Recommended

5 Reasons Why People Quit the Ministry

#1 – Burnout

I once heard someone say, "I would rather burn out than rust out." Uh…BOTH are bad because NEITHER of them finish well. Too many people in the ministry work themselves into a frenzy, never take time to disconnect and refresh and do absolutely nothing for fun…this always goes bad!

When it comes to leadership circles in America we've equated being busy with being godly; however, the haunting reality that confronts that idea is what God Himself said in Psalm 46:10, "BE STILL and know that I am God"…not "be busy!"

Get Our Latest News for FREE

Subscribe to get daily/weekly email with the top stories (plus special offers!) from The Christian Post. Be the first to know.

If we are not taking regular breaks, doing things "just for fun" and disconnecting then burnout isn't a matter of "if," but "when!"

#2 – Unrealistic Expectations

Too many people believe that ministry = easy…despite the fact that it seemed to go really bad for everyone in the Scriptures that sold their life out to Him! Jesus went to the "place of the skull" to be crucified…why would we ever believe He would lead us to "the place of the mattress?"

When we impose our plans and ideas on God and refuse to surrender to His…and then things don't go as planned…it usually leads to people "giving up" because "God just didn't come through."

#3 – Criticism

Criticism hurts…it always will…and if it ever doesn't then, according to my counselor, something is dead inside of you. AND…it is always personal (especially when someone begins with, "don't take this personally…but…).

You can't let the critics dicate what you think/feel! If you have a ministry that constantly responds to critics then you will not have one that responds to Jesus. You MUST respond to the people who God has placed in your life to surround you and protect you–that's not criticism but rather correction. However, you cannot allow those who know you the least to control you the most–period!

#4 – Discouragement

Every church leader I've ever chatted with has done some serious battles with discouragement. After your message on Sunday the enemy comes in and begins to accuse you, telling you that you did a pathetic job and that no one is going to come back next week. Heck, I've had to battle discouragement during the message before, hearing voices inside of my head saying things like, "you suck, these people hate you…you need to quite the ministry…" and so on.

This is why it is essential for leaders to get in a place like David did in I Samuel 30:1-6…he faced an incredibly discouraging situation and yet someone managed to find His strength in the Lord. I do this through reading through encouraging letters and emails that I've received in the past, placing myself in encouraging environments and focusing on what God's Word says about me.

#5 – Losing Focus On God's Power

When we actually believe it is up to us to make people come back to church every week rather than believing we are conduits that God wants to work through to do that very thing…it's over! Because…we fall into the trap of trying to outdo ourselves every week, every series and every year…and prayer/seeking the Lord becomes something we love to talk about but fail to do. He saves…He draws people…and He uses us to do it. It's not up to us…but rather allowing Him to work through us to accomplish all that He wants to do!

Face it…on our own we don't have enough power to blow our nose! We NEED Him…HE is the game changer!!!

Was this article helpful?

Help keep The Christian Post free for everyone.

By making a recurring donation or a one-time donation of any amount, you're helping to keep CP's articles free and accessible for everyone.

We’re sorry to hear that.

Hope you’ll give us another try and check out some other articles. Return to homepage.