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Influence: The Impact of Servant Leadership

Published on September 09, 2019

by FCA
By Dr. Chang Won Kim

 

In the summer of 2010, I traveled to Kansas City from Korea  with a curiosity about FCA.

I still remember asking one of FCA's staffers, "What is the difference between FCA and other sports ministry organizations?"

“Influence,” he answered in one word. I didn’t know what he meant at the time.

However, after a week of training at the FCA Support Center, I understood, much due to experiencing servant leadership. With my hierarchical cultural background, servant leadership made a huge impact on me. FCA’s Dan Britton especially showed me the power of influence through servant leadership, and he has been one of the greatest influences in my life in the last 10 years. All of FCA values servant leadership because it’s the model Jesus Christ showed us. To be a good leader means we serve one another.

I returned home after a great experience with FCA, and we officially established FCA in Korea in September 2017.

Integrity, Serving, Teamwork and Excellence are FCA’s Core Values. I often train colleagues at my hospital on these values. When I share, I usually say, “We’ve already attained excellence when we live a life of integrity in the presence of God, serve our neighbors, and value teamwork with others.”

These values are being shared throughout Korea in many ways. One way is Trey Hillman, an American baseball coach who coached teams in both Korea and Japan. Trey coached the Incheon SK Wyverns professional baseball team, who defeated the Doosan Bears in 2018 to win the Korean Baseball Championship.

For any winning team, many behind-the-scenes stories of the athletes’ efforts and the coach’s leadership are told after the championship. After they won, Trey’s servant leadership was in the spotlight. He became the first foreign manager to lead the team to the playoffs in Korea, and the first manager in the world to achieve championships in both Korea and Japan at the same time.

Trey led his team with servant leadership rather than the strict hierarchical leadership that is prevalent in Korean sports culture. Instead of dominating the team with authoritarian leadership and charisma, he deeply cared about each individual on the team, leading them to become one family. Trey didn’t only care about his players, but also his staff members. Instead of asking his players before training or the games, “How is your conditioning?” he often began conversations with, “How is your family? How is your kid?”

He even asked the team’s scouts the same questions after they returned from business trips. Trey cared about everyone involved with the team. Recently, one of the board members of FCA Korea adopted Trey’s servant leadership model for his own life.

The servant leadership and determination of Trey to uphold Integrity, Serving, Teamwork and Excellence led his team to the championship. It showed the powerful influence of a servant-leader, someone who follows in Christ’s footsteps when it comes to leading.

 

Prayer: Jesus Christ, I pray for influence that comes from being a servant-leader. Amen.

 

Changwon Kim photo
Dr. Chang Won Kim is married with three
children (one boy and two daughters). He is a
director of the Hanmam Sports Rehabilitation
Hospital and specializes in rehabilitation. He
serves as chairman of the Korea Student Cycle
Federation. Dr. Kim has served as the Korea FCA
Board Chairman since its beginning up to today.




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