Moving Forward after a Setback

When engaging a VUCA environment in your church appears daunting



Photo by Chen Yichun on Unsplash

One of ironies of leading a church through change is that it can be either the source of our greatest joy, or the cause of our deepest misery.

The experience of change can bring either pain or pleasure….change is behind why sometimes we throw confetti and other times we grab for another Kleenex.

When a church experiences an abrupt pastoral transition, it quickly enters a painful season of change. And for the leadership team, dealing with the aftermath, this season can be confusing and threatening. The change has thrown you into the dark, and it feels as if we’re groping our way forward blindly. (more…)

Finding Confidence to Lead in VUCA Moments -Part 3

Shepherding not from a distance, but with your presence



Photo by Leio Mclaren from Unsplash

Being on a church’s leadership team is not for the faint of heart!

As I’ve mentioned in the first 2 parts of this blog (here and here), there will come seasons that are best described as VUCA. It’s when the environment of the church is volatile, uncertain, complex and ambiguous.

A VUCA season creates immense challenges for church leadership teams. For you have to lead in the midst of disorder and chaos. Former solutions or approaches don’t work. It’s difficult to get your head and hands around the problem.

In times like this, leaders can wonder if they bring anything helpful to the table. In times like this, leaders consider stepping down. In times like this, leaders hesitate because they don’t have confidence in navigating their current situation.

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Finding Leadership Confidence Amid VUCA Moments –Part 2

Being honest about your reaction to pain



“…though now for a little while, if necessary, you have been grieved by various trials…”
-1 Peter 1:6

Photo by Jamison Riley on Unsplash

One of the most unsettling grief experiences for church leaders is when their senior pastor abruptly leaves. Sorting through the debris of his choices and living with the repercussions that reverberate in the church, are part of the painful aftermath.

It’s not unusual for the leadership team to lack confidence in how to move forward. After all, who was prepared or trained for this trial?

Over the last 7 years I have been the intentional interim pastor at four different churches scattered literally from coast to coast. Three of these churches lost their senior pastor due to an affair. And in one of those churches the pastor also took his own life. So, I have had a front-row seat to watch boards and leadership teams struggle to lead with confidence during painful aftermath. (more…)

Finding Confidence Amid VUCA Moments -Part 1

When the Storms of Life Pummel you



               Photo by Pop-Zebra from Unsplash

Earlier this summer in our city, Colorado Springs, a violent hail storm came over the Front Range and with little warning hit the world-class Cheyenne Mountain Zoo. Guests and staff dashed for cover as tennis ball-sized hail pummeled the facility.

The aftermath? Fourteen people were injured and went to the hospital, two zoo animals died, and over 400 cars in the parking lot were trashed with 4-inch dents and shattered windshields. All 3,400 zoo guests had to be bused to a local high school being used as a Red Cross Evacuation Center.

Imagine if you had been at the zoo that day! Your expectation of a wonderful outing turned disastrous. Now what? No car. How do we get back home or to our hotel? What about the rest of our vacation? How do we get our car repaired? If it was a rental, what’s the next step?

Leaders will have unexpected storms cut across their journey.

Life becomes stressful when thunderstorms pop-up unexpectedly. Likewise, occupy almost any leadership role long enough, and unexpected storms will cut across your journey in a most unwelcome way. (more…)

The Fallacy of Damage Control

When you're not sure how deep the rabbit hole goes



It is tempting for the church’s leadership team to go into damage control mode when their senior pastor abruptly departs. After all, it feels as if everything is coming unglued…so the need is to do something to withstand the storm!

But what is happening in the church after the moral implosion of your pastor is not a problem you can fix. Rather it is a season to shepherd.

This is the pivotal moment when a critical choice is made, and a series of realities is faced.

What is the critical choice?

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Leadership Myths about Abrupt Pastoral Transition

Subtle assumptions that hinder church recovery



Photo by Bobby Johnson on Unsplash

When a senior pastor abruptly exits a church, damage and turmoil begin to reverberate. Everyone experiences, to some degree, the combination of an earthquake and tsunami. People are first deeply shaken, then swept into the current of strong emotions. Myths about what the leaders should do next abound.

Typically, the church leadership team has not been prepared, or trained, to handle painful pastoral transition. Some act with wisdom and seek counsel because they suspect they don’t know what they don’t know about leading in this kind of environment.

In the first 90 days there are crucial decisions to make and subtle myths to avoid!

It’s a season of uncertainty and not unusual for confidence to be in short supply. Not only are there crucial decisions to make for the sake of the church in the first 90 days, there are also widely accepted myths that must be avoided at all costs!

After over 35 years of pastoral ministry and 7 of those years as an intentional interim pastor working with churches experiencing abrupt pastoral transition, let me give you my top 5 leadership myths. Each one of them will hinder a church from recovering well when the senior pastor abruptly leaves.

Myth #1: The sooner we can get another pastor in here, the better off we will be.

This is a business model being imposed on the church. It’s the mind-set that we can “hire our way out” of this problem. The church is not a business, but a body of believers, a family who is responding to the pastor’s departure like the death of a spouse. Believing that all the church needs is a new pastor, is like telling a widow whose husband died in a car wreck that getting a new car will make everything fine.

Myth #2: We can fix this and quickly move on. 

This myth sees the abrupt exit of the senior pastor as simply a problem to fix. But the grief reactions of the church are not problems to solve but wounds to heal (click here for more insight). The pastor’s hasty departure throws the whole church into a season of grieving transition. That season cannot be rushed or denied –it needs to be shepherded! For hopes, dreams, trust, and expectations have painfully died. People will need time and help to work through their grief.

Myth #3: The moral implosion of our former pastor is our only issue (otherwise we’re just fine).

The pain of what the former pastor did makes everyone want to distance themselves from the issue. The hard truth is that even though he is fully responsible for his moral choices, the church environment contributed in some measure to the sin. The transitional season is a good time to take a deep breath and with courage honestly evaluate the spiritual environment of the church and the leadership team. To accomplish that kind of healthy assessment the leadership team often needs to be guided by a trusted set of outside eyes.

Myth #4: As a leader I need to be strong for the church at this time.

The church does need strong leadership, but they also need to see that their leaders are deeply grieved by this. The pastor’s sin revealed that a cover-up in some form was occurring. All “looked” well in his life, but it wasn’t. Trust has been broken, and the need is for the church’s leaders to be transparent. Don’t hide how this has deeply hurt you. Let others see how you are a grieving leader. Lean on the promise of Philippians 4:13 “I can do all things through Him who strengthens me”.

Myth #5: We shouldn’t publicly address grieving the loss of our pastor, for that just makes it worse.

1 Thessalonians 4:13 tells us, “…that you may not grieve as others do who have no hope.” Many have misunderstood this to mean the followers of Jesus don’t grieve. But that is not what Paul is saying. We do grieve, but we grieve with hope! To lament the harsh experiences of life is to be human and authentic in our relationship with the Lord. This season is a time to help those don’t know how to grieve to learn to do it in a biblical way. When we deny our grief, or try to just move on, we miss out on the wonderful opportunity to grow in our intimacy with the Lord.

Myths are attractive, for they offer a way of “making sense” of that which is puzzling and painful. They are also tempting, for they appear to give direction when uncertainty blankets our choices.

But myths are nothing more than traditions at best, and illusions at worst. Resisting these 5 as you lead your church through pastoral transition will position you, and the body you serve, to recover well and be ready for the next season of Christ-honoring ministry.

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“Leading Your Church When There’s Corporate Grieving”

How to confidently engage when you’d rather bolt!


When a senior pastor abruptly leaves the church, it typically leaves a painful aftermath for the leadership team to clean-up. But who feels adequately trained or prepared to confidently step into the mess?

It feels very similar when someone has died, and there will be a funeral. Who really enjoys being in those situations? We know we should be there, but we feel so awkward because we’re not sure what to do or what to say (and we’re nervous we’ll say or do the wrong thing).

That’s exactly the depth of uncertainty the leadership team faces when their senior pastor abruptly leaves. They need to be right where they don’t easily know what to say or what to do!

So how do we engage when we have the strong urge to escape? What does it look like to invest in others when our inclination is to withdraw? (more…)

Cultivate the Right Mindset

The first response of church leaders to their pastor's affair




You remember the moment all too well. Maybe it was a phone call, or a meeting face-to-face, but it left you shocked…shaken…and unnerved. You heard what you hoped you would never have to hear. Your senior pastor had an affair.

The decisions and choices the leadership team of a church makes in the first 60 to 90 days after the pastor’s affair determine how well the church recovers. But those who make up the leadership team, typically, have not been prepared or trained for this possibility. They honestly don’t know what to do next.

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When Your Pastor has an Affair

Sharpened Focus for Transition Resource Ministry

Most high-level church leaders are not prepared, or trained, to handle the abrupt departure of their senior pastor due to an affair. At the very moment, when feelings of inadequacy are overwhelming, the church they serve needs wise, loving, and godly proactive leadership. Yet who is competent for “such a time as this”?
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The Incredible Value of an Interim Pastor

What he can bring to the table

When a church leadership team first considers bringing in an interim pastor, at some point they will wrestle with the question of value or worth. What value will an interim pastor bring to the table? Is it worth having an interim pastor during this season of transition?

What should the leadership team look for? What expectations are appropriate for how an interim will fulfill his role in the life of the church during the strategic transition season?

(more…)