The IRMA Community
Newsletters
Research IRM
Click a keyword to search titles using our InfoSci-OnDemand powered search:
|
The Impact of Faith on Servant Leadership and Leadership Behavior
Abstract
The objective of this chapter is to describe a couple of the deepest, compelling antecedents or schemata that shape personal faith and spiritual beliefs as well as two behaviors that exude outwardly toward followers of servant leaders. The first three core leadership points are strongly based on the theoretical model of Phipps (2012). The first core subject is a leader's personal spiritual beliefs, schema, or worldview. The existential worldview, as categorized by Koltko-Rivera (2004), shares the Christian worldview as a prototypical basis for servant leadership. The second core subject is a leader's constructive development or life experience, which shapes a leader's thinking (Phipps, 2012). This entails how a leader learns, processes, and makes meaning by reflecting on the school of personal experience, including trials and crucibles. The third core subject is more of a leader outcome, called meta-belief. A servant leader utilizes meta-belief or self-awareness in order to make choices in particular places and contexts. Finally, the fourth core essential subject that is evident to followers of servant leaders is vision and hope. A hopeful leader is always optimistically looking ahead with foresight, knowing what has taken place in both the past and present.
Related Content
N. L. Swathi, Achukutla Kumar.
© 2024.
17 pages.
|
Gurwinder Singh, Anshika Thakur.
© 2024.
21 pages.
|
Ashok Singh Gaur, Hari Om Sharan, Rajeev Kumar.
© 2024.
16 pages.
|
Sabyasachi Pramanik.
© 2024.
17 pages.
|
Geetha Manoharan, Abdul Razak, C. V. Guru Rao, Sunitha Purushottam Ashtikar, M. Nivedha.
© 2024.
28 pages.
|
Roop Kamal, Manpreet Kaur, Jaspreet Kaur, Shivani Malhan.
© 2024.
10 pages.
|
Anu Sharma.
© 2024.
8 pages.
|
|
|