About 15 years ago, I collaborated
with my late friend, David Stoddard, to write The Heart of Mentoring. To sum up the book’s message, we wanted to
suggest that everyone should be a “mentored mentor.” In other words, each of us
should be mentoring someone else, and we should find someone willing to be a
mentor for us.
Today much is said and written about
mentoring, with good reason. As we trudge along this journey we call life, it
helps to have someone to offer wisdom, advice and guidance whenever we
encounter occasions of uncertainty. Which we will. Daily life is more complex
than ever; competing and often conflicting messages are plentiful. If we’re
humble enough to admit it, having someone to show the way – or least assist us
in sifting through the alternatives – can be indispensable.
If we don’t already have a
mentor, we might be inclined to admit it could be useful to find one. But when challenged
to mentor another person, a typical response would be, “Oh, I’m not qualified
to mentor anyone. I don’t know enough.” As if being a mentor requires being an
expert or recognized authority.
That’s hardly the case. As we
stated in The Heart of Mentoring, all
that’s necessary is that you be just a little bit farther down the road from
the person you’re starting to mentor. You might be a bit older, or a bit more
experienced. It doesn’t require a lot. A college student can mentor a high
school student. A young married person can mentor a single person. A long-time
married person can mentor a newlywed. Someone who’s been on the job for several
years can mentor someone that’s newly hired. And anyone can mentor a child or
adolescent.
We can mentor others not only
by talking about our successes, but also our failures. Why do we have to make
all of our own mistakes? We can benefit from hearing about the mistakes others
made, and trying to avoid repeating them.
When it comes to mentoring, the
demand always exceeds the supply. But as I’ve learned over more than 30 years
of mentoring and discipling others, the return on investment can’t be beat. It’s
a great example of the principle Jesus taught, “It is more blessed to give than to receive” (Acts 20:35). Because
by investing time and a little energy in meeting with someone over time in a
mentoring relationship, we receive not only the satisfaction of helping another
person, but also learn ourselves – gaining from their perspectives and unique
life experiences.
Mentoring might be unpleasant for
both parties, as Dave and I acknowledged in our book, if the mentor takes a
condescending, “I’m doing you a favor” approach. However, if it’s understood and
approached as a mutually beneficial relationship, in which the mentor recognizes
he or she can learn from the “mentoring partner,” it becomes not only a good
experience – it can be life-changing.
One of my favorite passages
from the Scriptures related to this is Proverbs 27:17, which reminds us, “As iron sharpens iron, so one man sharpens
another.” As I’ve made myself available to other men, offering to share
some of what God and life have taught me, I’ve found them “sharpening” me, too,
through their insights and questions.
A great thing about mentoring –
or if you prefer, discipling (in a spiritual context) – is that it multiplies.
Once someone starts being mentored, they can begin mentoring another individual
and before long, the pattern starts repeating itself. As the apostle Paul wrote
to his young protégé, Timothy, “And the
things you have heard me say in the presence of many witnesses entrust to
reliable men who will also be qualified to teach others” (2 Timothy 2:2).
That’s at the heart of what
Jesus was commanding when He left His disciples with the Great Commission: “Therefore go and make disciples of all
nations…teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you” (Matthew
28:19-20). Jesus expected His followers to multiply – as they have through the
centuries, from a mere handful to countless millions around the world. And this
has occurred simply by men and women willing to be used by Him to pass along to
others what the Lord has given to them.
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