Titus Kevin Mays Titus Kevin Mays

Holy: A Life Set Apart for God

Jesus is called “the Holy One of God” not just because He was morally perfect—but because He was fully aligned with the will of the Father. Every action, every word, every step was soaked in love, obedience, and purpose.

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Titus Kevin Mays Titus Kevin Mays

Upright: Living Justly in a Crooked World

Jesus lived uprightly. He challenged injustice. He confronted hypocrisy. He treated the poor, the rich, the religious, and the forgotten with truth and fairness—never with favoritism.

And more than that, He became our righteousness. His life was the fulfillment of all justice—and His death satisfied what none of us could. That means uprightness, for us, doesn’t start with behavior. It starts with union with Christ, and flows out from there.

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Titus Kevin Mays Titus Kevin Mays

A Lover of Goodness: Loving What Reflects the Heart of God

Do you find yourself more drawn to critique than celebration? More focused on what's wrong than what’s right?

That’s not necessarily wrong—but over time, it can dull your spirit. We were created to delight in good things. And our leadership will feel stale if our hearts are only trained to spot danger and never beauty.

To love goodness is to be alive to what God is doing, not just aware of what the enemy is trying to destroy.

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Titus Kevin Mays Titus Kevin Mays

Hospitable: Making Room for People Like Jesus Did

Hospitality isn’t easy. It costs time, energy, emotional capacity, sometimes even resources. It risks awkwardness. It gets messy. But that’s the point.

The Church isn’t meant to be polished—it’s meant to be open.
And our leadership should reflect that openness. Not just to those we already like or understand, but to those we don’t yet know how to love.

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Titus Kevin Mays Titus Kevin Mays

Not Greedy for Gain: Leading Without Self-Interest

Paul's list of spiritual leadership traits continues with something both ancient and modern: greed.

It’s easy to assume this is just a financial warning—don’t be a corrupt church leader. And yes, that’s part of it. But Paul is aiming at something deeper. He’s warning against a heart driven by self-interest—a person who treats people and ministry like tools to build a personal empire.

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Titus Kevin Mays Titus Kevin Mays

Not Violent: Leading Without Force or Fear

Violence doesn’t always show up as bruises. Sometimes it’s in the tone of a voice, the manipulation of emotions, the silencing of dissent, or the refusal to allow questions or feedback. It may hide behind spiritual language, but its fruit is fear, shame, and control.

Jesus never led like that.

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