Page 99 | Volume 2 | The Leadership Journal of Dallas Baptist University

99 84 Grych, Hamby, and Banyard, “The Resilience Portfolio Model," Psychology of Violence 5, no. 4 (2015): 344. The authors state, “Resilience is best understood as a dynamic process rather than a stable quality of a person because it depends on the constellation of stressors, risk, and protective factors that characterize the person’s life at a particular time (e.g., Masten, 2011; Rutter, 2012).” The note, along with the most recent resilience research, claims that individual, relationship, and community factors serve a protective role in individual resilience. 85 Ibid., 343. 86 Ibid., 347. 87 Willard, The Spirit of the Disciplines, 158. 88 Foster, Celebration of Discipline, 7. 89 Northouse, Leadership: Theory & Practice, Kindle: 14029. AN ETERNAL WEIGHT OF GLORY: EXPLORING SPIRITUAL DISCIPLINES AS POTENTIAL PREDICTORS OF RESILIENT PASTORAL LEADERSHIP

RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy ODc4ODgx