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Leading From the Middle

Leading From the Middle

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About this listen

Leading from the middle carries tension most people don’t talk about. You’re translating vision down and reality up at the same time. Lose either side, and you stop being a bridge and become a bottleneck. In this episode of Student of Life, I reflect on leading and managing from the middle grounded through the lens of the Roman centurion who understood what it meant to be under authority and with authority. We talk about listening, stewardship, and how to carry both vision and reality without distorting either.




Student of Life Guide

Key Idea

Second-chair leadership requires maturity: honoring authority above you while representing reality below you. It’s stewardship, not control.


3 Big Insights

  1. Authority flows through submission.The centurion understood authority because he lived under it (Matthew 8:9). Leadership clarity begins with humility.
  2. Middle leaders have strategic access.You see up, down, and sideways. That access is intelligence — if you listen well.
  3. Vision must not mute reality.Healthy leadership translates honestly. If you protect only vision or only feelings, you stop being a bridge.


Reflection Questions

  1. ​Where am I leaning too hard — protecting vision or protecting comfort?
  2. ​Do I truly understand the authority I’m under?
  3. ​Am I listening continuously, or only when it benefits my position?


Practice

Before your next key conversation:

  • ​Ask: “What is leadership above me trying to accomplish?”
  • ​Ask: “What are people below me actually experiencing?”
  • ​Translate clearly. Don’t exaggerate either side.


Anchor Thought

“Under authority, with authority — that’s the tension of the middle.”


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