Page 27 - The Bible On Leadership
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14                                  THE BIBLE ON LEADERSHIP


               Ezekiel prophesied against false prophets, those with ‘‘false words,
             lying visions . . . and utter lying divinations.’’ (Ezek. 13:8–9) Today we
             speak of those who ‘‘varnish’’ or ‘‘whitewash’’ the truth by putting a
             pleasing patina on top of a weak or faulty structure. Several thousand
             years ago, Ezekiel addressed this universal problem using a very similar
             analogy:

                 When a flimsy wall is built, they cover it with whitewash, therefore tell
               those who cover it with whitewash that it is going to fall . . . When it
               falls, you will be destroyed in it . . . So I will spend my wrath against
               the wall and against those who covered it with whitewash. I will say
               to you, ‘‘The wall is gone, and so are those who whitewashed it.’’ (Ezek.
               13:10–16)

               Ezekiel proclaims there can be no true peace and harmony, either in
             business or politics, without true honesty and integrity. ‘‘Whitewashes’’
             may seem to work in the short run, but they rarely do in the long run.
               In 1985, Federal prosecutors charged GE’s Re-Entry Systems with a
             mammoth whitewashing job, claiming they had committed $800,000
             in fraud by altering workers’ time cards. At first, GE refused to admit
             guilt, but Jack Welch says, ‘‘we got to the point where we concluded
             that someone did cheat . . . Until we got to that point, we were chasing
             ourselves around in a circle.’’ He might have added that they were just
             adding coats of whitewash to a flawed structure. When Welch and GE
             finally saw that the problem was one of ‘‘basic integrity,’’ they admitted
             their transgressions and set up an ethics program to make sure that the
             problem was addressed. 12
               The times of Jeremiah the prophet were corrupt, perhaps even more
             corrupt than America in the late twentieth century! He continuously
             spoke out about the lack of integrity that permeated the entire society,
             which did not make him a revered guest of honor at the king’s court or
             banquets. But a leader who points out other leaders’ lack of integrity is
             not necessarily going to be popular in any society or business:

                 Go up and down the streets of Jerusalem, look around and consider,
               search through her squares. If you can find but one person who deals hon-
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