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Making
the Leadership Transition:
An Interview with Mark Earley
Mark
Earley, 47, former Virginia Attorney General and gubernatorial
candidate, became president of Prison Fellowship, the
world's largest outreach to prisoners, ex-prisoners,
and their families, on February 1, 2002. As president
of Prison Fellowship, Earley oversees the U.S. arm of
an international prison outreach organization with active
ministry in prisons and communities in all 50 states
and in 95 countries worldwide. Leader
Links editor Michael Duduit recently
visited with Early to discuss his leadership of this
major organization, including the transition from founding
president Charles Colson.
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Leader
Links: How
in the world does somebody succeed Chuck Colson?
Early:
Very carefully. I think one of the great strengths of Chuck
is the desire to see the ministry identified with the vision
more than with him as a person. Following along with that
is the desire for him to see the ministry succeed for many,
many years and actually to provide for that transition. When
you succeed someone it's not that you try to be them or try
to fill their shoes because everybody carries their own unique
set of gifts. Chuck has brought his own unique gifting that
really was pivotal and critical to the founding of Prison
Fellowship. Our goal now is to transition this ministry into
the next generation, the next thirty years while Chuck is
still very vibrant and energetic and has a tremendous amount
of contribution still to make. In fact I think some of his
most fruitful days are still ahead.
Leader
Links: Sooner
or later, most effective leaders face the question of handing
the ball to a new generation. Thinking about it from a leadership
perspective, was there a process that had to take place and
some strategy that was involved in having someone else step
into that role that had been so visibly connected to one person?
Early:
First of all, our board at Prison Fellowship has had this
on their radar screen for about ten years. Many churches,
many organizations wait until there's a crisis or a death
and then begin to think about the future of transferring leadership.
That's obviously one of the worst things you can do. I think
the leaders themselves have to be thinking about this in the
future and they truly have to be committed to it not
just in word but in deed.
Secondly,
I think you have to have a leader who is committed to a transition
committed to seeing someone else succeed and they get
involved in helping that person make their way in the new
arena of leadership. A lot of times that doesn't happen. Sometimes
there is a stated desire that it happen and yet there's almost
a kind of hoping it doesn't happen so they can stay at the
helm. With Chuck that's not the case.
The
third thing that's important: he and I intentionally talk
about transition. We intentionally talk about roles and who's
going to do what and when and why. We are submitted in that
relationship to an accountability group, which in our case
is the board. A lot of communication is extremely important.
I
think those things are key. That there be a long term commitment
to do it on the part of the leader. Secondly, that there be
a desire on the part of the leader who is transitioning out
to see his successor lead. Third, that there be a lot of communications
between those two individuals.
Leader
Links: Have
you or Chuck encountered any unexpected problems in this process?
Early:
No, it's been a real relationship of grace. It has been good.
I think one reason is that he is so committed to it. From
my perspective it's God's timing and God's thing. I think
that if you have a leader who is committed to it and a successor
who doesn't have an agenda of their own, it really works well.
Leader
Links: What
led you to your interest in and involvement with Prison Fellowship?
Early:
I'd been a lawyer for fifteen years. For five of those I was
in private practice. For ten of those years I was a state
Senator, and then for four years I was the Attorney General
of Virginia. Subsequent to that I ran for Governor of Virginia
in 2001 and lost. At that point I was sort of in a period
of waiting on God and saying, "Lord, what would you have
me to do? Would you have me run for governor again? Would
you have me practice law and try to live for you and have
my light shine in that arena? Or do you want me to go back
into full-time ministry?" I say back into full-time
because I really began before I was in law and politics. I
was in full-time ministry with The Navigators for five years.
I was in Campus Ministry one year in Pennsylvania, two years
in the Philippines and then three years back in Virginia.
I
always thought that the Lord would lead me back into full-time
ministry after my season in government service and politics
had come to an end. But my time table was a little different
than God's. I thought I had four more years in the political
arena and then I would go back to the full-time ministry.
I was kind of waiting to see what the Lord wanted me to do,
and Chuck called and left a message a couple of days after
the governor's race was over in Virginia. I'd had quiet time
the day after the loss and I had written in my journal the
things I believe today. Two of the things I wrote down: one,
that I believe losing the election is part of God's sovereign
plan and grace for my life; and two, that having lost the
election I believe God was shutting that door but that I was
excited about what door He was going to open.
It
was just a couple of days later that Chuck called and said,
"Would you pray about becoming President of Prison Fellowship
and begin a process of transitioning my leadership of this
ministry to you?" I prayed about it for a couple of months.
The Lord impressed on me two things during that time. One
was that of all the things I'd ever had a passion about in
my Christian life evangelism, disciple making, missions,
public policy, and a concern for people who are on the margins
of society all had a home at Prison Fellowship.
Then
during those two months I was praying about it I was having
my quiet time in Exodus and Acts. I was impressed afresh that
Moses the one God chose to lead the Israelites out of Egypt,
the one God chose to give the Ten Commandments to, who He
chose to write the Torah was a murderer. I thought, "Now
if I was God, I wouldn't have picked the guy who was a fugitive
hiding out from justice for four years." Then I'm reading
in Acts and I'm reminded again that the man God chose to write
most of the New Testament to actually frame the doctrine
of justification by faith, to frame and articulate who the
church was, to be the first missionary was Paul, who was
also a murderer. A co-conspirator to put to death Lord knows
how many Christians simply because they named the name of
Jesus.
And
it dawned on me: this is God! It's been like God since the
beginning of time, it's like Him today. It's the same God
we serve today. He's in the business of raising up leadership
for His people that come from having been broken and come
from a position where most of us would think they're not going
to ever be fit to lead. God says, "That's precisely when
I have the opportunity for my grace to be demonstrated most
significantly." And I thought, "Boy, this is the
same God that I serve today, and wouldn't it be just like
God to raise up the next generation of leadership for the
church worldwide from behind prison bars!" That's what
motivates me when I get up every morning now as President
of this ministry. I truly believe and Chuck Colson is an
example that a lot of the vibrant leadership for the generation
of the church in the next generation is going to come from
people today who are either in prison or should be in prison
because of what they've done.
The
people God has chosen to lead don't come out of what we in
the church think is sort of the exemplary paradigm. That doesn't
mean God can't use people who come from great Christian homes
and live great lives and don't cross the line, but the fact
of the matter is that God is just as much in the business
of using people who do fall flat on their face, are totally
broken before Him, who the rest of the world looks at and
says, "they're finished; we going to lock them up and
put them away forever." And God says, "Now I have
a chance for my glory to shine."
Look
at how many people were in prison who had a significant impact
on the church: Paul, Daniel, Joseph, all these great leaders
of God ended up at one time or other in prison either for
the Lord or they were in prison because they were running
from the Lord and He reached in prison and plucked them
out. There is a solid biblical basis and command for the church
to be involved in a ministry to prisoners and to prisoner's
families.
Leader
Links: As
a culture we can't build prisons fast enough to hold the population,
and these men and women behind bars also have families. How
do we respond to that need in our culture?
Early:
We have two million people in prison today in America. We
have over two million children of prisoners in America today.
In terms of the prisoners of those two million that are in,
600,000 of them will get out this year. We know nationally
the recidivism rates are between fifty to sixty percent. If
you have two million people in prison, 600,000 of which are
getting out this year, and they are going to be back within
two years at a rate of fifty to sixty percent and they
are coming in at the front end at the same rate you
can see we've got a growing mission field and we have system
that is broken. It's a pregnant opportunity for the witness
of the transforming power of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
The
great untold story in the church today is what's happening
behind prison walls in the revival of God reaching out and
saving men and women, and of the church forming behind the
prison walls. It's really beginning to have an impact beyond
where they are. It's a huge opportunity for the church, and
we just dare not miss that opportunity.
The
opportunity to minister to the children of prisoners is a
way not only to minister to those children but to reach their
mother and father who's in prison. One of the great things
about the Angel Tree program that we do every Christmas
we serve about 600,000 kids a year with about 15,000 churches
as partners is the stories we hear about the prisoner who
signed their child up to receive a gift and to hear the gospel.
Those prisoners weren't Christians but they see a church care
enough about their child they see somebody love their kids
who they don't know and all of the sudden their heart is
almost like Wesley said, "strangely warmed". They
get a sense of the power of the love of God. That leads so
often to prisoners coming to Christ because someone reached
out and touched their child.
Leader
Links: Your
professional public career was a series of successes, and
then you hit a point when you lost the governor's race
that publicly would appear to be a failure. Obviously God
has taken that moment and used it in a remarkable way. Out
of your own experience of dealing with that, what are some
insights that you would offer for people who feel they have
hit the wall of failure?
Early:
The problem comes into how we as Christians define success.
If I define success and I find my self worth and my security
in attaining a position or having a certain job or having
certain economic standard of living, then when I don't have
that I feel that I'm not a success. That's not how the scripture
defines success. Basically the scripture defines success as
faithfulness to Jesus Christ. So for the believer there are
going to be a lot of circumstantial ups and downs in life
which shouldn't be viewed as success or not success, as long
as we are being faithful to Jesus Christ.
In
politics I never prayed to win an election. I just knew God
wanted me involved in that arena to be faithful to him and
to be faithful as a witness to him, to be salt and light.
I used to pray that God would help me not to get my identity
wrapped up in my title of Senator or Attorney General so that
when it came time to give those up and I knew there
would be a time, either voluntarily or involuntarily
that I would not be wondering about who I was, that my identity
would always be rooted in Jesus Christ. When I lost the election
for Governor I did not go through a lot of bitterness or soul
searching or disappointment. I was disappointed I didn't win
but I was over it in an hour. I got up the next morning and
basically said, "OK Lord, you've shut this door. Where's
the door you're going to open?" And I was excited because
I really believe in the sovereignty of God, so I just had
a real sense of calm assurance that if what I had thought
was where He wanted me was not where He wanted me, I was content
with that because I believed He knew better what was best
for me. I think for Christians we get locked in our
mind what our dreams are, what our ambitions are. We
ask God to bless those and we try to get Him to make them
His own as opposed to saying, "Lord I want to make my
own what's in your heart," and be much more open to where
God will take us. Sometime it will be pleasant and sometimes
it will be unpleasant. That's a promise.
Leader
Links: You
obviously had great experience as a leader in the public sector
and now in a ministry organization. What are some of the most
important things you have learned about leadership over the
years?
Early:
I think in any position of leadership a leader has to paint
a vision of where you are going and what it's all about. It
has to be simple and it has to be memorable and it has to
be biblically based. You have to continually repeat that vision,
remind people of that vision, and keep people focused on that
vision. I think that's an absolute key component to leadership.
The
second thing is that we have forgotten as believers what our
calling is. We tend to think of calling as a particular job
or a place or a position with an organization. As I read the
scriptures our calling is to fellowship with Jesus Christ.
The call that God has on our life is that we be in relationship
with Him, and then in that relationship He sends us out to
a lot of different places. One of the key principles for any
leader is to be grounded in the calling they have to fellowship
with Jesus Christ. Paul in 1 Corinthians 1:9 says "God
is faithful who has called you to fellowship with Jesus Christ."
I
remind all of our folks at Prison Fellowship that the most
important thing we have to do every day as leaders is to give
God the choicest cut of our day in the Word and in prayer.
You know the story of Mary and Martha Martha wanted
Jesus to get Mary up away from His feet and to go help her
do what she was doing. Jesus' response was: "Martha,
you're troubled about a lot of things but one thing is necessary
and Mary has chosen it and I won't take it away from her."
Whenever Jesus says one thing is necessary I think your ears
ought to kind of pop. He was saying the one thing that's necessary
is she is with me. She is sitting at my feet listening
to me. That's the one thing that's necessary in the life of
a leader every day.
There
was a book written years ago called Tyranny of the Urgent.
Basically the premise of the book is there is a lot of things
every day that clamor for our attention. They are urgent in
the eyes of the world and they will rule our life. We have
to make sure that our life is being ruled by the most necessary
thing, and the one thing that Jesus says is necessary for
the believer is to be in a position of fellowship with Him
everyday. We can't do that unless we are carving out time
to listen to Him speak to us through His Word and then us
to talk back to Him through prayer.
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