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Presence Matters: Level Up How You Show Up

A leadership and faith podcast from E. Derrik Porter—where ministry meets education and presence becomes practice. Level up how you show up. ederrikporter.substack.com

  1. Give Them the Room

    -4 h

    Give Them the Room

    There is a moment in every generation when the baton is not passed — it is simply held by different hands. No fanfare. No formal ceremony. Just a room where the work continues, and the ones carrying it forward are not the ones who built it. I watched that moment happen on a Sunday. The pastoral leaders were away — resting, restored, removed from the weight they carry every week. And their adult children were in place. Every one of them. In place. Serving, leading, holding the line with a kind of quiet authority that did not ask for permission. And in that moment, I heard something that has not left me since. They are not standing in for their parents. They are stepping into their assignments. The Distinction That Changes Everything These two phrases live close enough to each other that most people never notice the distance between them. But that distance is where legacy is won or lost. To stand in for someone is a positional assignment. You are a placeholder. A warm body in a cold chair. Your authority is borrowed. Your tenure is temporary. You are waiting for the real leader to return so you can exhale and step aside. To step into is something different entirely. Stepping into is not about filling a vacancy. It is about fulfilling a calling. The one who steps in is not asking what do I do while they are gone — they are asking what does this moment require of me, now that it is mine? One is about Substitution. The other is about Succession.. The former holds the place. The latter carries the purpose. Preparing Them for Their Absence Here is what I do not want us to miss about that Sunday morning. These leaders were not hovering. They were trusting. And trust, at that level of leadership, is one of the most mature and difficult acts a legacy leader can perform. It sometimes feels better to believe you are indispensable than it is to know you are replaceable. Indispensability feels like importance. Replacement feels like risk. But the leaders who leave and watch the work continue — without a phone call, without a crisis, without a system held together only by their personal presence — those are the ones who have actually built something. Not just a ministry. Not just a team. A legacy. Rest, for a legacy leader, is not abandonment. Rest is testimony. The work ran without them because they did the harder work beforehand — the work of formation, of investment, of releasing what they built into the hands of people they trusted to carry it. The Weight We Place on the Next Generation I want to speak to those of us who are seasoned. Veterans of the mission. The ones whose names are attached to what we have built. We have to ask ourselves an honest question. Have we been forming successors — or have we been appointing stand-ins? Because there is a way to develop the next generation that never quite lets them arrive. We give them access but not authority. We give them assignments but not agency. We let them serve on the stage but keep the decisions in our office. We call it mentorship. But what it produces is a generation that is perpetually on standby — capable, prepared, faithful — and yet waiting for a permission that never fully comes. That is not legacy. That is dependency. The adult children on that Sunday were not waiting. They were not performing for approval. They were not glancing at the door to see if their parents had come back early. They were fully present, fully engaged, fully in. Because somewhere along the way, the work had become theirs too. The Theology of Succession There is a moment in the text — running through the prophets, through the apostles, through the whole sweep of salvation history — where God does not merely transfer a task. He transfers identity. Elisha does not stand in for Elijah. He carries the spirit of Elijah — doubled. Joshua does not stand in for Moses. He crosses the Jordan that Moses never crossed. Timothy does not stand in for Paul. He carries the gospel into a generation Paul would never reach. In every case, the successor is not trying to replicate the predecessor. They are continuing a work that was never about the predecessor to begin with. God is the source. We are the resource. The work was never ours to own. That means it is not ours to hoard, either. The Call If you are a legacy leader — pastor, principal, founder, elder, parent — I want to leave you with this. Stop building people who can hold your place. Start building people who can take your position into places you have never been. There is a generation behind you that is not waiting to stand in. They are ready to step in. Give them the room. E. Derrik Porter is a pastor-scholar, educator, and moderator of The Presence Collective who writes on faith, leadership, and the examined life, shedding with people who refuse to live shallow and want their lives to carry weight and make Godly impact This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit ederrikporter.substack.com/subscribe

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A leadership and faith podcast from E. Derrik Porter—where ministry meets education and presence becomes practice. Level up how you show up. ederrikporter.substack.com