter shaping the New Evangelization today: https://www.builtforgreatness.com/tao-te-ching-chapter-68-humble-leadership/
What if the real secret to effective leadership has nothing to do with dominance, force, or always getting your way? In this thought-provoking exploration of humble leadership, we uncover a radical alternative to worldly power dynamics that might just transform how you approach challenges in your life.
Drawing from Chapter 68 of the BFG Handbook—described as a Christian edition of the Tao Te Ching—we dive deep into counterintuitive wisdom that challenges everything modern culture teaches about strength. "Great generals are not warlike. Great warriors do not get angry. Those who are good defeat their opponent without engaging them." These statements fly in the face of conventional leadership advice, yet they point to a profound truth about human influence and spiritual power.
We break down the practical MAP framework (Mindset, Aim, Practice) that transforms these ancient principles into actionable steps anyone can apply, whether you're managing a team, raising children, or simply trying to navigate difficult relationships. From emotional control to non-contention, from empowering others to aligning with divine guidance, each principle offers a pathway to more effective and peaceful engagement with life's challenges.
Perhaps most fascinating is how these principles resonate across major world religions—we explore parallels in Christianity, Islam, Buddhism, and Hinduism that suggest these might be universal truths about human experience rather than isolated religious teachings. As St. Thomas Aquinas noted, "Truth cannot contradict truth."
The next time you feel provoked to anger or drawn into unnecessary conflict, remember that the greatest power might come not from fighting back, but from the counterintuitive strength of humility, restraint, and love. Subscribe to continue exploring how ancient wisdom can transform modern living, and share your experiences with humble leadership in the comments below.
Okay, let's unpack this. What if I told you that real power, the kind that leads effectively, isn't actually found in force or always getting your way? What if it's rooted in something well quieter like humility, self-control, even not contending?
Speaker 2:That feels incredibly counterintuitive, doesn't it? I mean, our world often screams the opposite.
Speaker 1:Exactly Be aggressive, fight for what's yours, you know, never back down.
Speaker 2:Right, and that's why we're diving today into a really fascinating source. It's chapter 68, titled Humble Leadership, from the BFG Handbook.
Speaker 1:The BFG Handbook and it's described as a Christian edition of the Tao Te Ching.
Speaker 2:Yeah, which straight away signals this unique blend right. Ancient Eastern wisdom meets Christian spiritual principles.
Speaker 1:Which is interesting because the Tao Te Ching is all about harmony, balance, finding that way.
Speaker 2:Effortless action aligning with the Tao, and this edition filters those ideas through a Christian lens.
Speaker 1:So our mission for this deep dive is to really get to the core of what this source means by humble leadership.
Speaker 2:Yeah, we want to pull out the key insights. See how it contrasts with you know, typical worldly views of strength.
Speaker 1:And understand why the source argues this approach isn't just effective, but maybe essential.
Speaker 2:And we'll look at how the source breaks this down. It uses a framework mindset, aim and practice.
Speaker 1:Ah, the MAP framework.
Speaker 2:Exactly, and it finds echoes of these ideas in Christian scripture, but also, interestingly, across other major world religions. The source uses these terms restore, renewal and respond.
Speaker 1:Okay, so let's start with restore the foundation, the core principles, right from the opening lines of chapter 68.
Speaker 2:Yeah, these lines really set the stage. Things like great generals are not warlike.
Speaker 1:Great warriors, do not get angry.
Speaker 2:Those who are good defeat their opponent without engaging them.
Speaker 1:And those who are good humble themselves before the people.
Speaker 2:Straight away. That just challenges our whole idea of strength, doesn't it?
Speaker 1:Totally. The source is saying real leadership, real power. It isn't about aggression or temper or conflict.
Speaker 2:It's a different kind of strength altogether, and what's fascinating is how the source immediately connects these ancient sounding ideas to Christ's own life and teachings.
Speaker 1:Like avoiding strife and rage, trusting in God.
Speaker 2:Exactly, it points to Psalm 37,. You know about not fretting, trusting in the Lord, that reliance on a higher power.
Speaker 1:And the example of Jesus during his arrest. That comes up too right.
Speaker 2:Yeah, Matthew 26. The source highlights that he could have called down legions of angels, but he chose surrender, not fighting back.
Speaker 1:Which the source frames as this powerful example of non-contention trusting God's plan over physical force.
Speaker 2:Right, it argues. True victory isn't about overpowering people. It's achieved through wisdom, humility, love.
Speaker 1:Which really resonates with the Beatitudes like blessed are the meek.
Speaker 2:Matthew 5.5. And that meekness isn't weakness, it's strength under control, Power yielded essentially.
Speaker 1:And the handbook points to practical stuff too, like turning the other cheek.
Speaker 2:Loving enemies, overcoming evil with good Matthew 5, Romans 12. It's an active choice for peace, not just being passive.
Speaker 1:So this virtue of not contending is really central, absolutely.
Speaker 2:And the source frames it not as giving up but as a deep trust in God's strength working through you, not just your own limited power. Passages like Ephesians 3, talking about being strengthened with power through his spirit, or Romans 8, about being led by power through his spirit, or romans 8 about being led by the spirit operating with divine power okay, and the last bit being one with the heavenly spirit that's presented as aligning with the great principle of old kind of a timeless truth aligning with god's will exactly, and the source says that's where we find the power for endurance, for patience.
Speaker 2:It points to colossians 1, about being strengthened with all power according to his glorious might.
Speaker 1:So this first section restore. It's really about redefining strength, isn't it?
Speaker 2:Completely Humble leadership characterized by peace, self-control, non-contention. Humility isn't a lack of power. The source presents it as reflecting Christ's example and relying on divine power.
Speaker 1:Okay, but principles are one thing. How do you actually live this out? That brings us to renewal, right.
Speaker 2:Exactly, and this is where the Trinitarian MAP framework comes in Mindset aim practice.
Speaker 1:MAP like a roadmap for transformation.
Speaker 2:Pretty much, it guides you to shift your thinking that's the mindset Clarify your intention, the aim, and define concrete actions, the practice, how to actually integrate these ideas.
Speaker 1:How does the MAP apply to those core lines, Starting with? Great generals are not warlike.
Speaker 2:Okay, so the suggested mindset Embrace peace as the foundation. Actively reject conflict as your go-to tool.
Speaker 1:the source says real guidance flows from peace and wisdom which is pretty radical compared to a lot of leadership styles out there definitely, and the real world application.
Speaker 2:Choose to be a peacemaker at work in relationships. Listen, understand, aim for resolution.
Speaker 1:Don't just jump into confrontation it goes of blessed are the peacemakers from Matthew 5 and Romans 12 about not repaying evil for evil.
Speaker 2:So if that's the mindset, the aim is to actively seek peace and harmony, consciously avoid aggression.
Speaker 1:Like using diplomacy compromise.
Speaker 2:Exactly the source points to Matthew 5, again in Psalm 34, seek peace and pursue it. That's the goal. Well, the source links the practice of humility and service here. But it kind of covers the next couple of points too, about not getting angry and humbling yourself.
Speaker 1:Ah, okay, so what's that practice?
Speaker 2:It's serving others without needing recognition, leading by example. That's where our Matthew 20 comes in Whoever wants to become great must be your servant. And James 4, humble yourselves before the Lord. Humility as an action.
Speaker 1:Got it Okay, next line Great warriors, do not get angry. What's the MAP there?
Speaker 2:The mindset is cultivating self-control, patience, staying calm. Anger clouds, judgment right. The source emphasizes wise people control their emotions. So in practice, when conflict hits, the real world application is pause, breathe, reflect, maybe pray. Respond in a measured way, Don't just react impulsively.
Speaker 1:That sounds like James 1.19.
Speaker 2:quick to listen, slow to speak, slow to become angry. And proverbs 19 about wisdom, yielding patience and overlooking offenses so the aim that flows from that mindset it's practicing self-control and patience, aiming to stop your emotions from driving your actions. Step back from stress or conflict. Communicate calmly. James 1.19 again and ecclesiastes 7.9. Do not be quickly provoked, for anger resides in the lap of fools.
Speaker 1:Strong words and the specific practice.
Speaker 2:Emotional control itself being slow to anger, quick to listen. That pause, that moment of reflection or prayer before you respond. That is the practice.
Speaker 1:Okay, what about the third one? Those who are good defeat their opponent without engaging them. That sounds tricky.
Speaker 2:It's a really unique strategy. The mindset is about indirect influence, winning people over through kindness, wisdom, virtue, letting your character do the talking, basically.
Speaker 1:Like how the source mentions Jesus responding to insults with love.
Speaker 2:Exactly so. The real world application when you face criticism or opposition, respond with love and understanding, not defensiveness. It's not weakness, the source suggests it disarms hostility. And Matthew 5, love your enemies. So the aim is resolving challenges without direct confrontation, allowing peaceful solutions to emerge by understanding the root causes of disagreement, using empathy, finding common ground. The source points to Romans 12, again about not repaying evil for evil. In Proverbs 15, a gentle answer turns away wrath.
Speaker 2:And the practice thing is Peaceful resolution, handling conflicts with wisdom, patience, diplomacy, trying to understand the other side, find common ground, build bridges with words instead of just fighting. Matthew 5 and Romans 12 again.
Speaker 1:Right, Okay, number four those who are good humble themselves before the people.
Speaker 2:The mindset here is embracing humility as the path to actual greatness, accepting the call to be humble in everything mirroring Christ.
Speaker 1:And practically speaking.
Speaker 2:Practicing humility in leadership, in interactions, acknowledging you need others, recognizing their contributions, avoiding pride, focusing on serving. The aim is Practicing humility in every situation, embracing servanthood, acknowledging others' value serving them, not elevating yourself, focusing on collective success.
Speaker 1:And the specific practice for this one.
Speaker 2:As we said, the source bundles the practice of humility in the service under that first point, but it clearly applies directly here too. It's that act of serving without seeking the spotlight.
Speaker 1:Makes sense. Okay, let's move to the virtue of not contending.
Speaker 2:The mindset is letting go of the need to compete, seeking peace instead, avoiding pointless arguments or competition.
Speaker 1:That takes trust, doesn't it, especially when the world pushes you to win.
Speaker 2:Huge trust, trust in God's timing and plan. The source suggests the real world. Application, practice restraint in conversations, listen actively, share, kindly Know when to let something go without needing the last word.
Speaker 1:Philippians 2 encourages doing things without grumbling or arguing.
Speaker 2:And Romans 12 urges living at peace with everyone if possible. So the aim is to actively avoid unnecessary competition. Strive for peace. Let go of. Is to actively avoid unnecessary competition. Strive for peace. Let go of needing to prove your superior.
Speaker 1:Focusing more on collaboration.
Speaker 2:Exactly In your career, in life, seeking solutions that benefit everyone. Romans 12 and Philippians 2 again. Do nothing out of selfish ambition. Value others above yourselves.
Speaker 1:And the practice is embracing non-contention.
Speaker 2:Actively refraining from competing for power or recognition, focusing on teamwork, cooperation, supporting and uplifting others.
Speaker 1:Okay. Next, the power to use the strength of others.
Speaker 2:The mindset here is recognizing interdependence. You need other people to achieve big things. It's about empowering them, seeing their strengths, working together intentionally.
Speaker 1:Like Jesus, empowering his disciples.
Speaker 2:The source uses that example. Yes, and the real world application is acknowledging and uplifting people, encouraging their gifts, collaborating on shared goals. By lifting others, you actually strengthen the overall mission.
Speaker 1:Two are better than one, like Ecclesiastes says.
Speaker 2:Right and Romans 12,. The body of Christ analogies many parts, one body. So the aim is empowering others to contribute their strengths for the common good, recognizing the value they bring.
Speaker 1:Practically that means delegating based on strength.
Speaker 2:Yes, and creating a supportive environment where people feel safe and encouraged to contribute.
Speaker 1:Does this one have a specific practice tied just to it?
Speaker 2:The source doesn't list one separately here, but it's clearly woven into the overall practice of collaboration, service and humility we've been talking about.
Speaker 1:Gotcha and the final principle from that opening set being one with the heavenly spirit.
Speaker 2:Deep alignment. That's the mindset, consciously aligning your will with God's, letting the Holy Spirit guide you, surrendering your agenda, living in constant awareness of the spirit.
Speaker 1:So practically seeking God's will.
Speaker 2:In everything, big or small, through prayer, scripture, being mindful of those promptings, striving for harmony with his guidance. Daily Romans 8 talks about being led by the Spirit.
Speaker 1:And John 15, remain in me.
Speaker 2:Exactly that essential connection. So the aim is striving for that deep harmony with God's will and guidance, cultivating that connection. Seeking guidance is striving for that deep harmony with God's will and guidance, cultivating that connection. Seeking guidance daily, making choices reflecting love and truth, trusting the Spirit's power.
Speaker 1:And the practice is living in that alignment. Yes, through consistent prayer, discernment, listening for God's voice and obedience, dedicating time for prayer, reflection, trying to live by God's word, trusting the Spirit's leading. Okay, so that covers the MAP for the seven core lines, but you mentioned the source adds a couple more practices.
Speaker 2:It does, two key ones that reflect broader principles. First, the practice of generosity and moderation.
Speaker 1:Based on which principle?
Speaker 2:It connects to knowing moderation. One becomes generous. The practice is finding that balance being generous with time, resources, talents.
Speaker 1:But doing it mindfully.
Speaker 2:Exactly From a place of moderation, avoiding excess in your own life, ensuring giving flows from love and wisdom, not waste. Be generous, yes, but also be mindful of your own consumption. Avoid indulgence. The source points to loop six. Give and it will be given Matthew six treasures in heaven, first Timothy. Six instructing the rich. Avoid indulgence. The source points to Luke 6. Give and it will be given Matthew 6. Treasures in heaven 1 Timothy 6. Instructing the rich. And Philippians 4. Let your moderation be known.
Speaker 1:And the second additional practice.
Speaker 2:Love in all things this draws from. Use love when engaging in battle, and all will be conquered.
Speaker 1:So practicing unconditional love.
Speaker 2:Selfless love, even in tough situations, seeing it as reflecting Christ's love. The source stresses how love can transform relationships and dissolve conflict where other things fail.
Speaker 1:And the application is obvious but hard.
Speaker 2:Prioritize love in all interactions family, work, public Act with kindness, empathy, understanding. Let love guide your actions. It's rooted in the great commandment loving enemies, 1 Peter 4. Above all, love each other deeply.
Speaker 1:Wow. So the renewal section with the MAP framework really gives concrete steps. It takes these lofty principles and makes them actionable.
Speaker 2:Exactly how to change your thinking, your aims and your actions.
Speaker 1:But the source doesn't stop there. There's a final section respond. What's that about?
Speaker 2:This part is really interesting. It connects these principles of humble leadership to similar teachings in other major world religions.
Speaker 1:Finding parallels.
Speaker 2:Yes, highlighting what the source sees as shared spiritual truth that resonate across different traditions, it suggests a kind of universal wisdom here.
Speaker 1:Okay, what themes does it identify?
Speaker 2:First, humility and service. We saw the Christian links Matthew, James, Philippians but the source points to parallels in Islam, emphasizing humility before God and equality. Also Buddhism, the Dhammapada, speaking against pride, and Hinduism, the Bhagavad Gita, listing humility as a virtue.
Speaker 1:So the source argues this is a unifying theme.
Speaker 2:Yes, that it unites faiths by calling us to transcend ego, align with divine virtues, pursue spiritual growth. A universal call to selfless service. The application is servant leadership helping without expectation.
Speaker 1:What's next?
Speaker 2:Non-anger and emotional control. Again we saw Christian links in James Ecclesiastes. The source finds similar teachings in Islam Quran 3, praising those who suppress anger.
Speaker 1:And Buddhism.
Speaker 2:Dhammapada 222 advising conquering anger and Hinduism. Bhagavad Gita 16, listing non-anger as divine.
Speaker 1:So emotional control is seen as universally important.
Speaker 2:Crucial for spiritual maturity. The source argues Prevents harm, fosters peace. The application is consistent. Respond with patience, use techniques like prayer or meditation. Makes sense what else Peaceful resolution and non-contention. Beyond Matthew 5 and Romans 12, the source points to Islam's Quran 41 recommending responding to evil with good. Like turning the other cheek In essence and Buddhism's Dhammapada 103 on conquering anger with gentleness. Hinduism's Bhagavad Gita 16 includes absence of quarrelsomeness so the universal truth here is real strength is mastering your inner state, not beating opponents.
Speaker 2:It encourages reconciliation, forgiveness, avoid arguments, seek understanding, propose peaceful solutions, moderation and generosity. We saw the christ angle. The source finds echoes in Islam Quran 17, warning against extravagance. Buddhism's Dhammapada 177 advises contentment and generosity. Hinduism's Bhagavad Gita 9 speaks of God providing for the devoted.
Speaker 1:Key virtues everywhere.
Speaker 2:Pretty much Preventing greed, fostering community, promoting balance. The application involves both generosity and moderation. Give freely, but live mindfully.
Speaker 1:And the final theme.
Speaker 2:Love as a unifying force Central in Christianity. Obviously Matthew 22, matthew 5, 1 Peter 4. Parallels in Islam's Quran, 49, emphasizing brotherhood, dhammapada 223, conquering anger with love, and Hinduism's Bhagavad Gita 12, describing the devotee's qualities friendliness, compassion.
Speaker 1:So love is presented as the ultimate unifier.
Speaker 2:Perhaps the most central unifying force across these traditions, according to the source, transcending hostility, leading to healing, unity, peace. The application is prioritizing love in all interactions, kindness, empathy, understanding, guiding your actions.
Speaker 1:Okay, stepping back, then. The core message from this chapter, interpreted by the source, is really powerful and countercultural.
Speaker 2:Absolutely True. Greatness and leadership in life isn't about force or dominance. It's rooted in humility, peace, self-control, collaboration, a path for personal renewal.
Speaker 1:While the response section shows, these ideas aren't isolated, they resonate across different spiritual paths.
Speaker 2:Suggesting something universally true, deeply human, about this kind of humble string.
Speaker 1:It definitely challenges our default settings, makes you think that real effectiveness, real peace, might look very different from what the world usually tells us. So here's something to think about, maybe mull over. How might adopting just one of these principles, maybe that virtue of not contending when you feel provoked, or actively practicing peaceful resolution in a tricky conversation, how might that reshape a challenge you're facing right now, whether it's at work, at home or somewhere else in your life?
Speaker 2:It really makes you think, doesn't it? Maybe there are some fundamental truths about the human experience that we're all tapping into, just in different ways.
Speaker 1:Which brings us to our final thought. For you, the source material actually ends by quoting St Thomas Aquinas, who said truth cannot contradict truth. So, as you think about that, how does exploring these different spiritual expressions of similar ideas maybe shift your own understanding? Does it point towards a deeper unity underlying those surface level differences?
Speaker 2:We encourage you to really reflect on the power of restraint and spiritual surrender in your own life and how choosing those paths might unlock some unexpected possibility. Thanks for listening, everybody thanks for joining us.