Strategic Planning Executive,
City Harvest Church
Lecturer,
Nanyang Technological University
Wayne Choong holds a PhD in sociology from Nanyang Technological University, where his research focused on digital Christianity and the evolving faith practices of youth in Singapore. He also holds an MSocSci and BSocSci in sociology from the National University of Singapore and is currently pursuing an MA in leadership studies at Vanguard University.
Dr Wayne serves in the CEO Office of City Harvest Church, where he supports strategic planning and research initiatives. Drawing on over a decade of youth pastoral ministry, his work contributes to the church’s engagement with contemporary society through thoughtful analysis and ministry development. His interests lie at the intersection of Christian spirituality, digital culture, and social transformation.
In addition to his role at City Harvest, Dr Wayne lectures at Nanyang Technological University’s School of Social Sciences, teaching interdisciplinary modules on science, technology, and society. His recent publication, An Ecosystemic Approach to Digital Christianity: How Faith and Identity Formation Evolve Among Youth in Singapore, reflects his commitment to understanding how Pentecostal identity and spiritual formation are shaped in digital environments.
Leadership is a complex phenomenon that cannot be easily defined as a single concept. Still, it is often understood as a set of social processes that influence people towards common goals—an approach that I will follow in this study. Drawing from general leadership theory and research on Pentecostal leadership, I will emphasise the interaction between leaders, followers, and the spiritual dimension, leading to a constructivist perspective on leader-follower relationships. The article will first address leadership in various settings, emphasising the need to contextualise leadership in different cultures, but also keeping an analytical distance to avoid dominating discourses that break with Christian perspectives. Second, I will discuss the complexity in Pentecostal leadership, especially the collaboration between divine and human interventions, the dialectic connection between agency and structure, and the ambivalence and tension between leaders and followers in ecclesial settings. Finally, I will highlight the constructive relations between leaders and followers. While leaders hold a formal position, leadership is also a social phenomenon effective only if it makes sense to church members, implying that the leader’s task is not to create everything from scratch but to build relationships and draw from the resources and spirituality present within the congregation.
© 2025 City Harvest Church. All Rights Reserved.