Page 17 - The Bible On Leadership
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4                                   THE BIBLE ON LEADERSHIP


             queen’’ who, when caught paying almost no income taxes on a vast
             business empire, cavalierly stated that ‘‘only the little people pay taxes.’’
             There is a story, perhaps apocryphal, that she posted one of the ‘‘little
             people’’ on each side of her swimming pool with a bucket of iced
             shrimp so that she could partake while she swam her laps.
               But Ahab and Jezebel’s lack of integrity certainly rivals ‘‘Queen Leo-
             na’s.’’ A man named Naboth possessed a vineyard, which was close to
             Ahab’s palace. Ahab wanted to buy it to use as a vegetable garden, but
             Naboth refused to sell: Ahab became angry and sullen, refusing to eat,
             but at least his first impulse was to obey the law, however distasteful and
             frustrating this might have been.
               However, Jezebel saw no need for him to sulk or be disappointed:
             ‘‘Is this how you act as king over Israel? Get up and eat! Cheer up! I’ll
             get you the vineyard.’’ (1 Kings 21:7) She devised a simple yet totally
             amoral solution. She got two scoundrels (presumably through bribery
             or intimidation, since she was capable of both) to publicly testify that
             Naboth had cursed both God and the king (she wanted to cover all the
             bases).
               Jezebel succeeded in getting Naboth stoned to death. As soon as she
             heard the ‘‘good news,’’ she said to her husband, ‘‘Get up and take
             possession of the vineyard of Naboth the Jezreelite that he refused to
             sell you.’’ (1 Kings 21:15) Ahab, man of integrity that he was, was only
             too happy to comply.
               Compare Ahab and Jezebel’s approach with that of King David, who
             wanted to build an altar to the Lord on the threshing floor of a fellow
             named Araunah the Jebusite. David forthrightly approached Araunah to
             humbly ask him to sell the threshing floor at full price (Ahab had Na-
             both killed so he could appropriate Naboth’s vineyard at no cost).
               Araunah offered David the threshing floor for free: ‘‘Take it! Let my
             lord the king do whatever pleases him.’’ (1 Chron. 21:23) But David
             insisted on paying full price despite the fact that as King he could easily
             have appropriated the property by executive fiat.
               By comparison, here is a modern example of a ‘‘vineyard’’ that was
             certainly coveted but not seized from its rightful owner because of an
             executive’s integrity. David Armstrong of Armstrong Industries wanted
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