
“Everyone should be quick to listen, slow to speak and slow to become angry.” James 1:19 (NIV)
Pastor, have you noticed how hard it is to be heard these days?
Conversations move fast. Opinions move faster. Everyone has something to say—and most people are ready to say it before anyone else finishes.
And if we’re not careful, that hurried pace can slip into our leadership.
After a long Sunday, you may walk into Monday already carrying frustration. A critical comment. A tense hallway exchange. A leadership disagreement that didn’t resolve. When you’re tired, it doesn’t take much to spark irritation.
That’s why James’s words are so timely for church leaders: “Everyone should be quick to listen, slow to speak and slow to become angry” (James 1:19 NIV).
Notice the order:
Quick to listen
Slow to speak
Slow to become angry
In ministry, listening is more than a communication skill. It’s a pastoral discipline. When you truly listen to a staff member, a volunteer, or a hurting church member, you’re modeling the patience of Christ. You’re saying, “You matter enough for me to slow down.”
Anger in leadership doesn’t always look explosive. Some pastors are what you might call “skunks.” When they’re upset, everyone knows it. The room fills with tension. Words come quickly and sharply.
Others are “turtles.” They retreat into their shells. The frustration simmers quietly. Nothing is said—but nothing is resolved either.
Both styles can wound a church. Both need the same remedy: Slow down and listen first.
Listening forces humility. It creates space for understanding. It lowers the temperature in the room. And often, it reveals that what first felt like defiance was really confusion, fear, or hurt.
Pastor, your people don’t need a reaction. They need a shepherd.
So before you respond to that email. Before you correct that staff member. Before you step into that difficult conversation—pause.
Ask one more question. Pray one short prayer.
Take one slow breath. Be quick to listen. Be slow to speak. And you may find your anger softening into wisdom.
That kind of leadership reflects the heart of Christ. And your church will feel the difference.