Leader
13 minute read

Leadership is a core masculine calling. Not leadership in the sense of dominating or bossing people around, but leadership in the biblical sense - taking initiative, making decisions, setting direction, and accepting responsibility for outcomes. Men are designed to lead. This shows up in families, churches, workplaces, and communities. And it’s desperately needed in a culture where too many men are passive, indecisive, and unwilling to take responsibility.
Biblical leadership isn’t about power or control. It’s about service and sacrifice. Jesus made this crystal clear - the greatest among you is the servant of all. The model for masculine leadership is Christ Himself: the leader who washed feet, who laid down His life for His people, who led by example and sacrifice. That’s what godly leadership looks like. If you want to lead well, you serve well. If you want authority, you earn it through faithfulness and character.
Leadership is a core masculine responsibility to take initiative, make decisions, set direction, and serve those in your care. It’s rooted in Scripture (Ephesians 5:23-25, Joshua 24:15), modeled after Christ’s servant leadership, and essential for being a godly husband, father, and man. Develop decision-making skills, take responsibility, and lead by example.
What It Means to Lead
Biblical leadership has several key dimensions:
Taking Initiative
Leaders don’t wait to be told what to do. They see what needs to happen and make it happen. They take the first step. They start the conversation. They address the problem. If you’re always waiting for someone else to go first or tell you what to do, you’re not leading - you’re following.
Making Decisions
Leadership requires decisiveness. You gather input, consider options, seek wisdom, and then decide. You don’t endlessly delay, hoping someone else will choose. You make the call and accept responsibility for it. Good leaders make decisions with incomplete information and adjust as needed. Indecision is paralysis.
Setting Direction
Leaders establish vision and direction. Where are we going? What are we building? What values will govern this family or team? Leaders don’t just react to circumstances - they shape circumstances by setting intentional direction. Joshua said, “As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.” That’s leadership - stating clearly where you’re headed.
Serving Those You Lead
This is the heart of biblical leadership. You lead by serving. You don’t demand to be served. You look out for the wellbeing of those under your care. You put their needs ahead of your comfort. You sacrifice for them. This is the Christ model - the leader who gave His life for His people.
Bearing Responsibility
Leaders accept responsibility for outcomes - both success and failure. When things go well, you credit the team. When things go wrong, you take ownership. You don’t blame others or make excuses. Buck stops with you. That’s leadership.
Leading by Example
The most powerful form of leadership is modeling. You don’t ask others to do what you won’t do yourself. You set the standard through your own life. Your family, team, or community watches how you live, and that teaches more than anything you say.
Why Leadership Matters
- Families need direction and stability - Homes drift into chaos without leadership. Children need fathers who lead with wisdom and love.
- It’s a biblical mandate for husbands - Ephesians 5:23 calls the husband the head of the wife. This isn’t about superiority - it’s about responsibility.
- Passivity destroys relationships and families - When men abdicate leadership, everyone suffers. Decisions don’t get made, direction is lost, and insecurity grows.
- Good leadership multiplies good - When you lead well, you bring out the best in those around you and create environments where people flourish.
- It reflects Christ’s relationship with the church - Jesus leads His people with love and sacrifice. Husbands are called to the same pattern.
- Someone will lead - make sure it’s godly - If godly men don’t lead, ungodly men or ungodly ideologies will fill the vacuum.
- Leadership is how you serve others - The greatest way to serve people is to lead them toward what’s good and true and away from what’s destructive.
Biblical Foundation
Scripture consistently calls men to leadership and provides the model for how to do it well.
Headship with Sacrificial Love
This is the foundational passage on masculine leadership in marriage:
“For the husband is head of the wife, as also Christ is head of the church; and He is the Savior of the body. Therefore, just as the church is subject to Christ, so let the wives be to their own husbands in everything. Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ also loved the church and gave Himself for her.” - Ephesians 5:23-25 (NKJV)
The husband is the head - that’s the leadership role. But notice how Paul immediately defines it: as Christ loved the church and gave Himself for her. Christ’s leadership was self-sacrificial service. He died for His people. That’s the model for husbands. Your authority comes through laying down your life for your wife, not demanding she submit to your preferences.
Paul continues:
“So husbands ought to love their own wives as their own bodies; he who loves his wife loves himself. For no one ever hated his own flesh, but nourishes and cherishes it, just as the Lord does the church.” - Ephesians 5:28-29 (NKJV)
Nourish and cherish. That’s leadership. You care for her wellbeing like you care for your own body. You lead her toward flourishing, not toward serving your ego.
Joshua’s Family Leadership
Joshua made a public declaration of his leadership:
“And if it seems evil to you to serve the Lord, choose for yourselves this day whom you will serve, whether the gods which your fathers served that were on the other side of the River, or the gods of the Amorites, in whose land you dwell. But as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.” - Joshua 24:15 (NKJV)
Joshua set the direction for his household. He didn’t poll everyone’s opinion and go with the majority. He led. “As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.” That’s masculine leadership - deciding what’s right and leading your family there.
Jesus: The Servant Leader
Jesus redefined leadership in the most radical way:
“You know that the rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and those who are great exercise authority over them. Yet it shall not be so among you; but whoever desires to become great among you, let him be your servant. And whoever desires to be first among you, let him be your slave - just as the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give His life a ransom for many.” - Matthew 20:25-28 (NKJV)
Greatest = servant. First = slave. The Son of Man came to serve and give His life. That’s the leadership model. If you want to lead like Christ, you serve like Christ.
Jesus demonstrated this visibly:
“Jesus, knowing that the Father had given all things into His hands, and that He had come from God and was going to God, rose from supper and laid aside His garments, took a towel and girded Himself. After that, He poured water into a basin and began to wash the disciples’ feet.” - John 13:3-5 (NKJV)
Jesus - fully God, creator of the universe, the disciples’ master - washed their feet. That’s leadership. The greatest serves the least. If Jesus washed feet, you can do your wife’s dishes.
Peter on Shepherding Leadership
Peter, instructing church elders, gives principles that apply to all masculine leadership:
“Shepherd the flock of God which is among you, serving as overseers, not by compulsion but willingly, not for dishonest gain but eagerly; nor as being lords over those entrusted to you, but being examples to the flock.” - 1 Peter 5:2-3 (NKJV)
Leadership is shepherding - caring for, protecting, guiding. Not “lording over” but being an example. You lead those entrusted to you by serving them and modeling what you’re asking from them.
The Father as Disciplinarian and Guide
Proverbs speaks to the father’s responsibility to lead through discipline and instruction:
“My son, do not despise the chastening of the Lord, nor detest His correction; for whom the Lord loves He corrects, just as a father the son in whom he delights.” - Proverbs 3:11-12 (NKJV)
God corrects those He loves. Fathers are to do the same. Leadership includes correction and discipline, motivated by love and directed at growth. Fathers who refuse to discipline abdicate their leadership responsibility.
Adam’s Failure to Lead
The first failure of masculine leadership is instructive:
“So when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, that it was pleasant to the eyes, and a tree desirable to make one wise, she took of its fruit and ate. She also gave to her husband with her, and he ate.” - Genesis 3:6 (NKJV)
Adam was right there. He didn’t intervene. He passively watched Eve be deceived, then joined her in sin. Paul later places primary responsibility on Adam, not Eve (Romans 5:12). Why? Because Adam failed to lead. Masculine passivity has devastating consequences.
Practical Examples
Marcus started dating Emily and realized he needed to set physical boundaries to honor God. He initiated the conversation, explained why purity mattered to him, and proposed specific boundaries. Emily respected his leadership. He didn’t wait for her to bring it up or hope they’d figure it out by accident. He led by addressing it clearly and early.
Jason noticed his wife seemed discouraged but wasn’t talking about it. Instead of ignoring it or waiting for her to bring it up, he initiated: “Hey, I can tell something’s bothering you. I want to hear about it. Let’s talk.” He created space for her to share and listened without trying to fix everything immediately. He led by making the conversation happen.
Biblical leadership asks questions and listens. “What do you think we should do?” “How do you feel about this?” “What concerns do you have?” You gather input, consider perspectives, and then make decisions. Dictators demand. Leaders listen and decide wisely.
Steven decided his family would have regular Bible reading and prayer together. He didn’t ask if everyone felt like it. He led. Every night after dinner, he gathered the family, read a short passage, explained it simply, and prayed. His kids didn’t always love it, but they grew up knowing Scripture and seeing dad’s faith. That’s leadership - setting direction and following through.
David lost his job unexpectedly. He could have panicked or fallen apart. Instead, he gathered his family, explained the situation honestly, outlined his plan to find new work, adjusted the budget, and assured them they’d be okay. He made sacrifice decisions - cut his own expenses first before touching family activities. He led through a crisis by staying steady, communicating clearly, and taking responsibility.
Chris noticed his wife was exhausted after a long week. Without being asked, he took the kids out for several hours Saturday morning so she could rest. He cleaned the kitchen before she woke up. He didn’t announce it or expect applause. He just served. That’s leadership - seeing needs and meeting them without fanfare.
How to Live This Out
Here’s how to develop the mindset and habits of a biblical leader:
Start leading in small ways now - Practice initiative. See something that needs doing? Do it. Group project at school or work? Take the lead. Event needs planning? Volunteer. Small leadership develops the habit.
Make decisions instead of avoiding them - Practice decisiveness in low-stakes situations. Where to eat? You decide. What to do this weekend? Make a plan. Build the muscle of making decisions and accepting outcomes.
Take responsibility for your life - Stop blaming others for your circumstances. Stop making excuses. You’re responsible for your choices and your outcomes. Own it fully. This is foundational to leadership.
Study Christ’s leadership - Read the Gospels and watch how Jesus led. Notice His questions, His patience, His boldness, His service, His sacrifice. Model your leadership after His.
Serve consistently and sacrificially - Look for ways to serve daily. Do tasks others don’t want to do. Help without being asked. Put others’ needs ahead of your preferences. Servant leadership is built through repeated acts of service.
Lead spiritually in relationships - If you’re dating or married, take initiative in spiritual things. Pray together. Read Scripture together. Bring up faith conversations. Don’t wait for her to do it. Lead.
Set clear direction and values - Decide what you stand for. What values govern your life? What priorities matter most? Be clear and intentional about direction. Communicate it clearly to those you lead.
Listen more than you talk - Good leaders listen well. Ask for input. Hear concerns. Consider perspectives. You’ll make better decisions and people will feel valued.
Follow through on commitments - Leaders keep their word. If you say you’ll do something, do it. Reliability builds trust. Trust is the foundation of leadership influence.
Lead by example in everything - Be the hardest worker. Be the most honest. Be the most faithful. Don’t ask anything of others you won’t do yourself. Your example gives you authority to lead.
What This Is NOT
Biblical leadership has been badly distorted. Let’s be clear about what it doesn’t mean:
It’s NOT Authoritarianism or Domination
Biblical headship doesn’t mean you make all decisions unilaterally and your wife just obeys silently. That’s tyranny, not leadership. You lead by listening, considering, serving, and deciding wisely - not by demanding submission.
It’s NOT About Your Ego or Preferences
Some men use “leadership” to justify always getting their way. They frame their preferences as “leadership decisions.” That’s manipulation. Biblical leadership prioritizes others’ good, not your comfort.
It’s NOT Excusing Abuse
Leadership is never an excuse for controlling, manipulating, or abusing your wife or children. If your “leadership” creates fear, you’re not leading biblically - you’re sinning. Get help immediately.
It’s NOT Ignoring Your Wife’s Wisdom
Proverbs commends the wise man who listens to counsel. Your wife is your partner and often has better insight than you. Lead by seriously considering her input, not dismissing it because you’re “the leader.”
It’s NOT Laziness Masked as “Delegation”
Some guys “lead” by doing nothing and expecting their wife to handle everything. That’s not leadership - that’s abdication. Lead by working harder than everyone else, not by sitting on the couch while others serve you.
It’s NOT Making Your Wife Your Mother
Immature men expect their wives to manage them like their mothers did. Biblical leadership means you manage yourself and lead the family. Don’t make your wife responsible for your spiritual growth, schedule, health, or basic life tasks.
It’s NOT About Being Right All the Time
Leaders make mistakes. When you do, admit it and apologize. Don’t double down or refuse to acknowledge fault. Humility strengthens leadership. Pride destroys it.
Living as a Leader
Leadership is how you direct, protect, and serve those God places in your care. It’s not about status or control - it’s about responsibility and sacrifice. The model is Christ: the leader who washed feet and died for His people. That’s the standard. If you want to lead well, you must serve well.
Start developing leadership now, wherever you are. Take initiative in small things. Make decisions and accept outcomes. Serve people without expectation of recognition. Lead by example in work ethic, integrity, and faithfulness. Study Jesus and learn from His approach to leadership.
Prepare to be a husband who leads his wife by laying down his life for her. Prepare to be a father who sets spiritual direction for your home. Prepare to be a man who can be trusted with responsibility because you’ve proven faithful in small things. The world needs men who will lead with courage, wisdom, and sacrificial love.
Leadership isn’t optional for biblical men. It’s part of how God designed you. Accept that responsibility. Develop the character it requires. Lead like Jesus - with strength, humility, service, and love. Your future family is depending on you to be ready. Start preparing today.