Here's another quote from the book, this one on the leader with a compulsive dark side. Anyone besides me recognize Betty?
A compulsive dark side allowed to operate unchecked can result in a personal and organizational rigidity that stifles creativity and frays our relationships with others. Compulsive leadership can produce a self-righteous, legalistic environment that alienates the people we are called to lead. Compulsive tendencies can result in workaholism or a painful emotional explosion and lead to a complete burnout that may take years to recover from. Additionally, the urge to control those we lead and live with more often than not results in alienation and rebellion as people react against our control. More than one marriage and church have been hopelessly fractured by such leadership.
And this one, the codependent, was me, and others too, I'm sure.
Many codependent leaders have destroyed themselves in ministry as they tried in vain to keep an entire church happy and meet every other need while ignoring their own family and personal needs. Burnout, divorce, adulterous affairs, and physical illness can result when a leader fails to redeem his or her codependent behavior. It is highly likely that codependency has crippled more churches and Christian organizations than any other leadership malady.
Thanks, Tom. It seems to help, in some perverse kind of way, to become aware that these problems plague other churches besides just the Assembly--to the degree that the phenomenon is wide spread enough to deserve a book about it by a college professor.