Leading Through a Pandemic: Three Questions Ministry Leaders Should Be Asking Themselves

This article was first published on Bible.org. .

After studying leaders during high-stakes, high-pressure situations for more than two decades, Harvard’s National Preparedness Leadership Initiative summarizes: “Crises are most often over-managed and under-led.” They explain that leaders often find themselves making decisions based on the tyranny of the urgent. And in doing so they fail to gaze beyond the crisis to intentionally lead others through the uncertainty toward a more promising future. 

 

But unlike secular business leaders, Christ followers, have the benefit of a unique perspective. Woven into the DNA of our Christian faith is an outlook oriented toward the future. And as we sit in the midst of a pandemic that has overturned our normal ministry operations and shattered our plans, we stand confident of a future where there will be no more tears, death, or pain (Rev. 21:5). We can lead toward a promising future. 

 

Yet still, we find ourselves operating under present uncertainties in the face of a coronavirus pandemic. So, how do we lead well when large group gatherings (central to the church and so many Christian ministries) are illegal?

 

1.     Leverage technology, but don’t confuse consumption with connection.

 

As ministries across the globe adjust to shepherding their flocks in the absence of face-to-face meetings, they are adopting digital tools such as podcasts, video conferencing, online streaming, and social media. But not every online effort is effective. Digitizing messages and creating content consumable in pajamas over coffee is helpful, but not if these efforts fail to engage hearts. There is a growing chasm of voices streaming online today, and leaders who fail to pair good content with personal connection risk having our efforts reverberate fruitlessly amidst the rest of the noise. 

 

Nika Spaulding, resident theologian at St. Jude Oak Cliff, a church plant in South Dallas, says her leadership team is intentional about when and how they stream messages. They make an effort “not to over-digitize the incarnational aspect of church.” Ms. Spaulding said, “Our new normal is figuring out how to individually love people while still maintaining consistent rhythms in this new reality.” For St. Jude, that means prerecording Sunday morning messages, hosting live theology courses and small groups via Zoom, and individually calling all members to check in. 

 

Even mega-church contexts are pairing technology with individual connection. Callie Nixon, the women’s ministry director at Dallas’s Watermark Community Church, says staff members are making phone calls to each of their church’s 12,000+ members and leaning on their network of community groups to fight against isolation. At the same time, Watermark spun up a TV channel via Instagram in less than a week. They are also sharing digital resources daily (such as podcasts, kids’ at-home Bible study resources, and devotionals) on top of streaming the usual Sunday messages. 

 

Polished Ministries, a national outreach ministry geared toward young professional women, was set up surprisingly well for a pandemic. Though Polished is primarily events-based, their network of members is naturally tech-savvy, their podcast and social content was already thriving, and they had just invested in an online training tool to support all twelve of their chapters. Still, Kat Armstrong, the ministry’s co-founder, says, “There must be a marriage between technology and pastoral work.” Great technology tools enable pastoral care; they will never replace it. 

 

There is benefit in leveraging the circumstances to “get up to speed” on technologies that may have been put on the back burner, yet the hearts of our people must remain the focus. 

  

So, as leaders, we must ask ourselves: How can we intentionally leverage technology to further enable personal connection? 

 

2.     Model healthy rhythms, including lament.

 

Most ministry leaders—at least cognitively— understand the importance of leading one’s self first, then serving others out of the overflow of that personal and spiritual health. More than ever, leaders need to lean into healthy spiritual rhythms, not only for the sake of emotional and spiritual health, but also for those who are looking to them as  models for how to respond in this uncertain season. Jesus, says good fruit comes from abiding (see John 15).  

 

Dr. Sandra Glahn, an author and professor at Dallas Theological Seminary, aptly pointed out, “It’s not a good time for a pep-talk. That’s not congruent with what we are feeling.” She notes that many western Christians lack a context for healthy lament. So, perhaps one of the most helpful ways to lead in this season is to show others what it looks like to go to God with our pain, fear, and uncertainty. We must avoid spiritually by-passing people’s emotions and instead be willing to recognize and sit with the grief. An explanation is not always the most helpful response. 

 

As leaders, we often feel pressured to have a polished response to current events. But possibly one of the most cathartic responses of a leader today involves uttering far fewer words. Simply listening—both to the Lord and those we shepherd—might be the best use of our energy in this season. For example, Ms. Spaulding is encouraging her ministry leaders to serve others as “emotional sherpas” whenever possible. She defines such sherpa-ing as being a “non-anxious presence” and helping others process their feelings of pain and grief by listening, asking questions, and reminding them that it is okay to grieve. 

 

We must ask ourselves: How can we usher others into a healthy expression of grief?  

 

3.     Embrace the gifts of forced flexibility to catalyze creativity.

 

Although an unwanted stimulus, COVID-19 presents unparalleled potential for Americans to rediscover important biblical foundations  while simultaneously forcing organizations to adapt in resourceful ways. Christian leaders have a unique opportunity to respond boldly in the face of great fear and uncertainty.

 

Polished, for example, migrated all currently scheduled in-person events to an online video conferencing platform. In place of a physical table with volunteers who facilitate discussion, Polished is using an online tool that enables digital breakout rooms. Trained volunteers are assigned to each digital room and will lead discussions and build relationships just as they would have done over chips and salsa at a luncheon.  

 

The changes in daily life due to the coronavirus has had an impact on volunteer availability and capacity dramatically, putting pressure on ministry leaders as they determine how to function effectively with less (physical) volunteer support and presumably fewer financial resources. 

 

Michelle Attar, pastor of Adult Ministry at Bent Tree Bible Church in Carrollton, Texas, believes this is a unique time for the church to use the God-given giftings of individual members. While many ministry volunteers are consumed by added responsibilities such as homeschooling young children, working longer hours, or caring for sick loved ones, some do have extra time, and they can bring important skills to the table. 

 

“We are thinking creatively about how to tap the right person on the shoulder and let them loose,” Ms. Attar said. “Though it is out of my comfort zone, we are consciously thinking about how to get the church staff out of the equation as quickly as possible and empower lay leaders to make it happen.” An organic, member-empowered form of ministry is likely a more sustainable model in the coming months, especially if group gatherings remain limited, as many are predicting

 

When loving others means staying home, we must recontextualize how we serve those we love outside of our homes. At the same time, we have an opportunity to be on the front lines of dramatic transformation. The forced change of pace and natural reconsideration of our own mortality is cracking open the door for a renewed prioritization of the nuclear family and a revival of life-on-life discipleship and smaller church gatherings. 

 

So this is a great time to think ahead and ask ourselves these questions: What innovations, resources, or process changes do we need to make to effectively love and serve others in our new normal? How can we proactively prepare to respond to needs people will likely have as a result of the coronavirus and disrupted economy? 

This is a difficult season for ministry leaders, forced as we are to change how we care for those we serve, lead ourselves well through uncertainty, and innovate at an uncomfortable pace. But Ms. Nixon says her earnest prayer in this season is, “Lord, don’t let me miss it.” Because like other pandemics throughout church history—the plagues of AD 251, the Black Death in the Middle Ages, and the yellow fever epidemic in the early 1790’s—the COVID-19 pandemic is an opportunity for shepherds to lead through, rather than manage the crisis. And as a result of our serving well those entrusted to our care in this high-stakes, high-pressure time, the church can more brightly shine.  

Previous
Previous

The Profile of a Spiritual Athlete

Next
Next

A Prayer Guide For Girl Moms