The Difference between Confidence and Arrogance
The Difference between Confidence
and Arrogance
We ask leaders to be confident, but we bristle
when they become arrogant. What is the difference? The dictionary reveals
arrogance is pride, egotism, and inflated self-importance, while confidence is
the state of being certain. When an arrogant person grates you, however, you’re
not thinking about the technical nuances between confidence and arrogance. You
simply feel it.
Pastors should preach boldly and lead
confidently. The foundation of Scripture gives this assurance. But when church
leaders begin to rely on their own abilities, arrogance builds, especially when
the church grows. Arrogance is the catalyst for building your own kingdom
instead of God’s kingdom. How can you tell when confidence is slipping into
arrogance?
Constant defensiveness. Every
leader has moments of defensiveness. After all, leaders receive more
attention—and thus more blame—for the decisions they make. But when the default
reaction to criticism becomes defensiveness, there is reason for concern.
Constant defensiveness is a sign the church leader is relying on himself or
herself too much. And self-reliance is one of the pillars of arrogance.
Protectionism. When ministries
become “my turf,” arrogant decisions become normative. Church leaders should do
everything they can to prop up their ministries. However, when church leaders
advance their ministries at the expense of others, it’s a sign confidence has
become arrogance. Church ministry is not a zero sum game, in which a gain in
one area comes at the expense of another area. Good ministries, and confident
leaders, are collaborative and cooperative.
Imitation. Imitating other
mature leaders is biblical, if the goal of this imitation is to be like Christ.
Imitating others to mirror their success is arrogance. Frequently comparing
yourself to other successful church leaders is a form of ministry envy.
Using intellect as a weapon. One
of the greatest pieces of advice I’ve ever received came from a quiet—but
godly—personnel committee member: “Sam, it’s good you like to learn, but don’t ever
use your intellect as a weapon.” Those words have stuck with me. Just because
you might know a few more facts than the next person does not give you the
right to use them to demean others. Only arrogant leaders use their intellect
to climb over followers. Intellectual elitism has no place in the church.
Self-promotion. This one is
obvious. If all your sermon examples are about you, then you’ve got a problem
with arrogance. If all your tweets are about you, then you’ve got a problem
with arrogance. The problem with arrogant self-promoters is they don’t
recognize their problem. Thus the cycle of arrogance and self-promotion.
Boldness and confidence are biblical. Arrogance
is destructive. Discerning the difference between confidence and arrogance can
be difficult. Defensiveness, protectionism, imitation, intellectual elitism,
and self-promotion are all major warning signs of arrogance.
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