Why Emotional Intelligence is Biblical Wisdom Rediscovered

Why Emotional Intelligence is Biblical Wisdom Rediscovered
For evangelical executives seeking leadership development grounded in Scripture, not secular psychology
When Daniel Goleman published Emotional Intelligence in 1995, the business world took notice. Suddenly, boardrooms buzzed with talk of self-awareness, empathy, and social skills as the new keys to leadership success. Yet for many evangelical executives, this created tension: Was adopting “emotional intelligence” compromising biblical leadership principles for secular psychology? The answer might surprise you. What if emotional intelligence isn’t secular wisdom imposed on faith, but biblical wisdom that secular research has rediscovered?

Evangelism Reframed: Bringing Genesis 1 Evangelism to Work
For many Christians, evangelism in the workplace feels daunting. Do I need to be the office preacher? Should I hand out tracts at lunch? Must every meeting become a mini-sermon? These questions reveal an underlying tension: we often think of evangelism as an event...
Evangelism Reframed: When the Design Fractures

When sin fractured God’s original design, work became toil and relationships strained, yet the image of God remained. For leaders, this means every boardroom and team carries both dignity and distortion. The gospel speaks into this reality, not only forgiving sin but restoring what is broken. In Christ, leaders can face fractures honestly, model hope, and point others toward redemption.

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