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Sarah Visser occasionally jets out of her office a few minutes early. Itā€™s not that sheā€™s uncommitted to her roleā€”she loves her work with students and faculty at Calvin University as the executive vice president for student experience and strategy. But every now and then, Visser runs from work prematurely to catch a glimpse of her daughterā€™s fifth-grade volleyball game.

Itā€™s a delicate balance of caring for her three children while shepherding the almost 4,000 students and faculty at Calvin. And itā€™s a role she doesnā€™t take lightly.

ā€œAs a woman in leadership, Iā€™m often asked about work-life balance. I find it nearly impossible to strike absolute balance, but Iā€™m drawn to the concept of integrated living,ā€ Visser explained. ā€œI am a whole person, and that means that I bring all of who I am into everything I do. I canā€™t compartmentalize different areas of my life.ā€

How she leads as a mom, she noted, spills into how she leads as a professional. And how she leads as a professional makes a difference in the way she parents. The two go hand in hand. 

As a woman in a high-visibility position, Visser said, she uses her role to mentor and come alongside the other women in her purview. She encourages them to bring their entire selvesā€”as mothers, daughters, sisters, wives, and friendsā€”into the workplace.

ā€œYour vocation is not a job,ā€ Visser explained. ā€œItā€™s who youā€™re called to be. Where is God asking you to lead in your life?ā€ 

Much of Visserā€™s leadership philosophy is undergirded by the concept of imago Dei: everyone is created in Godā€™s image. Regardless of oneā€™s gender, she said, fully ā€œshowing upā€ in oneā€™s leadership roles is an act of faithfulness and points others to Godā€™s creativity and complexity.  We all benefit when every individual recognizes her or his unique calling as an agent of renewal in Godā€™s world.

ā€œOrganizations and communities are healthier when we have the full spectrum of voices around the table,ā€ Visser said. ā€œWithout women or other forms of diversity in leadership speaking into things, we are not able to fully live into all God has designed.ā€

When Jesus faced his darkest days, it was the women who surrounded him, who joined him at the foot of the cross, and who were the first to testify to the empty tomb. Indeed, womenā€™s faithful leadership is honored throughout the biblical narrative. Visser sees this in her own story as well.

ā€œI have seen that women can often sit in the emotion of things. They can walk toward the hard conversations and approach work conflicts with poise, grace, and warmth. Many of the women leaders I admire have demonstrated an ability to navigate challenges with grace, presence, and hope. ā€¦ God uses all components of our lives to help us lead and complete the work heā€™s set before us, whether thatā€™s in the home, the workplace, the community, or the church,ā€ she concluded. ā€œI may not be sufficient to complete the tasks at hand, but thatā€™s OK. When I lean into Jesus, I am reminded that he is more than sufficient to help me complete everything heā€™s called me to do.ā€

 

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