Abstract:
Times of crisis call for sustainable leadership. Often in Christian circles, (especially among
Evangelicals), the biblical figure of Nehemiah is presented as a model of leadership from
which one can learn directly how leadership can work today in our time and situation. This
article has addressed the question of whether and how this is possible. In a first step, the
author dealt with the hermeneutical question of how to derive teachings from biblical
narratives and how to apply these teachings. In a second step, he examined a number of
popular and scholarly articles and books dealing with Nehemiah and the topic of leadership.
He critically examined three models and evaluated them on the basis of his hermeneutical
considerations. It became clear that there are essentially three different approaches: 1.
Many articles and books derive leadership principles more or less directly from the
Book of Nehemiah. 2. Some authors first identify biblical principles, which they then
illustrate with the person of Nehemiah. 3. One contribution is examined in which leadership
principles based on sociological considerations are taken as a starting point, which are then
concretised with Nehemiah. On the basis of the fundamental hermeneutical considerations,
the author came to the conclusion that only models 2 and 3 are possible approaches to the
question. This article moves between Old
Testament and Leadership Studies. It is therefor by intention interdisciplinary. There are
implications for the understanding of Old Testament narrative texts but also for Leadership
Studies