Skillfully Leading Your Church Through Adversity

Sometimes the first step is the hardest. (Pixabay)

As leaders, we can't always anticipate what's around the bend.

Sometimes life just happens—even in the church.

Quality leadership and the kindness of God will help you make it through anything that comes your way.

But in the same way, a very difficult situation doesn't just happen; there are reasons and causes. You can't successfully lead your way through adversity without a clear strategy to follow.

Adversity can hit a church in a wide variety of ways. In just the last couple of weeks, a church let me know they let several staff go due to lack of income. Another church lost their pastor to a moral failure, and still another church is tangled up in a lawsuit regarding a building project.

In some ways, a church is like a magnet for adversity because spiritual warfare is in play. I'm not suggesting that you adopt the disposition that there is a demon behind every problem. We are all capable of creating our own problems. We do know, however, that the enemy does not want your church or any church to prevail and, therefore, champions anything that will short-circuit kingdom progress.

I pray your church is not going through a tough time, but if it is, the following will be helpful to you.

5-Step Plan to Navigate Adversity:

1. Lean into God, but don't hide behind Him.

It is possible to hide behind God by over-spiritualizing a problem. You can skirt the real issue by saying, "We'll just pray about it." Prayer is essential and is absolutely vital to successfully leading through adversity. But at some point God wants you to get up from your knees and lead the way.

This requires facing reality with openness and honesty. Own the problem and talk about it with your staff and key leaders. God provides the wisdom, favor and power, but we must do our part as well.

2. Rightsize the situation.

Hardship hits us first in the realm of emotion, so we often don't see the situation clearly.

Our perspective is often skewed by our own human emotion; therefore, it's easy to unintentionally exaggerate the size of the problem. This usually leads to making a solution seem unattainable.

Rightsizing a situation is accomplished when you avoid emotionally-laden statements and replace them with facts.

For example, a staff member in a large church said to me (referring to his fellow staff members), "Wow, everyone is leaving. What's going on?" I asked him what he meant by "everyone is leaving" and what he thought the solution was. He was concerned that so many people leaving would hurt morale, and the church would have a hard time rehiring those positions.

I asked him to name the people leaving. There were three. I asked him how many were still on staff. He said 47. "So, three are leaving, and 47 remain on the team and love their jobs. Is that right?" He responded with a yes and immediately saw the point. I then asked if he thought they could make three good hires. He smiled and nodded yes. That is the process of rightsizing a problem.

3. Regain clarity of vision.

Difficult situations often derail leaders from the primary vision. There are so many fires to put out, conversations to have and issues to resolve that your time and energy are pulled from the real mission.

It often takes no more than a quiet hour with God to regain the clarity of your vision and get back on track.

Push pause on all the noise of your current troubles and get alone with God. As you pray and listen, write down the vision. It's unlikely that it changed; it was just hijacked by the difficulties you are facing.

4. Focus on the essentials.

A clear vision requires strategy. A workable strategy is a written plan with a timeline and measurable goals.

Begin with the essentials. What are the things that must be done to achieve the vision? Ask the question: "How do we focus on strategic steps connected to the vision so that we get through this tough season having made measurable progress?"

5. Take the first step.

At this point, you have accomplished several things. You have talked to God and been honest about the situation with other leaders. You've gained a clear definition of the problem and rightsized where necessary. You've regained focus on the vision and essential steps in the strategy.

Now it's time to take the first step in your strategy.

As each step is achieved, adjust if necessary and take the next step.

Keep going, and you will make it through the adversity.

Dan Reiland is the executive pastor at 12Stone Church in Lawrenceville, Georgia. He previously partnered with John Maxwell for 20 years, first as executive pastor at Skyline Wesleyan Church in San Diego, then as vice president of leadership and church development at INJOY.

This article originally appeared at danreiland.com.

Get Spirit-filled content delivered right to your inbox! Click here to subscribe to our newsletter.


Dr. Mark Rutland's

National Institute of Christian Leadership (NICL)

The NICL is one of the top leadership training programs in the U.S. taught by Dr. Mark Rutland. If you're the type of leader that likes to have total control over every aspect of your ministry and your future success, the NICL is right for you!

FREE NICL MINI-COURSE - Enroll for 3-hours of training from Dr. Rutland's full leadership course. Experience the NICL and decide if this training is right for you and your team.

Do you feel stuck? Do you feel like you’re not growing? Do you need help from an expert in leadership? There is no other leadership training like the NICL. Gain the leadership skills and confidence you need to lead your church, business or ministry. Get ready to accomplish all of your God-given dreams. CLICK HERE for NICL training dates and details.

The NICL Online is an option for any leader with time or schedule constraints. It's also for leaders who want to expedite their training to receive advanced standing for Master Level credit hours. Work through Dr. Rutland's full training from the comfort of your home or ministry at your pace. Learn more about NICL Online. Learn more about NICL Online.

Charisma Leader — Serving and empowering church leaders