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Master of None

 It's commonly acknowledged in business that sometimes the best engineers make the worse managers of the engineering department, just as sometimes the best artists should never be in charge of the other artists. In fact, in any technical field those that have demonstrated mastery in their profession fail at managing their peers. Instead, just like in baseball, sometimes the best general managers are those that were not naturally gifted players. These were the invididuals who played their hardest, studied the game, and learned how to overcome physical deficiencies to still successfully play the game they loved.** They became utility players - reliable in every circumstance but not a star in any position. In business, we say that they are "a jack of all trades, but master of none."

The reasons these jacks may make the best managers is because they realize that they can't control the outcomes of project or endeavors through their own skills and efforts. Those who are naturally gifted in any particular field often expect that they can determine the course of events through their own willpower and talents. Those who have had to work and strive for their place on the team realize that this is not possible for them. (Additionally all that time spent studying and learning what success looks like doesn't hurt them eitheer.) Therefore the jack of all trades realizes that just as they may not be a master in their field, they are also not the master of the work that others produce. Therefore they are gifted at orchestrating the work of others to achieve the success that they know exists. Its a lesson for all of us who are tasked with managing others. Managing them doesn't mean controlling them. It means recognizing that control is limiting, but that as each master excersies their particular skill set, we can work towards acheiving the goals we've set.

This observation holds another truth for us as well. Just as we are not able to control the outcomes of a project, neither are we able to dictate that circumstances that invade our life. That's when we must rely on the Master to accomplish the goals He has for our lives and His Church.

 

**Just because someone is not naturally gifted in a particular field of endeavor, does not mean that they should stop trying to become "skilled in their work" (Proverbs 22;29). See blog titled "Eschewing Obscurity" for further details.

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Loving God's through loving His people across the globe. This blog will focus on issues of international development with a keen awareness that God says that we love Him providing food, shelter, and comfort to those who are in need.


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