How Saint Clare of Assisi Guided Her Sisters. Impulses for the Today’s Leadership Context
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Background
1.2. Aim of the Study
2. Results
2.1. Embracing the Poor Christ
2.2. Clare and Her Community of the Poor Ladies
2.3. Clare’s Understanding of Management and Leadership: The Abbess is a Servant (for All)
“For the Lord Himself has placed us as a model, as an example and mirror not only for others, but also for our sisters whom the Lord has called to our way of life as well, that they in turn might be a mirror and example to those living in the world. Since the Lord has called us to such great things that those who are a mirror and example to others may be reflected in us, we are greatly bound to bless and praise God and to be strengthened more and more to do good in the Lord”(TestCl; see also: FLCl 8:10.14–16)
2.4. Clare’s Leadership Style
“God chose her as mother of the virgins, as the first and principal abbess of the Order, so that she guarded the flock and strengthened the other sisters of the Order with her example in the goal of the holy Order. She was certainly most diligent about encouraging and protecting the sisters, showing compassion toward the sick sisters. She was solicitous about serving them, humbly submitting herself to even the least of the serving sisters, always looking down upon herself”(Proc VI: 2,7–9)
“Let whoever is elected reflect upon the kind of burden she has undertaken on herself and to Whom she must render an account of the flock committed to her. Let her also strive to preside over the others more by her virtues and holy behavior than by her office, so that, moved by her example, the sisters may obey her more out of love than out of fear. Let her avoid exclusive loves, lest by loving some more than others she give scandal to all.”
“She was vigilant in prayer and sublime contemplation. At times, when she returned from prayer, her face appeared clearer than usual and a certain sweetness came from her mouth.” (Proc VI: 3,10) and “When she returned from her prayer, the sisters rejoiced as though she had come from heaven”.(Proc I:28)
“The abbess is bound to call her sisters together at least once a week in the chapter, where both she and her sisters should humbly confess their common and public offenses and negligences. There let her consult with all her sisters concerning whatever concerns the welfare and good of the monastery, for the Lord frequently reveals what is better to the youngest.”
3. Discussion
“The servant-leader is servant first… It begins with the natural feeling that one wants to serve, to serve first. Then conscious choice brings one to aspire to lead. He or she is sharply different from the person who is leader first, perhaps because of the need to assuage an unusual power drive or to acquire material possessions.”
4. Conclusions: Impact on Leadership Today
- develop a respectful inner attitude
- reflect our own leadership behavior and our own values
- develop our own effects as a (leadership) personality
- perceive the patterns of personality, communication and dealing with conflicts in daily leadership and to take consciously action
- be able to trust one’s own competencies and use one’s strengths effectively
- gain natural authority and integrate our personality into the leadership style
- create trust, feedback culture and open communication and
- find access to the interlocutor.
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
- Regis J. Armstrong, trans. 2006, The Lady. Clare of Assisi: Early Documents. New York: New City Press, ISBN 978-1565482210.
- Bekker, Corné J. 2005. Kenotic Mysticism and Servant Leadership in the Letters of Clare of Assisi to Agnes Prague. Paper presented at Servant Leadership Research Roundtable, Regent University, Virginia Beach, VA, USA, August. [Google Scholar]
- Burchard, Mary J. 2012. Sacred Heart Leadership As Seen in the Testament of Saint Clare of Assisi. Regent University. Available online: http://www.academia.edu/4812375/Sacred_Heart_Leadership_in_Clare_of_Assisi (accessed on 21 June 2018).
- Carney, Margaret. 1993. The First Franciscan Woman: Clare of Assisi and Her Form of Life. Quincy: Franciscan Press, ISBN 978-0819909626. [Google Scholar]
- Christenson, Georgia. 2013. St. Clare of Assisi: A Servant Leader. AFCU Journal: A Franciscan Perspective on Higher Education 10: 13–25. [Google Scholar]
- Dalarun, Jaques. 2005. Francis and Clare of Assisi: Differing Perspectives on Gender and Power. Franciscan Studies. New York: St. Bonaventure University, vol. 63, pp. 11–25. [Google Scholar]
- Dienberg, Thomas. 2009. Das Leben nach dem Evangelium. Modernes Management und die Regel des heiligen Franziskus. Wissenschaft und Weisheit 71: 196–227. [Google Scholar]
- Dienberg, Thomas. 2016. Leiten—Von der Kunst des Dienens. Franziskanische Akzente. Würzburg: Echter-Verlag, ISBN 978-3429039356. [Google Scholar]
- Dienberg, Thomas, and Markus Warode. 2015. Evangelical Poverty and the "Fraternal Franciscan Economy"—New aspects for a reflected business education. In Prosperity, Poverty and the Purpose of Business. Rediscovering Integral Human Development in the Catholic Social Tradition. Handbook of the 9th International Conference on Catholic Social thought and Business Education, Manila, Philippines, February 26–28. Manila: De La Salle-College of Saint Benilde, pp. 142–46. [Google Scholar]
- Gerundt, Mareike. 2012. Die Ordensregeln des Franziskus von Assisi als Schatzkammer für moderne Personalführung. Wissenschaft und Weisheit 75: 102–60. [Google Scholar]
- Gerundt, Mareike. 2018. Klara Kommunizieren! Kommunikationsfähigkeit bei Klara von Assisi. ChrisCare 2: 26–27. [Google Scholar]
- Greenleaf, Robert K. 1998. Servant-Leadership. In Insights on Leadership. Edited by Larry C. Spears. New York: John Wiley & Sons, pp. 15–20. ISBN 978-0471176343. [Google Scholar]
- Gregg, Karen Monique. 2017. Clare of Assisi (1191–1253): Breaking Through Social Barriers for Women. In Women, Religion and Leadership: Female Saints as Unexpected Leaders. Edited by Barbara Denison. New York: Routledge Taylor & Francis Group, ISBN 978-1138204843. [Google Scholar]
- Karecki, Madge. 2008. Clare of Assisi: Foot-washing leadership. Inner Resources for Leaders 1: 1–9. [Google Scholar]
- Kreidler-Kos, Martina. 2003. Klara von Assisi: Schattenfrau und Lichtgestalt. 2 überarb. Aufl. Tübinger Studien zur Theologie und Philosophie 17. Tübingen: Tübingen University, ISBN 978-3772025853. [Google Scholar]
- Kreidler-Kos, Martina. 2011. Ich halte dich für eine Gehilfin Gottes selbst. Die Frauenfreundschaften der heiligen Klara von Assisi. In Bettelarmut und Beziehungsreichtum. Beiträge zur neueren deutschsprachigen Klara-Forschung. Edited by Bernd Schmies. Münster: Aschendorff, pp. 3–31. ISBN 978-3402186879. [Google Scholar]
- Kreidler-Kos, Martina. 2013. Klara von Assisi. Zwischen Bettelarmut und Beziehungsreichtum. In Lebendiger Spiegel des Lichtes: Klara von Assisi. Edited by Paul Zahner. Norderstedt: Books on Demand, pp. 1–17. ISBN 978-3848212453. [Google Scholar]
- Kreidler-Kos, Martina, Niklaus Kuster, and Ancilla Röttger. 2015. Mein Leben leuchten lassen. Heute beten mit Klara und Franz von Assisi. Ostfildern: Patmos Verlag, ISBN 3843605955. [Google Scholar]
- Kuster, Niklaus. 2013. San Damiano und der päpstliche Damiansorden. Die spannungsvolle Gründungsgeschichte der Klarissen im Licht der neuesten Forschung. In Lebendiger Spiegel des Lichtes: Klara von Assisi. Edited by Paul Zahner. Norderstedt: Books on Demand, pp. 19–120. ISBN 978-3848212453. [Google Scholar]
- Ledoux, Clare Marie. 2003. Clare of Assisi. Her Spirituality Revealed in Her Letters. Translated by Colette Joly. Dees. Cincinnati: St. Anthony Messenger Press, ISBN 978-0867163681. [Google Scholar]
- Löser, Saskia, and Katharina Zimmerbauer. 2010. Ordensgründerin, Heilige—Mentorin? Klara von Assisi als Spiegel und Inspiration für Theologinnen heute. Wissenschaft und Weisheit 73: 195–214. [Google Scholar]
- Maier, Theresia. 2011. Forma vitae. Eine Interpretation der Ordensregel der heiligen Klara von Assisi. In Klara von Assisi. Zwischen Bettelarmut und Beziehungsreichtum. Beiträge zur neueren deutschsprachigen Klara-Forschung. Edited by Bernd Schmies. Münster: Aschendorff, pp. 327–74. ISBN 978-3402186879. [Google Scholar]
- Mertens, Benedikt. 2011. In menschlichen Beziehungen heilig werden—Klara von Assisi. In Klara von Assisi. Zwischen Bettelarmut und Beziehungsreichtum. Beiträge zur neueren deutschsprachigen Klara-Forschung. Edited by Bernd Schmies. Münster: Aschendorff, pp. 375–82. ISBN 978-3402186879. [Google Scholar]
- Mueller, Joan. 2001. Clare’s Letters to Agnes: Texts and Sources. Clare Resources Series No. 5; St. Bonaventure: Franciscan Institute, St. Bonaventure University, ISBN 978-1576591765. [Google Scholar]
- Mueller, Joan. 2006. The Privilege of Poverty: Clare of Assisi, Agnes of Prague, and the Struggle for a Franciscan Rule for Women. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, ISBN 978-0-271-02769-2. [Google Scholar]
- Mueller, Joan. 2010. A Companion to Clare of Assisi: Life, Writings, and Spirituality. Brill’s Companions to the Christian Tradition 21. Leiden: Brill, pp. 209–57. ISBN 978-90-04-19343-7. [Google Scholar]
- Self, Catherine. 2008. Incarnational Leadership as Reflected in St. Clare’s Third Letter to Agnes: A Sensory-Aesthetic Study. Paper presented at Annual Roundtables of Contemporary Research & Practice, Virginia Beach, VA, USA, May 16–17. [Google Scholar]
- Spears, Larry C., ed. 1998. Insights on Leadership: Service, Stewardship, Spirit and Servant-Leadership. New York: John Wiley & Sons, ISBN 978-0471176343. [Google Scholar]
- Spears, Larry C. 2002. Tracing the past, present, and future of servant-leadership. In Focus on Leadership: Servant-Leadership for the Twenty-First Century, 3rd ed. Edited by Larry C. Spears and Michele Lawrence. New York: John Wiley & Sons, pp. 1–16. ISBN 0-471-41162-0. [Google Scholar]
- Spears, Larry C. 2010. Character and Servant Leadership: Ten Characteristics of Effective, Caring Leaders In. The Journal of Virtues & Leadership 1: 25–30. [Google Scholar]
- Swan, Laura. 2014. The Wisdom of the Beguines: The Forgotten Story of a Medieval Women’s Movement. New York: BlueBridge, ISBN 978-1933346977. [Google Scholar]
- Till, Robert, and Catherine Petrany. 2013. Stewardship Theory, Servant Leadership and Clare of Assisi: Shifting Paradigmens in Business Management. AFCU Journal: A Franciscan Perspective on Higher Education 10: 43–54. [Google Scholar]
- Van den Goorbergh, Edith A., and Theodore H. Zweerman. 2000. Light Shining Through a Veil. On Saint Clare’s Letters to Saint Agnes of Prague. Translated by Aline Looman-Graaskamp, and Frances Teresa. Amsterdam: Van Gorcum & Camp, ISBN 978-90-429-0845-1. [Google Scholar]
- Warode, Markus. 2016. Das Franziskanische Führungskonzept. In Führen und Führen Lassen in der Praxis: Fallbeispiele. Edited by Bernd Blessin and Alexander Wick. München: UTB GmbH, pp. 353–65. ISBN 978-3825286576. [Google Scholar]
- Warode, Markus, and Mareike Gerundt. 2013. Franziskus und Personalführung. Was macht gute Führung aus? Impulse des Heiligen Franziskus von Assisi für moderne Führungskräfte. Kapuziner 2012/2013: 70–72. [Google Scholar]
- Warode, Markus, and Mareike Gerundt. 2014. Franziskanische Werte—Inspiration und Interpretation. Was Leitungsverantwortliche vom heiligen Franz von Assisi lernen können. Pax et Bonum, Magazin der Franziskanerbrüder vom Heiligen Kreuz 3: 10–14. [Google Scholar]
- Warode, Markus, and Mareike Gerundt. 2015. Führungskräfte profitieren von Franziskus von Assisi. Ordenskorrespondenz, Zeitschrift für Fragen des Ordenslebens 2: 217–24. [Google Scholar]
vision |
|
resource |
|
(building) community relationships and networks |
|
empowerment |
|
courage and persistence |
|
love |
|
empathy |
|
humility |
|
trust and faith |
|
Recognition of responsibility/stewardship |
|
Spirit of serving |
|
© 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Gerundt, M.; Warode, M. How Saint Clare of Assisi Guided Her Sisters. Impulses for the Today’s Leadership Context. Religions 2018, 9, 347. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel9110347
Gerundt M, Warode M. How Saint Clare of Assisi Guided Her Sisters. Impulses for the Today’s Leadership Context. Religions. 2018; 9(11):347. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel9110347
Chicago/Turabian StyleGerundt, Mareike, and Markus Warode. 2018. "How Saint Clare of Assisi Guided Her Sisters. Impulses for the Today’s Leadership Context" Religions 9, no. 11: 347. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel9110347
APA StyleGerundt, M., & Warode, M. (2018). How Saint Clare of Assisi Guided Her Sisters. Impulses for the Today’s Leadership Context. Religions, 9(11), 347. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel9110347