Issue #8
In the past 7 months, we’ve been exploring one of the gravest miscarriages of justice in modern history: the UK Post Office scandal.
This scandal was not the result of a single bad decision. It was the product of a system that failed at every level and kept failing. Leaders chose easy lies over the truth. Silence was engineered. Power was used for self-protection rather than service. Systems rewarded the wrong behavior and shut out those affected. Accountability was more for show than real action. Repentance came decades late. And prevention was never designed from the start..
This final part asks the one remaining question: how do we build systems that prevent these failures in the first place?
The answer requires three things working together: aligned incentives, independent accountability, and a courageous culture.
First: align incentives with stewardship, not optics.
In the Post Office scandal, the system rewarded people for protecting the status quo. Almost no one was rewarded for challenging it.
Ask yourself: what happens when someone shares bad news here? That shows your true culture. Healthy organizations value honesty and openness. So make sure everyone, from vendors to executives, supports truth, trust, and long-term success, not just quick wins.
Second: build accountability that moves upward, not just downward.
It is often easier to question people with the least power than those with the most. But systems become weak when those with the most authority are questioned the least.
Nehemiah dealt with this directly. He confronted wealthy nobles who were exploiting the poor, demanded they make things right, and refused the privileges expected of a governor (Nehemiah 5). Later, he returned and found that corruption had come back. He confronted the problems and corrected them again (Nehemiah 13).
This is the quiet work of stewardship. Power can distort perspective. Independent oversight, whistleblower protection, and external audits help keep things in check.
Third: build cultures where truth can survive.
Even well-designed systems fail when people are afraid to speak. Psychological safety is essential. Punish the first person who brings bad news, and others will stay silent. Thank them and take their concerns seriously, and others will speak up too.
It takes courage to implement systemic change before a crisis forces it, and humility to admit the systems are falling short and to keep examining and correcting long after the pressure fades.
So what can you do?
Ask:
- How quickly does bad news travel upward in my organization?
- Are accountability mechanisms applied equally at every level?
- Are the incentives driving the behavior I want?
- Would someone feel safe challenging me directly?
Act:
- Review one incentive structure and identify what behavior it unintentionally rewards.
- Create one mechanism for independent challenge or review.
- Publicly protect someone who raises a difficult concern in good faith.
Model:
Admit one leadership blind spot openly. Show your team that correction is not weakness, but stewardship.
Systems do not move towards justice on their own. Left unchecked, they tend to protect themselves. Stewardship means noticing that drift and correcting it before people are harmed. This is the challenge of leadership and the responsibility of every steward.
But no leader sustains this kind of stewardship alone. That’s why I lead Kingdom Factor Cohorts (KFCs), confidential groups where Christian CEOs, founders, and executives find the wisdom, courage, and accountability to lead faithfully over the long term. Come see if a KFC is right for you.
(Read the entire UK Post Office Scandal series here.)
Thank you, Mun-Wai, for a truly outstanding series. I do not believe the Post Office scandal is anywhere near concluded; its implications for the 21st century are profound and still unfolding.
Perhaps God guided you to select this subject, because of the powerful lessons it holds for justice, truth, and accountability in our time. I pray that your work will not only continue to bring these issues into the light, but also help draw others toward God, through Jesus Christ, and toward a deeper commitment to unity, loving one another, independence of thought, and faithful stewardship.
Whilst your work has a clear foundation in Christianity, it also reaches far beyond—speaking to people of all faiths, as well as those who do not identify with any religious tradition. It offers something meaningful to anyone beginning a journey of self-awareness, particularly through its emphasis on affective empathy and our shared responsibility to understand and care for one another.
Thank you, Trevor. Your encouragement means a great deal, especially given your firsthand experience of events that most of us only know through inquiries, reports, and headlines.
One of the things that struck me throughout this series is that the Post Office scandal was never just a technology failure or a legal failure. It became a human failure, touching truth, justice, leadership, culture, and stewardship. That’s why I agree that its implications are still unfolding.
I also appreciate your observation about reaching beyond a Christian audience. While the series is grounded in a biblical worldview, my hope has always been that principles such as truth-seeking, accountability, empathy, and stewardship resonate with anyone who cares about leading people well.
And thank you for the many conversations we’ve had along the way. They helped me see not only the public story, but also some of the human realities behind it. I know there are still lessons from this scandal that leaders around the world have yet to learn.