Lessons of The Priest
Lawrence Lerner • March 26, 2022

There is strength in diversity

This assertion is often expressed in many ways. A rope woven of many strands is stronger than one. Diversity of opinions, experience, and perspective ensures many options are considered.
 
My areas of professional and personal excellence are diverse. They include my career as an executive, a technologist, and an investor. I am also a person of faith and a priest. I coach businesses and people to achieve sustainable advantages, strengthen corporate culture, and thrive through adversity. All are woven into the fabric of who I am. It gives me a diverse perspective to solve problems from analytical, emotional, and cultural angles. I have been called a polymath. Others have called it "A cacophony" ;) 
 
Last week I signed Rabbi Denise Eger's "A Letter of Spiritual Solidarity with Ukraine" with other faith leaders. This is an example of strength through diversity. Can one letter make a difference? Perhaps. It demonstrates that diverse and contrasting ideologies can join together.
 
Rabbi Eger is a representation of diversity as the first openly gay female rabbi to serve in Jewish leadership roles. Rabbi Eger is a past President of the Central Conference of American Rabbis, a leading US Jewish faith body. She is a noted speaker on human sexuality, LGBTQ issues, and Judaism. While some celebrate her, others question.
 
An open and honest question to the reader. Why do the varied disciplines create dissonance with some people? It is not unique in having diverse interests and specialties. I am keenly eager to hear your opinions.
 
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Onward.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Silent


Silent provides the tools for seekers to recognize their path and enables self-reliance for spiritual and magickal growth. 


Seekers gain insight from his work and find their inner calm from his ability to listen and help others reflect.

By Silent April 23, 2026
Restructuring sounds operational. It isn't. At the whiteboard, it's clean: new structure, realigned roles, redeployed capital. Logic holds. The math works. But you're the one who has to tell someone who's been with you for eleven years that there's no longer a place for what they do. You're the one who has to walk into a room and say the version of this company you all built together is ending, and here's what comes next. And then you have to go lead the next thing. That's not a strategy problem. That's a threshold. Leaders who get this wrong don't get it wrong because they lacked the right framework. They get it wrong because they're making permanent decisions from a state of depletion, and there was no honest space in between to process what was actually happening to them — not just to the business. Reinvention extracts something from a leader that the org chart doesn't account for. It asks you to hold grief for what's ending while holding conviction for what's being built. Simultaneously. In public. Most leaders do this alone. They call it "staying focused."  Sometimes it is. Sometimes it's just the only option they can see. Spiritual direction doesn't tell you what to do. It helps you tell the truth about what's real — including what it costs you to do the right thing, and whether the version of yourself making this decision is the one you trust. Not every leadership problem is a strategy problem. Some of them are located inside the person who has to execute the strategy. If you're in a season of hard reset and carrying more than you've named yet — I'm available for a quiet conversation. No pitch.
By Silent April 22, 2026
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By Silent April 19, 2026
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