Bill Hybels
Bill Hybels
William Hybelsis the founding and senior pastor of Willow Creek Community Church in South Barrington, Illinois, one of the most attended churches in North America, with an average attendance of nearly 24,000 as of 2011. He is the founder of the Willow Creek Association and creator of the Global Leadership Summit. Hybels is also an author of a number of Christian books, especially on the subject of Christian leadership...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionReligious Leader
Date of Birth12 December 1951
CountryUnited States of America
The nature of human beings is such that we tend not to drift into better behaviors. We usually have to be asked by someone to consider taking it up a level.
Don't get so addicted to vision that the people feel like equipment
The Church will never reach her full redemptive potential until men and women with the leadership gift step up and lead.
We live in a world that is crying out for better leadership.
Playing around is one thing; following an established regimen is quite another. It's true with exercise equipment and it is true with prayer.
Whenever you see something going well - whenever light begins to chase back the darkness that threatens to engulf our world - look closely. There stands a leader who is holding that candle.
It takes a great deal of courage to follow another person's lead.
People join organizations, they leave managers.
God wants to father all of us until we're dead sure of his approval, his guiding power and his promise of heaven.
Leadership in church is one of the biggest challenges that the Church is facing because without strong leadership, the church rarely lives out its redemptive potentials.
Leaders need to have a ruthless commitment to resolving relational conflict regardless of how bad it feels.
The leader is the organization's top strategist... systematically envisioning the future and specifically mapping out how to get there.
Our conduct will never change God's character.
Legacy leaders are the only ones wiling to pay the price to fix a broken culture.