Reading Helps Leaders Keep Growing
Mark A. Taylor reflects on the simple truth that living things must grow or die, connecting that lesson to the life of the soul and mind. He argues that reading is essential nourishment for Christians, especially leaders who want to remain effective and growing.
- Growth requires nourishment, whether in plants, people, spirit, or intellect.
- Reading remains essential for continued learning and leadership.
- The article points readers toward examples of leaders whose lives have been shaped by books.
By Mark A. Taylor
Living things grow, or they die.
This is a fact I tend to forget every spring when Iโm planting. I have this way of cramming too many plants into my borders and patio pots. But at the end of the summer everyone can see my folly.
Zinnia struggle for sunlight as they poke their stems through the drooping stems of spent perennials planted too close beside them. Tomato vines sprawl, the vines poking through slats of the deck and snaking through daylilies nearby.
I notice some plants have grown to the size of a small bush, while others remain as single stalks. The difference? The larger plants were planted alone in a substantial pot. Their spindly siblings fought for nutrients and sunlight with others shoved too close beside them. When I purchased them they were all the same size, but some grew six times the size of others.
Growth Requires Nourishment
That leads to a second truth about living things. They require food, or they wonโt grow. (Which means, you remember, theyโll die.)
Let me hasten to my point before you give up on these statements of the obvious. Whatโs true of plants (and people, I might add; weโve all seen pictures of those children in Africa), is true of our spirit and intellect as well.
If our soul is alive and our brain isnโt dead, itโs because theyโre growing. Theyโre receiving nourishment. And, even in this multimedia age, that requires reading.
Readers Keep Growing
Kenneth S. Hemphill, writing in the Baptist Press this summer, told about bumping into a fellow Baptist at an airport bookstore. His new acquaintance, a recent Christian college graduate, said he was glad to be out of school so he would no longer need to read.
โCan it be true that we no longer read?โ Hemphill asked his readers in dismay. He quoted T. Harv Eker, author of Secrets of the Millionaire Mind, who wrote, โRich people constantly learn and grow. Poor people think they already know.โ
He added an observation from best-selling leadership guru Kenneth Blanchard, who said that with very few exceptions, readers are leaders.
Thatโs the bottom line in the articles by Fred Hansen and Brian Jones this week. If you donโt read, sooner or later youโll die, or at least your effectiveness will. Accompanying those articles are brief recommendations from our contributing editors. โTell our readers about a book thatโs made a difference in your life this year,โ we invited them.
They offer the testimony of leaders who are readers. Weโre pleased to share their example.






