Coaching—executive coaching, life coaching, leadership coaching—is relatively new, but the impact of coaches in both personal and professional life has been significant. Coaches have a certain "soft skill" DNA. The best candidates are typically professionals in "people-centric" fields who have already shown an ability to encourage and develop others. I suggest that there are seven types of individuals who may be ready for coach training and have the potential to use those skills effectively with others. 1. Clergy leader. Pastoral leaders are called to do many things, but one that cannot be neglected is the development of others in the Christian faith. These people may be staff or lay members of the congregation. In Ephesians, we are reminded, “So Christ himself gave the apostles, the prophets, the evangelists, the pastors a...
Jesus said, “Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of heaven belongs to such as these.” (Matthew 19:14, NIV) We often sing “Jesus loves me, this I know” and “Jesus loves the little children” to our grandchildren. This is a rudimentary form of Christian nurture planting the core idea that a simple, childlike faith is basic to one’s spiritual formation. Children are open, eager to learn, and hopefully raised in an environment of trust and love that encourages a healthy faith. However, as a child grows, the challenge is to build upon that simple, childlike faith. In our lives, we experience events, people, and circumstances that provide the incentive for growth in our faith. Although we don’t always seize those opportunities, they are there, nonetheless. We can only benefit from them if we not only experience them but see them through the eyes of a faith that seeks to grow. ...