Devotional

Iron Sharpens Iron

Proverbs 27:17 (ESV)

Scripture

Proverbs 27:17 (ESV)

Reflection

Sharpening requires contact. Two pieces of iron that never touch each other do not sharpen anything. The friction is not a side effect of the process. It is the process.

Leaders who avoid difficult conversations, who smooth over disagreement, who redirect conflict before it can produce anything useful, are not building a culture of sharpening. They are building a culture of dull edges. Everyone stays comfortable. No one gets sharper.

The communication this proverb describes is not conflict for its own sake. It is the kind of honest engagement between people who take each other seriously enough to push back, to challenge, to say what they actually think rather than what the room seems to want. That kind of engagement is not natural in hierarchical environments. It has to be built deliberately by a leader who models it and protects it.

A leader who is genuinely sharpened by the people around them is also a leader who has created conditions where those people feel safe enough to be honest. The sharpening goes both directions or it does not go at all. A team where only the leader does the sharpening is not an iron-sharpens-iron environment. It is just a leader with a grinding wheel.

Practical Application

  • Identify whether your team environment produces honest pushback or managed agreement.
  • Assess whether you are being sharpened by the people around you or only sharpening them.
  • Create one opportunity this week for the kind of direct exchange that produces sharpening in both directions.

Takeaways

  • Sharpening requires friction. A culture that avoids all friction produces dull edges, not sharp ones.
  • A leader who cannot be sharpened by others has not built an iron-sharpens-iron environment.

Closing Thought

The leader who can be challenged is the leader who keeps getting sharper. The one who cannot will eventually go dull.