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I am glad everyone here are too truthful to take the job! (or at least those who said so).
On the other hand, sometimes you need to do something on behalf of the tzibur (Mordechai being an example).
At the end of Hagigah, there is a statement that Gehinom does not burn Talmidei Chachamim. The question is – what are they doing in Gehinom in the first place? some explain that they are there to help others, which does not seem to fully rhyme with an unqualified statement of the Gemorah. [I did not have time to look it up “thanks” to daf Yomi, if someone did – please post!]
I think here is the connection: A story goes about a group of Rabonim riding a train in Poland in 1920s. They would come out at the stations to meet local Jews who came to greet them. (elderly) Chofetz Chaim stayed inside. (a youngster) R Meir Shapiro (Daf Yomi connection) asked him why he is not coming out. Ch Ch said – it is asur because it is gaavah. R Shapiro asked – and what is the punishment for gaava? Ch Ch thundered: GEHINOM. Oh, said R Shapiro, and is this too much of a punishment to withhold a pleasure of seeing a tzaddik from thousand of Yidden who came to the train!? Ch chaim agreed and started coming out for the rest of the trip. I think they both relied on this Hagigah Gemora that they’ll not get burned. And this also rhymes with the explanation above – that they get to Gehinom because they were doing something for others and, in the process, did something not fully proper.