leadership integrity

Above All, Guard Your Heart: Leading With Integrity

July 2, 2026

Christian Standard

Leadership integrity begins with guarding the heart. This article reflects on Scripture, ministry experience, friendship, and spiritual formation as essential foundations for faithful leaders.

Leadership Integrity Begins with Guarding the Heart

This article reflects on Proverbs 4:23 and the central importance of leadership integrity for those entrusted with ministry. Through biblical examples, personal experience, and lessons from spiritual formation, it argues that faithful leadership begins with a heart that stays close to Jesus.

  • Integrity is not perfection, but wholeness before God.
  • Leadership formation must prioritize character, friendship, and soul care.
  • Young leaders need spiritual formation before influence and recognition grow.

By Tim Spivey

โ€œAbove all else, guard your heart, for everything you do flows from itโ€ (Proverbs 4:23, New International Version).

Above all. Scripture rarely speaks so plainly or with such urgency. Before ambition, before achievement, before influence or effectiveness, God calls his peopleโ€”especially those who leadโ€”to guard the heart. Not as an afterthought, but as the central work of a faithful life.

This command is for every Christian. But it carries particular weight for those entrusted with leadership. An undivided, Christlike heartโ€”formed in obedience and sustained by graceโ€”is both a leaderโ€™s greatest asset and their most faithful offering to God. Skill may open doors. Charisma may draw a crowd. But integrity is what sustains a calling over time.

In an era marked by public failure and private compromise, leadership integrity has become both more fragile and more essential. Stories of moral collapse rightly draw scrutiny, but they do not tell the whole story. Far less attention is given to the many leaders who have quietly walked with God for decadesโ€”loving their families, serving their churches, telling the truth, repenting when they fall short, and finishing well. These leaders may never trend online, but they bear witness to something far more enduring: sustained faithfulness.

If I were to gather a hundred seasoned church leaders and ask what single piece of counsel they would offer someone entering ministry, most would say the same thing: Stay close to Jesus. Why? Because the power for ministry does not come from us. Because the road of leadership is both beautiful and treacherous. Because storms inevitably rise, and without the โ€œpeace, be still,โ€ of Christโ€”good luck. And because Scripture is unambiguous on this point: integrity is not a leadership add-onโ€”it is the bedrock of trust, credibility, and lasting influence.

Biblically speaking, to lead with integrity means that a personโ€™s inner convictions, private decisions, and public actions are aligned with the character and Word of God. Integrity is not perfection. It is wholeness. It is the slow, daily work of bringing our entire lives under the lordship of Christ. A leader who does not lead with integrity, in this sense, is not truly leading at all.

When Obedience Is Partial

Few biblical stories illustrate the cost of compromised integrity as clearly as the story of Saul in 1 Samuel 15. Saul was given a direct command by God regarding the Amalekites. Yet he held backโ€”sparing King Agag and keeping the best of the livestock. When confronted by Samuel, Saul defended himself. He had obeyed mostly. He had succeeded outwardly. The people were pleased.

But God was not.

The issue was never military victory or public approval. It was the heart. Saulโ€™s partial obedience revealed a divided allegiance, and that division cost him Godโ€™s trust and ultimately, his calling. His story stands as a sobering reminder that leadership in Godโ€™s economy is not measured by visible success but by faithful obedience. Integrity is not optional. It is the soil in which lasting influence grows.

A Lesson from My Own Journey

I learned this lesson earlyโ€”though not quickly.

At 26 years old, I accepted a senior minister position at a large church with a long history and a declining future if something didnโ€™t change. I was newly married, expecting my first child, and still learning how to preach without exposing my inexperience. I stepped into a story far larger than my maturity could hold.

What did I have going for me? A supportive spouse. A good education. But more than anything else, I had a close walk with Jesusโ€”one that would be tested beyond what I could have imagined. At the time, I did not yet understand that leadership has a way of exposing every weakness we do not know we have. It tests the heart long before it tests the hands.

Our first child arrived, and the intense pressures of large church ministry mounted as I thought I could stem the decline. I worked insane hours. I lost the ability to sleep soundly. I developed numerous physical symptoms of stress in my 20s as I kept trying ever harder to make something happen. Then, as the church began to turn around, I faced a new challengeโ€”pride. The church became a success story, and I needed to believe I had something to do with it. That would help me justify the complete lack of rhythm in my life. I began to take credit in my heart for the great things God was doing as a way of justifying my obsession with seeing the church โ€œsucceed.โ€ I didnโ€™t notice it, but I had begun to swerve into another lane spirituallyโ€”but God in his grace knew what I needed.

A turning point came when my wife and I were invited to a gathering of about 50 pastors and spouses leading similarly sized churches. I quickly realized I was the youngest person in the room. But instead of feeling out of place, I found myself surrounded by women and men whose humility, wisdom, and long obedience steadied me. They had weathered storms I had not yet seen. They had endured criticism, wrestled pride, navigated conflict, and stayed faithful.

Alongside them were peers closer to my age. We bonded quicklyโ€”not over success, but over vulnerability. We were trying to figure out how to lead without losing our souls. Those friendships became a lifeline. They remain among my closest relationships today.

What sustained me in those early years was not gifting or position. It was the presence of people who loved me enough to tell me the truth. They asked questions no one else asked:

Are you becoming more like Jesus?
Is your family flourishing?
Are you carrying burdens you havenโ€™t named?

Friendship invites honesty rather than performance. With trusted friends, leaders can say, โ€œIโ€™m discouraged,โ€ or โ€œIโ€™m losing joy,โ€ or even, โ€œIโ€™m tempted.โ€ After more than three decades of ministry, I can say without hesitation that integrity is not maintained in isolation; it is cultivated in community.

Forming Integrity in Leaders

How, then, do we cultivate integrity in those called to lead? There are no shortcuts. But there are practices the church must prioritize if integrity is to remain the foundation of leadership for generations to come.

First, character must outpace calling. As leadership platforms expand, so do temptations and pressures. Scripture repeatedly warns against rushing people into positions of authority before their character has been tested. Paul urged Timothy to move slowly in appointing leadersโ€”not because leaders must be flawless, but because integrity must be durable. When influence outpaces formation, collapse becomes more likely. We do leaders no favors by putting them on platforms their character is unprepared forโ€”even if their talent is.

Second, formation must be prioritized over skillโ€”without dismissing it. Psalm 78 describes David as a shepherd who led โ€œwith integrity of heart and skillful hands.โ€ These two belong together, but the order matters. Integrity matters more to God. That means it should matter most to the church. Training young leaders requires wisdom, patience, and a willingness to pace responsibility according to spiritual maturity.

Third, leaders must have close friends devoted to following Jesus. Accountability is most effective when it grows out of genuine friendship. The best questions are rarely, โ€œDid you fail?โ€ but rather, โ€œHow is your soul?โ€ Leaders need people who can speak truth without fear and offer grace without compromise.

Fourth, soul care of leaders must be prioritized. Many integrity failures begin not with rebellion, but with exhaustion, isolation, and unresolved pain. Churches and governing boards must see the care of leaders as a sacred trustโ€”encouraging rest, fair compensation, prayer, and protection from unfair criticism. A healthy leader is not a luxury; it is a stewardship.

Forming Integrity in the Next Generation

These same commitments must shape the formation of young leaders long before titles are assigned. In my own context at Pepperdine, we have seen how intentional spiritual formation can shape integrity earlyโ€”before influence and recognition enter the picture. Students are invited not only to think well about theology and ethics, but to desire holiness, love the church, and practice humility in public and private.

Through worship, mentoring, service, and confession, students are encouraged to embrace the truth that integrity is not a performance for an audience, but a posture of the heart before God. We want them to be shaped by the Holy Spirit so that the โ€œpersonality and deeds of Jesus Christ naturally flow out from them when and wherever they areโ€ (Dallas Willardโ€™s definition of spiritual formation).

A central expression of this vision is the Hub for Spiritual Lifeโ€”an ecosystem rather than a program. Worship, mentoring, pastoral care, and service are woven throughout the student experience. Students are not treated merely as attenders, but as emerging ministers and culture-shapers. They lead, serve, fail, repent, and growโ€”learning that how they lead matters as much as what they accomplish.

Over time, habits of alignment between belief and practice begin to take root. What begins on campus becomes a lifelong pattern of integrity in churches, workplaces, and families.

Staying โ€œBlessableโ€

In Joshua 3, Israel stood at the edge of the Jordan River, preparing to enter the promised land. One might expect Joshua to focus on strategy or military preparation. Instead, he gave a different command:

โ€œConsecrate yourselves, for tomorrow the Lord will do amazing things among you.โ€

Before victory comes consecration.
Before strategy comes surrender.

Cultivating integrity is leadership.

If we long to see God do extraordinary things in our lives and churches, then todayโ€”above allโ€”we must guard our hearts. God desires abundant life for his leaders and his people. And the path toward that life does not begin with charisma, innovation, or influence. It begins with a heart that walks closely with Jesus.

โ€œAbove all,โ€ Scripture says, โ€œguard your heart.โ€ Everything flows from there.

Christian Standard
Author: Christian Standard

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