"He who thinks he leads," said Benjamin Hooks, "and has no one following him is only taking a walk." No great cause can survive apart from leadership--in government, in industry, in business, in the church. One of the problems of leadership is that it is often difficult for the leader to distinguish between leading a cause and being the cause. In reality, a leader is committed to a cause, but he does not become the cause. Sometimes a leader pours himself into the cause he represents so much--body, soul, and spirit--that his judgment and perspective become warped. The individual begins to think that he is the cause.