Ten thousand men lay in the dark, unable to sleep, unable to eat, thinking of their fathers and their wives and the children they expected never to see again. Their generals had walked into what they were told was a peace conference and been seized; the officers who waited at the doors were ridden down by cavalry before anyone understood what was happening. Every layer of leadership was gone. Every supply line was cut. Fifteen hundred miles of hostile empire lay between the army and home. Into this absolute darkness, before the first light of dawn, a young Athenian private citizen who had come along as a friend of one of the murdered officers pulled himself up from his blanket, asked himself "why am I lying here?", and went to work. He gathered the officers. He reorganized the command structure. He led ten thousand men home across the mountains of Kurdistan and Armenia to the shore of the Black Sea. His name was Xenophon, his book is the Anabasis, and it is one of the ancient world's most honest accounts of what leadership actually costs. Read it alongside Scripture and you will understand your own leadership, and the leadership of Jesus Christ, more clearly than almost any other pairing of books can show you. The comparison works because Xenophon, without knowing the God of the Bible, discovered through necessity and philosophy some of the same principles the Bible commands by authority, and the places where his wisdom runs out are exactly the places where the gospel begins.
Three Generals and What Destroyed Them
The Anabasis's most concentrated teaching on leadership comes in Book II, where Xenophon pauses the narrative to give each of the murdered generals a character portrait. Read together, they form a single argument about what kind of character actually holds. Clearchus loved war the way other men love a vice, spending his fortune and his health on the one thing that made him feel alive. He held his army at peak performance through fear so total that his soldiers felt toward him "as schoolboys to a master," and in the moment of crisis, when everything depended on whether men would obey without hesitation, they obeyed. But "when the pinch of danger was past, many forsook him." Fear is not loyalty. It functions while the threat is immediate and evaporates the moment the pressure lifts. Proxenus was genuinely good, a young idealist who dreamed of becoming great without ever doing anything wrong; but he "feared his soldiers' hatred more than they feared losing his fidelity," and the corrupt men under him treated his gentleness as permission. Menon is the one who should give you pause. He regarded honesty as weakness, cultivated friendships purely as instruments of exploitation, and "contrived to secure the obedience of his soldiers by making himself an accomplice in their misdeeds." He survived the crisis by betraying his fellow generals. Then the Persians tortured him for a year before they let him die. His end is the moral argument made visible in a life: corruption as a leadership strategy does not fail eventually; it devours itself. Ask yourself honestly, not as a rhetorical exercise but as a genuine examination of conscience: which of these three generals do the people under your leadership actually experience? The one who leads by pressure that evaporates when you leave the room? The one whose kindness has no spine and whose followers know it? Or the one whose motives run so far beneath the surface that not even he can see them clearly?
What Genuine Leadership Looks Like in Six Feet of Snow
Against the three portraits of failure, the Anabasis traces what genuine leadership looks like under maximum pressure, not in abstract principles but in specific physical moments. In the Armenian winter, when snowfall so deep it has buried the weapons and blanketed the sleeping men generates a warmth that makes rising seem like choosing death, the text records a single detail: "it was not until Xenophon roused himself to get up, and, without his cloak on, began to split wood, that quickly first one and then another got up." He removes his cloak in cold that has already killed men and animals and does the work of a private soldier. The army follows him to their feet. Later, when soldiers bring formal charges against him before the full assembly for striking them during the retreat, he does not invoke his rank. He answers every accusation on its own terms, and when one man confirms that yes, Xenophon struck him, Xenophon says: "I struck you. Yes! you are right, for it looked very much as if you knew him to be alive." The man had been abandoning a still-breathing wounded comrade in the snow. The assembly shouts that Xenophon should have struck him harder. This is what alignment between stated motives and actual actions looks like in public: everyone can see it, and the transparency itself is the authority. When the city of Byzantium is in the army's hands and the soldiers call out to him to seize it and make himself great, he leads them quietly back out. When an official withholds the soldiers' pay for his own advantage, Xenophon confronts him directly and publicly rather than accommodating injustice to protect his own position. At every turn his leadership costs him something. That is the mark of the real thing.
The Courage to Tell the Truth While There Is Still Time
One of the principles Xenophon practices most consistently is the refusal to tell people what they want to hear when what they need to hear is harder and more urgent. In Book III, addressing an army on the edge of total collapse, he does not soften the danger or perform a confidence he does not feel. He states plainly that the king and Tissaphernes are plotting their destruction, and then, without minimizing the threat, reframes it in terms that make courage possible: their enemies have broken their oaths and forfeited divine favor; their forefathers defeated a larger Persian force at Marathon; cavalry count for nothing in the kind of direct fighting that the Ten Thousand do better than anyone alive. Truth-telling and hope-giving are not opposites in his hands. The honest assessment of the situation is the ground of the courage he is calling for. The Bible gives this leadership posture a name: watchman. Ezekiel 3:17-19 makes the stakes absolute, the watchman who sees the sword coming and fails to blow the trumpet bears the blood of those who fall. Paul claims his own innocence of the Ephesian congregation's blood on exactly this ground: "I did not shrink from declaring to you the whole counsel of God" (Acts 20:27). The most pervasive leadership failure in any century is not cruelty but a comfortable cowardice: softening what is hard, delaying what will cause friction, offering comfort when the trumpet should be sounding. Proverbs 27:6 speaks to this with a directness that should sting: "Faithful are the wounds of a friend; profuse are the kisses of an enemy." If you love the people you lead, you will wound them sometimes with truth. If you have been managing their comfort rather than serving their growth, that is worth sitting with today.
The Heart That Cannot Fix Itself
Here is where the Anabasis and the Bible move in different directions, and the difference is not about the quality of Xenophon's leadership but about the depth of the problem underneath all leadership. Xenophon believed, following Socrates, that virtue is teachable, that the right formation and the right examples can produce leaders of genuine integrity. He is not entirely wrong. Character is shaped by community and practice, and Scripture affirms both. But Jeremiah 17:9 says something Xenophon and Socrates together never said: "The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately sick; who can understand it?" The leader who appears genuinely virtuous under ordinary conditions may discover in extreme temptation that the virtue was shallower than it looked, and the leader who has been writing his own account for two decades may have quietly become the hero of every chapter without noticing. The Bible is consistently less sanguine about self-knowledge than the best Greek philosophy, and far more insistent on the need for transformation from a source entirely outside the self. The qualifications for elders in 1 Timothy 3 and Titus 1 are almost entirely character qualifications, describing people being continuously remade by the Spirit of God, not self-formed leaders who have mastered the right curriculum. The fruit of the Spirit in Galatians 5:22-23 is fruit: it grows from a root that is not the leader's own striving but the Spirit's personal presence within the believer. Love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control: you cannot produce these by trying harder. They are received by abiding in Christ, and the Holy Spirit who produces them is not a principle or a force but a person who dwells inside those who trust Jesus, bearing witness with their spirit, interceding in their weakness, and working in them both to will and to work for God's good pleasure (Philippians 2:13).
The Leader Who Leads Through Death
Xenophon leads ten thousand men through fifteen hundred miles of hostile wilderness and gets them home. Read the Anabasis and feel the full weight of what that cost: the frostbitten feet, the dead animals, the men who sat down in the snow and could not rise again, the grinding pressure of an enemy that harassed without ever quite destroying. And then one morning the men in front crest a ridge in Armenia and a shout starts and rolls back through the whole army: "The sea! The sea!" The Black Sea, which means Greek cities and ships and home. The soldiers "fell to embracing one another, generals and officers and all, and the tears trickled down their cheeks." It is one of antiquity's most moving images. But ask the question the Anabasis cannot answer: home for what? The army disperses to their Greek cities, returns to the ordinary life from which they came, and the men are the same men, only older and more weathered. They reached the sea. They did not become new people. The leadership Scripture describes is not ultimately about reaching a destination. Paul's aim in Colossians 1:28-29 is to "present everyone mature in Christ." Moses does not merely escort Israel from Egypt to Canaan; he is charged with forming them into a covenant people who will be a light to the nations. The sea was never the point. The transformation of the soul is the point. And the leader who defines the Christian understanding of all leadership took on flesh, walked the full length of the road his people walk, bore the weight of the sins that corrupt every leader's heart including yours and mine, died on a Roman cross, and rose on the third day with a life that death cannot touch. He did not lead through the crisis and survive it alongside his people. He led through death itself and came out the other side with room for everyone who follows. And the Spirit he sends does not manage the soul's transformation from a distance; he takes up residence within it, producing year after year the Christlikeness that no philosophy, however brilliant, and no education, however thorough, could begin to generate. One day, on a morning that will make the shout at Mount Theches sound like a whisper, the people Christ has led will see something that makes even the Black Sea look small.
The Question This Book Is Asking You
If you are a Christian in any position of leadership, the Anabasis is worth reading slowly with your Bible open beside it, not because Xenophon knew God but because he knew leadership with a clarity and honesty that most of us never achieve, and because seeing the best of human leadership at its most rigorous makes the gospel's claim about a different and better kind of leader shine with unmistakable brightness. See what shared hardship looks like when the leader is the first one in the cold without his cloak. See what accountability looks like when the commander stands before the assembly and answers every charge rather than hiding behind rank. See what integrity looks like when power is literally in your hands and you walk the army back out of the city. And when you have felt the genuine force of all of that, you are in the best position to understand what makes Jesus Christ incomparably greater than the most admirable leader the ancient world ever produced. Xenophon got his people home. He did not get them new hearts. Christ, the good shepherd of John 10, lays down his life for the sheep, deals not only with the danger outside but with the corruption within, and sends his Spirit to dwell inside the very people he leads, to do for them from within what no external example, however powerful, could ever accomplish. If you have never trusted him, today is the right day to follow the one leader whose authority rests not on his own achievement but on what he has already done for you at the cross and in the empty tomb. And if you have trusted him, let this ancient, admirable, and finally limited pagan general send you back to the vine that is the only source of any fruit worth giving to the people God has placed in your care.
