10 Things Pastors Hate To Admit Publicly

MB PostsWhen Ellen and I were first married ministry was not our 20-year plan, the Navy was. We had it all planned out; we were to spend the next 20 years with me being gone for 15. The Navy explained to my sweet new bride how grueling it would be, that I would be gone often and that even when I was around my mind would be elsewhere. Knowing that my particular career path in the Navy would be a marriage destroyer I pursued a discharge for the pursuit of higher education. With the promise of a difficult future behind us we embarked upon an easier dream where everyone would love us and things would be calm: pastoral service.

Twenty plus years later I can tell you it has been a ride we never could have anticipated. So much so that only now do I feel equipped enough to share a few things I either lacked the clarity or courage to share until this season of life. I want to share the 10 things we as pastors don’t really want you to know about us. Now in doing so my aim is not to rat out my fellow pastors. Nor am I doing this so congregants sleep with one eye open regarding their leadership. My intention is precisely the opposite. I hope that from this:

  • Churches will pray all the more for their pastors because they understand the challenges.
  • Churches will be doubly grateful for the fact that so many pastors stay in the saddle despite their fears, hurts and frustrations.
  • People in churches will think twice before engaging in things that sink deep into the soul of their leaders.

Therefore I give a glimpse into what we as pastors don’t like to admit about ourselves.

#1. We Take It Personally When You Leave The Church.

It’s just a straight up fact. We pastors eat, drink and sleep the local church and with that have a deep desires to see it thrive. Therefore when you leave to another church because…

  • you’re bothered by a recent decision, but didn’t ask about it…
  • the new church has a bigger and better kids wing, youth group, worship team, building space, (fill in your blank)…
  • your friends started going there…

… it hits us personally.

For us it feels disloyal, shallow or consumer driven. People affirm that church is a family, thus when you up and leave because the church down the road has Slurpee dispensers, a fog machine or it’s just cooler, well it jams us pretty deep.

#2. We Feel Pressure To Perform Week After Week.

The average TV show has a multimillion-dollar budget, a staff of writers and only airs 22 weeks out of the year; that’s what we feel we’re up against. Where the pressure is doubled comes from the previous point. We know there are churches near by with a multimillion-dollar budget or a celebrity pastor who have the ability to do many more things at a much higher level. From this a sense of urgency is created in our mind to establish the same level of quality, option and excellence to meet the consumerist desires of culture.

Now if this were exclusively in the hopes of reaching new people this wouldn’t be so bad, but increasingly pastors feel the need to do this just to retain people who may be stuff struck by the “Bigger and Better” down the way.

#3. We Struggle With Getting Our Worth From Ministry.

When the numbers are up, the complements are flowing and the people are lively we feel great. When everything is level, it feels like it’s in decline. When things are actually in decline, it’s a full-tilt tailspin in our soul. We almost can’t help but equate the growth of the church with our ability/inability to produce growth. Therefore if there is any appearance of waning we feel defeated and wonder how long before the church board wises up and trades us to another team. The “Idol of Ministry” comes on and off the shelf pretty regularly in a pastor’s office.

#4. We Regularly Think About Quitting.

This comes in two very different forms.

One form is the variation of perhaps leaving ministry all together. While there are some really great things about vocational ministry, there are also less enjoyable realities such as: pastors’ families are noticed (i.e. judged) routinely, pastors’ purchases are observed (i.e. judged) overtly and pastors’ words are weighed (i.e. judged) consistently. Therefore the ability to hide among the masses and not be noticed is very appealing.

The second form comes with the desire for a change of scenery. Pastors are shepherds, thus we love greener grass even more than sheep. To leave for a bigger budget, better building or a place with less difficult people (yeah, we get delusional sometimes) stands out as lush Kentucky Bluegrass when contrasted with the dusty patch of ragged earth called “our current church.” This “Greener Grass Gawking” usually occurs when we become too proud (“My gifts are better than this place”) or too insecure (“I stink and just need to start over”) and flows from #3.

#5. We Say We Are Transparent – It’s Actually Opaque.

Today pastors are generally more open about their struggles than previous generations, but we still sense there is a threshold that is not to be crossed. People want open, honest and real, but not too much. Generally churches want just enough so they feel safe with you, but not so much that it spoils the expectations they have of you. Unfortunately the threshold is a blurry line by which pastors never know how much is too much until its too late. After a couple of infractions we learn that opaque is safe – even if it’s isolating.

When pastors’ wives are polled on how it feels to be the spouse of someone in full-time ministry the #1 answer is one profound word, “Lonely.” They are around hundreds of people every week, but they never feel they can let their guard down because they know people have opinions on how a pastor’s wife should be. Now I know people say they don’t, but literally every church I have served in has shared unflattering stories of the previous pastor’s wife. Many of these stories came from the spiritually mature leadership who considered the pastor and his wife to be their friends. The real irony comes in when later in the conversation I would be told, “But don’t worry, we don’t have any expectations on your wife. We just want to love on her.” Right! Now I don’t blame people for this natural human tendency, but being aware of how things are keeps you relationally opaque. And it’s not merely pastors and their wives who insulate. Pastoral families at large feel alone because there is a certain level of unknown expectations buried like landmines through the field of the church and so there is a constant mode of mostly transparent.

#6. We Measure Ourselves By The Numbers.

Numbers don’t matter! Yeah right. No matter how badly we want to slap that bumper sticker on our Ford the reality is that numbers matter to us. And they matter to us it part because they matter to God. The problem however goes back to #1-3. The absence of growth in our churches can cascade into an internal turmoil by which we begin to scrounge for “The Next Big Thing” that will bring “Radical Growth” “Guaranteed.” So we read books on how to be a “Deep & Wide, Vertical, Purpose Driven, Radical Reformission, Creature of the Word, Big Idea, Center Church.” Then we jet off to a conference with thousands of other pastors who are seeking to glean the secret of success. And what is the first question we ask one another between sessions? “So, how big is your church?” Yep, we measure ourselves by the numbers.

#7 We Spend More Time Discouraged Than Encouraged.

Occasionally people say to me, “Must be awesome to get paid to study the Bible all day.” Every time they do I think to myself, “Must be awesome to be able to give someone the finger on the 520 without people saying, ‘The pastor at Redemption Church flipped me off today during rush-hour.’” I’m not fully sure why that is the comment that flashes across my mental dashboard, but I think part of it stems from what I perceive to be the tone of the comment. Rightly or wrongly I infer they are saying, “Must be nice to have such a cush gig as a paid quiet-time.” In all honestly it is pretty awesome to be paid study the Bible, but it’s a major downer when people:

  • tell you – after 2 minutes of un-investigated reflection – that your 30 hours of study and 2 collegiate degrees were wrong.
  • tell you that they just couldn’t stay awake today during your sermon, but no offense. (How about I fall asleep at your kid’s graduation and we’ll call it even.)
  • tell you how you should have also said…
  • tell you how Pastor So-N-So says…

Aside from these particular examples I find that for most pastors it generally feels like the boat is taking on water more than racing with the wind – regardless of size or rate of growth. Lead pastors particularly suffer from this since much of their job is to focus on seeing things get better, which often translates into focusing on the broken, lacking or unfilled parts of the church more than enjoying what is right and working. Many of the most faithful and fruitful pastors in history have suffered deeply with anxiety and depression for the same reasons.

#8. We Worry About What You Think.

We’re human and we want to be liked. Therefore when we know we’re going to do or say something people won’t like, we worry about it. Now when I say that I don’t mean to infer that it causes us to avoid the hard things. There are some of my fellow pastors who avoid challenging topics or decisions out of fear of people, but most of the ones I run with still choose deliver the mail regardless of the popularity of its message. Yet we still worry about how you may take it.

#9. We Struggle With Competition And Jealousy.

We like to hold ourselves above the petty fray and reiterate, “It’s all about the Kingdom,” but in reality pastors are a competitive bunch. As soon as one pastor asks another, “How big is your church?” the game is on if the two churches are within 20 miles of each other (past 20 miles we lighten up a lot and think each other is pretty cool). Within 20 miles however we begin to assess one another’s style, focus, message, sophistication and marketing. We gauge to see if it’s a “Goldilocks Church” – not to deep, not too shallow, but just right (like us). If you’re too deep we benchmark you as internally focused. If you’re too shallow we brand you as consumer-driven. If however we conclude that you too are a “Goldilocks Church” we then figure out how our church is still better than your church. If you have lame amenities, we critique that you will never grow until you reboot that 70’s sanctuary. If you have awesome amenities, we criticize that you grow only because people are shallow and care more about stuff than Scripture.

Yes we know it’s not right. We know that it’s ego driven, but we still fall victim to it. We believe our church is the best church ever and we can’t understand why everyone doesn’t see it.

#10. We Feel Like We Failed You More Than We Helped You.

Most pastors will never be famous. Most churches will never break the 100 mark. Yet we all entered ministry to change the world and reach the masses. With this we know it is the expectation of churches that we accomplish this very thing. Every job posting reinforces the idea with the sentence, “We are looking for a man that will take our church to the next level.” Then when the next level isn’t hit in the way anticipated or within the timeline envisioned – we feel like we failed you. This is especially true in light of the reality that we are our own biggest critics. We came in with expectations higher than anyone in the church. You look to us for direction and when we feel like we failed to produce we feel like we failed you.

552 thoughts on “10 Things Pastors Hate To Admit Publicly”

  1. thank you for this…. whenever i hear a preacher preaching against another preacher, no matter how “right” they may be it almost always just reeks of #9. John Piper’s recent, over dramatic tirade againt Osteen and Meyers was unfortunate. That he would take up precious resources and risk sacred opportunites to powefully touch someone with the love of Christ by publicy putting that negative, self serving rhetoric on the airwaves was a real disappointment. Piper, like so many others, just come off sounding jealous that their church isn’t as big or their ministry as rich. Why in the world another preacher spends time criticizing another ministry, when the love and calling of Christ is so encumbent upon us that if we talked about His love for a lifetime we still wouldn’t reach all the folks that need to hear it Time and opportunites are precious and we seem to waste it so.

    1. So what part of “Shepherding” you fail to get? There is a “protection” responsibility that a true shepherd takes seriously! In fact, such responsibility causes him to even call out names as a sincere effort to earn the sheep of dangers found in Matthew chapter seven, “Be aware of wolves…” Do you judge Jesus when he called out the Pharisees in John 8? What about Paul when he dropped names of people who walked away from Ministry (remember Demas?), or when Paul called out the heretical, or confronted people publicly like Peter???? Sir, when Godly men such as Piper or maybe your pastor calls out a name from the pulpit (even my obscure name) and says that particular pastor, preacher, or evangelist is heretical, you would do wise to listen of the case the scriptures brings against such a person to determine if this indeed is a biblically based warning or a pridefully driven complaint. To call it “wrong” without investigation and follow-through reveals the shallowness of your Americanized Christianity and extreme lack of knowledge of what scripture says of pastors…”they watch over your souls as one who will give an account.” I fully anticipate you to “automatically dismiss” this comment!

      1. Thank you. I personally find too many pastors afraid to speak out on current false teachers and cultural trends for fear of offending someone.

  2. Thank you for sharing pastorboz. Praying for courage to stand, humility to defer, for frequent footwashings, for unity to collaborate, and for His anointing upon all those with whom you are serving so that all can seize their calling as royal priests: to the work of the ministry of reconciliation, justice and peace in whatever field of the kingdom they find themselves. May He guide you in His ways and in the “effortless reproduction” of His name in the power and wisdom of the cross. Lord renew their hope in specific covenants, with greater honor (generosity), pervasive laughter and fun little projects together as a testimony to the practical acknowledgement of you love overruling all things. Revive us oh Lord for your namesake and your testimony. #ourcultureneedsushealthy #handsofftheark
    I offer the heart of my devotions: Ps 127, Isa 59:8-9, Jn. 14:1-6, 1Cor 1:17, Gal 2:20, 1Pet 2:8-9, Ro 11:36, 1Cor.4:20, Ro.14:17, Ro. 11:36

    I see now this orig post was a year ago… would be interesting to hear what insights you have had, what you have done differently and what the results are.

  3. Thanks for your insights. For me I would say that I would never go to the church I pastor if I wasn’t the pastor. I hate it there. It’s a religious club for old people who call themselves Christians but there’s no visible fruit. The word discipleship is a swear word. I think they employ Pastors just so that they have someone to abuse. At least I can console myself with the real possibility that I won’t have to share eternity with most of them! Hallelujah!

    1. Please quit the ministry, sir. Your flock deserves a shepherd who loves them, not a judgmental jerk who gripes about them behind their backs. Your post’s behavior is no better than the allegations you make against your flock, so you may be endangering your own soul by judging them so harshly. If you wouldn’t attend a church if you weren’t the pastor, you don’t belong there as a pastor, either.

      1. It is sad in hearing the words of a pastor speaking about the older and fruit-lacking people of his flock! That which he fails to recognize, is the age of the flock makes little differences, but the flocks’ lack, is evidence of the lack in the pastor’s ability to bring forth the beauty of the Sacred Scriptures in a manner whereby the people again regardless of age, are all born-again believers who have the fruit of the spirit constantly being seen!

        Those too, who see no fruit, may have no fruit of their own – of the Spirit that is – and if the pastor of the flock has no fruit of the spirit, the entire situation is well-understood! I am well-aware of the tendencies of some denominations, as they pander to those in the locl churches who have the most money, and thus, ensure those who do not want Scriptural teaching in Sabbath, if these are high tithe-payers, will ensure there is little Bible instruction which motivates to higher spirituality. We cannot know, saving from the lips of the preacher, much, and yet, if he would not make his own church his home church if her were not their pastor, this is a sad pastor for sure! All are to be loved, yet denominations cannot be held above the people, unless the denomination has become your saviour, never to occur, as this is the straight dollars and sense of the work, and has taken over everything!

      2. What unfortunate judgemental negativism, I am sure the write is grateful not to have you in his church, as I would be!

      3. Jesus died having been denied by one, betrayed by another, and abandoned by all. He died with the words, “Forgive them, for they know not what they do.” What if your task as minister was simply to love your people. And you weren’t held responsible for what they did or didn’t do. All you are responsible for is love.

  4. It’s like anything else, cant handle the heat, stay out of the kitchen. Selling a 2000+ year old “item” that’s not yours, or anyone elses, to “sell” and profit from, is the epitome of fraud. So is this inguenuine pack of lies you’ve blogged here……

  5. I’m going to be honest… I could be crazy but here are my honest feelings: These are important areas of personal growth in the Christ-likeness of a leader. They should not be places we permanently park. I think I’ve worked through each of these with God… and some of them many times… but we have worked through them. Now, after 15 years as a senior leader in ministry, if I feel one of them creeping in I usually bring it to Jesus quickly and we take care of it. Everyone is prone to some of them more than others. They are sin.

  6. The bloviating judgemental hysterical anger expressed by some of the comments…affirms exactly what the problem is in the church today. Legalistic self appointed prophets who exude negativity…

    1. Have you read John 8 where Jesus said “You are of your father the Devil…”???
      How negative is that? Speaking truth is oftentimes negative to those who walk contrary to truth! If you embrace a soft, self-satisfying, lovie-dovie, seeker-friendly kind of gospel, then you must cherry pic verses from the bible in order for your doctrine to fit in that context. But, that is not the kind of gospel that Christ offers! Truth is never sacrificed for the preference of a soft, ear tickling kind of gospel!

  7. You are part of the problem…”texts out of context” become pretexts to spout legalistic nonsense ,Mathew 7 covers this well.

  8. I’m a Pastor now for almost 4 years.
    You talking about me..we give everything to ministry
    And it seems like the people don’t get it..
    I Carter to the needs and they still walk out..
    But God told to preachieve the gospel be in season and out of season
    Still preach..
    Thank you I need to her this…
    Obey God cause it’s helping a little of People like me

  9. I hate to reveal this but I guarantee on average most of the people/kids in the church don’t even want to be there, but are forced by family. Religion is dying as science and reason is developing. Religion is only prominent in poverty stricken countries where they don’t have much else to hold on to. Everywhere else it’s dying

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