Self-willed Stewardship
“For a bishop must be blameless, as a steward of God, not self-willed, not quick-tempered, not given to wine, not violent, not greedy for money,”
Titus 1:7 NKJV
https://www.bible.com/114/tit.1.7.nkjv
Rhetorically, everyone understands that stewardship is the concept of leadership, i.e., a leader is called upon by a congregation or constituency to provide services rather than procure services. Even if the society must excuse failure in leadership, the household of faith (either as a single family or a collection of many families- a fellowship) is expected to be led by a blameless bishop. Unfortunately, many spiritual leaders often failed the blameless test on the basis of providing self-willed services, instead of spirit-inspired services. Since the will of every living soul is easily influenced by the welfare of his body (or the wellness of his passion), only a physically dead soul is clearly escaped from the temptation of self-willed stewardship. Whereas, the faithfulness to knowing and doing the will of God, without the conflict of interest from self-will, produces nothing but fruitfulness in every family and fellowship. However, the consequences of the converse (i.e., faithfulness to self-will) presents fruitless engagement. Even the will of a single man is unstable; needless to mention the sensitive polarity in divided interests. Therefore, a true steward of God must be strongly averse to self-will in order to provide good leadership in governance.
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