Section 121 Leader

Stanley Black

Leading from Zion instead of Babylon

  1. Jun 17

    The Choice: Inspiration or a King

    In this episode of the Section 121 Leader Podcast, Stanley explores the choice between inspiration and a king. Israel asked Samuel for a king because the nations around them had kings. A king felt visible, structured, powerful, and safe. But that ancient desire still shows up today whenever we lose hope that people can be inspired and start reaching instead for control, urgency, scarcity, fear, or compulsion. This episode looks at why Zion cannot be built by shortcuts. You can enforce compliance, but you cannot enforce excellence. Requirement may establish minimums, but inspiration is what invites willing contribution, trust, initiative, and people who become anxiously engaged in good causes of their own free will. Stanley discusses the difference between a scarcity economy and a Zion economy, why idleness must be faced honestly, and why hope is essential if people are going to rise, contribute, and consecrate. Core question: Are we trying to build Zion, or are we asking for a king to force people to behave? Scriptures referenced in this episode: 1 Samuel 8 — Israel asks Samuel for a kingDoctrine and Covenants 42:42 — “Thou shalt not be idle”Moses 7:18 — Zion as one heart and one mind, with no poor among themDoctrine and Covenants 58:26–28 — anxiously engaged in a good cause of our own free willDoctrine and Covenants 121:41–46 — persuasion, long-suffering, gentleness, meekness, love unfeigned, and dominion without compulsory means4 Nephi 1:3 — no rich or poor, bond or free4 Nephi 1:15–17 — no contention because of the love of God in the hearts of the peopleMoroni 7 — faith, hope, and charityIf you have feedback or questions about this episode, or suggestions for future episodes I would love to receive your feedback at:  stanley.black@invitethebest.com

    16 min
  2. Jun 3

    Waiting on the Lord is Not Weakness

    In this episode of the Section 121 Leader Podcast, Stanley explores why waiting on the Lord is not weakness — even when it feels slow, exposed, or unimpressive. Using the metaphor of working up from one mile to two, this episode reflects on the pressure many of us feel to prove strength through dramatic leaps instead of trusting the Lord’s pattern of steady mastery. Stanley discusses how this can be especially difficult for men, who often feel pressure to appear powerful, capable, and in control. The core principle: It is our job to work, and God’s job to make it work. Waiting on the Lord does not mean doing nothing. It means cheerfully doing what lies in our power, then trusting God with the outcome. Small steps, line-upon-line growth, and faithful effort are not signs of weakness. They may be the very way God builds lasting strength. Scriptures referenced in this episode: Isaiah 40:28–31 — “They that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength”Mosiah 3:19 — “The natural man is an enemy to God”Doctrine and Covenants 123:17 — “Let us cheerfully do all things that lie in our power”Doctrine and Covenants 121:41–42 — righteous influence through persuasion, long-suffering, gentleness, meekness, love unfeigned, kindness, and pure knowledge2 Nephi 28:30 — “Line upon line, precept upon precept”Alma 37:6–7 — “By small and simple things are great things brought to pass”Core question: Where am I demanding a dramatic jump when God may be inviting me into faithful mastery? If you have feedback or questions about this episode, or suggestions for future episodes I would love to receive your feedback at:  stanley.black@invitethebest.com

    13 min

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Leading from Zion instead of Babylon