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Want to Expand Your Ministry? Admit Your Weaknesses

I think there are two great confessions in the Bible. One of them is Peter’s great confession in Mark 8:29: “You are the Christ.” Our faith is built on that great confession. Then there’s what I call Paul’s great confession in Acts 14:15 at Iconium: “We too are only men, human like you.” (NIV) I know a lot of pastors who are quick to agree with the first confession, but they’re more cautious to proclaim Paul’s confession. A lot of us are more interested in proclaiming our spirituality than admitting our humanity. We want to deny that we are mere mortals and appear super human. But to deny your humanity is not only untruthful, it’s a disservice to both yourself and those you serve. The fact is that God likes to take weaknesses and turn them into strengths. In this context, I’m not talking about sins of character – like greed, overeating, or laziness. I mean any limitation in your life or ministry that you’ve inherited and can’t change. Maybe it’s a circumstantial limitation or a disadvantage that you’re facing in your church. It could be emotional limitations, scars we all carry from childhood. It could be personality or temperament characteristics. Or it could be physical or talent limitations that you have. But we’re all limited by something. We all carry the Gospel in jars of clay. Yet the limitations that God allows in our lives can actually be a blessing in disguise if we’re honest about them. Here’s how:

1. You’ll have a greater dependence upon God.

This is a lesson that we have to learn over and over again in ministry. At times, we forget that we find our power in our weakness. Usually we resist or resent any limitation that we have on our ministry. We usually ask God to remove them. But if God shows himself strong in these limitations, then why should he take the limitation away? The fact is sometimes God works through our human weaknesses rather than eliminating them. Remember the story of God using Gideon to overthrow the Midianites? He chose the youngest kid in the poorest family in Israel. Then before God let Gideon go to battle against 135,000 Midianites, God whittled down the army to only 300 men, which meant the odds were now 450 to one. Why? God wanted them to trust him alone for success. When I have a limitation in my ministry and personal life, it is an opportunity to trust God more. Andre Crouch said it like this, “If I never had a problem, I’d never know God could solve them.”

2. It prevents pride.

Paul was given a thorn. We don’t know what that thorn was, but we know it caused him pain and limited his ministry – and we know it kept Paul humble. In 2 Corinthians 12:7-10 Paul says, “To keep me from becoming conceited because of these surpassingly great revelations, there was given me a thorn in my flesh, a messenger of Satan, to torment me.” You can understand why Paul would be a little proud. He had written more than two-thirds of the New Testament, been persecuted for his faith in Jesus, and had helped spread Christianity throughout the known world. But it was hard to be arrogant about his own accomplishments, because he knew he had great weaknesses.

3. It causes a greater dependence on other Christians.

One of the dangers of our strengths is that it breeds an independent spirit. God allows weaknesses in each of us so that all parts of his body will recognize their need for one another. None of us can stand alone. Our humanity demands interdependence. It produces fellowship. Vance Havner said, “Snowflakes are frail, but if enough of them stick together they can stop traffic.”

4. It expands our capacity to minister.

If you’re going to have a Christ-like ministry it means that sometimes other people are going to find healing in your wounds. I believe that our greatest messages come out of our deepest hurts. One of the most powerful testimonies I’ve ever heard was when a well known pastor shared from a broken heart how one of his kids had gone off the deep end and got involved in drugs and such. Through that testimony, he was able to minister to many, many families among the thousands who were listening to him. Paul says in 2 Corinthians 1:4:“[God] comforts us in all our troubles so that we can comfort others. When others are troubled, we will be able to give them the same comfort God has given us.” (NLT) Pain sensitizes us to the hurts of others. If you’ve never struggled with any weaknesses, my guess is that your ministry is out of touch with those you want to minister to. Pastors who deny any struggles, and deny that they’ve had any pain are labeled as unreal. Our weakness and failures can be used to expand our capacity to minister to others. God helps us in trouble, then we comfort others with the same comfort we’ve been given. You only get these benefits if you’re willing to share your weakness. If you hold back the weaknesses, faults, and pain in your life, it’s of no benefit to those you could possibly minister to.

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Five Responses to Recover from a Failure

Five Responses to Recover from a Failure

Some days in ministry feel like Job 17:11: “My days are gone, and my plans have been destroyed, along with the desires of my heart” (NCV). You had a plan. You did the prep. You prayed. And then it still didn’t go the way you hoped.When that happens, the slide can be quick: defeat, then disappointment, then discouragement, then depression (What’s the use?), and then despair (Why keep serving?).If you’ve worked with people for any length of time, you’ve learned this the hard way: Jesus won’t let you down, but people will; sometimes you’ll even let yourself down. That acknowledgment doesn’t make you bitter. It makes you honest.Failure isn’t a surprise in ministry. It’s part of the training. The question isn’t whether you’ll ever fail. The question is what you do next.Here are five responses that help you recover without letting a failure take you out.1. Admit it; don’t deny it.One of the fastest ways to get stuck is pretending nothing happened.The Living Bible paraphrase says, “A man who refuses to admit his mistakes can never be successful. But if he confesses and forsakes them, he gets another chance” (Proverbs 28:13).Admitting it doesn’t mean you’re disqualified. It means you’re honest.Try saying it out loud—at least to God, and to the right people:“I blew it.”“That didn’t work.”“I made a bad call.”You’ll feel the pressure drop the moment you stop fighting reality.2. Learn from it; don’t waste it.You can’t always prevent failure, but you can refuse to waste it.James 1:3–6 reminds us that rough roads grow patience and character—and that when we don’t know what to do next, God isn’t stingy with wisdom.When something falls apart, slow down and ask:What was I assuming?What did I ignore?What warning signs were there?What should I do differently next time?Sometimes failure forces you to get creative. Sometimes it forces you to re-evaluate. Sometimes it finally gets you quiet enough to listen to God.But here’s the point: If you don’t learn from a failure, you usually have to repeat the mistake.3. Let God redeem it; don’t believe it’s beyond repair.Here’s a grace-filled truth many leaders forget: God can take your greatest failure and turn it into your greatest strength.It’s not that God approves of the failure. It’s that God is not trapped by it. Scripture is full of leaders who didn’t just stumble; they cratered. And God still used them.If you’ve ever thought, “After what happened, I’m done,” remember this:God has a long history of rebuilding leaders.God has a long history of turning wounds into ministry.If you’ve failed publicly, you may need to rebuild trust slowly. If you’ve failed privately, you may need to confess and get help. Either way, redemption is not theoretical. It’s what God does.4. Refuse to make it final; don’t quit.Romans 8:28 doesn’t call failure “good.” But it does promise that God can work even the painful parts for good when you love him and keep walking in his plan.Failure becomes final when you stop getting back up.“You’re never a failure until you quit” is not just motivational talk; it’s spiritual reality. The enemy would love to take one hard season and turn it into a permanent identity.So if you’re in a rough stretch right now, hold onto this:Your story is still being written.Your calling is not erased by one chapter.The Lord is not finished with you.5. Get up and start again; don’t stay on the ground.Philippians 3:13 is one of the most hopeful passages for leaders who feel behind. Here’s how the Living Bible paraphrase puts it:“I am still not all I should be, but I am bringing all my energies to bear on this one thing: Forgetting the past and looking forward to what lies ahead . . .”That doesn’t mean you rush back into the same patterns.It means you stand back up with humility and direction:You confess what needs confessing.You repair what can be repaired.You accept what can’t be changed.You take the next faithful step.Sometimes starting again is rebuilding a relationship. Sometimes it’s restarting a habit. Sometimes it’s returning to ministry after you’ve been knocked down. But it’s always the same spiritual posture: knocked down, not knocked out.If you’re carrying failure like a verdict, don’t. Let it be a teacher, not a label.Admit what’s true. Learn what you can. Let God redeem what feels wasted. Refuse to quit. Then take one clear next step. Today. That’s how leaders recover. Not by pretending it didn’t happen, but by getting back up and walking forward a little wiser than they were before.
The Courage to Receive Counsel

The Courage to Receive Counsel

“Stupid people always think they are right. Wise people listen to advice.” (Proverbs 12:15 (GNT)One of the hardest parts of leadership is this: You can love Jesus, love people, and still have blind spots.Some of those blind spots are obvious to everyone else. Some of them show up only under pressure: when you’re tired, when you’re criticized, when you’re under more stress than you can reasonably carry. And a few of them aren’t just unseen; they’re uninvited. You may not want to notice them, because noticing would mean changing.That’s one of the quiet mercies of God: He doesn’t leave pastors alone with themselves. He places people near us who can tell us the truth.Not the kind of “truth” that’s really just frustration or opinion. The kind that’s loving, specific, and aimed at our growth. The friend who says, “I think you’re discouraged, and it’s influencing how you’re leading others.” The spouse who says, “You’re present in the room, but you’re not really here.” The elder who asks, “Are you still praying like someone who needs God, or only planning like someone who needs control?”If nobody can speak honestly into your life, you’ll make avoidable mistakes. Not because you’re a bad leader, but because you’re a human leader. Isolation doesn’t protect you; it blinds you.So start your Monday with this question: Who has permission to tell you the hard thing?And just as important: Are you building the kind of relationships where that’s safe? If your circle only tells you what you want to hear, you may need to widen the circle—or deepen it.Proverbs says the wise listen to advice. Wisdom isn’t just what you preach; it’s what you’re willing to receive.Speaking truth takes courage. Receiving truth takes humility. Both are important elements of spiritual maturity and leadership.Pastor, if you want to be really brave this week, consider asking one trusted person in your life: “What’s one blind spot you think I might be missing right now?”
Three Leadership Qualities You Can Practice

Three Leadership Qualities You Can Practice

Nehemiah’s story in the Bible is good news for anyone who questions whether they have what it takes to be a leader.Nehemiah wasn’t a priest. He wasn’t a prophet. He wasn’t a builder. He was a cupbearer to a pagan king (Nehemiah 1:11). And God used him to rebuild what an entire nation had given up on.In Nehemiah 1:1–4, he gets a report that Jerusalem is still a mess. The people are in “great trouble and disgrace” (Nehemiah 1:3 NIV). The wall is broken down. The gates are burned.Before Nehemiah ever builds anything, you see the kind of man he is. And that’s always where God starts—with the heart before the work.Here are three qualities God looks for in leaders he uses. The best part? You can choose to practice and grow in these qualities.1) Develop sensitivity to what breaks God’s heart.When Nehemiah hears the report about Jerusalem, he doesn’t shrug. He sits down and weeps. He mourns, fasts, and prays (Nehemiah 1:4). Leaders don’t become leaders because they want a platform. They become leaders because they can’t ignore what God has put in front of them.In ministry, it’s easy to get insulated. You can spend your week putting out fires, managing budgets, and planning Sundays, and slowly lose touch with what people are actually carrying.But God often begins his leadership assignments with a burden.Pastor, what situation makes you stop and say, “This isn’t how it’s supposed to be”? That may be the beginning of God’s call.God uses leaders who care about what God cares about.2) Build a reputation for dependability.Nehemiah is trusted by the king. That’s why he’s in the role he’s in. A cupbearer had to be loyal, discreet, and reliable. The king trusts him with his safety and with his confidence.And God often prepares leaders through ordinary faithfulness long before the “big assignment” shows up. God doesn’t hand responsibility to good intentions; he entrusts it to proven faithfulness.Jesus said, “Whoever can be trusted with very little can also be trusted with much” (Luke 16:10 NIV).Before God hands you a larger burden, he watches what you do with the burden you already have.Dependability isn’t flashy, but it’s foundational:Do you keep your word?Do you show up when it’s hard?Do you finish what you start?Do people experience you as steady?You don’t need a bigger title to become more trustworthy. You need deeper integrity.3) Make yourself available when God calls.Nehemiah’s assignment was not convenient. Jerusalem was between 800 and 1,000 miles away. The job was dangerous. The politics were complicated. Opposition was real. Yet when the moment came, Nehemiah was willing to go.Here’s a leadership truth we don’t love, but it’s still true: God can do more with willingness than with raw talent.God is not mainly looking for ability. He’s looking for credibility, dependability, and availability.Availability is a choice.It’s the simple, costly prayer: “Here am I. Send me.”And it raises honest questions:Am I available to do something outside my comfort zone?Am I available to serve in a way that won’t earn applause?Am I available even if it disrupts my plans?Pastor, you don’t have to see every step to say yes to God.Nehemiah didn’t start with a construction plan. He started with a burden, a prayer life, and a willing heart.The kind of leader God uses is not the most talented person in the room. It’s the person who is sensitive to real need, dependable in character, and available when God says go.
When Pressure Is High, Let God Speak First

When Pressure Is High, Let God Speak First

“It was the first year of the reign of Darius the Mede, the son of Ahasuerus, who became king of the Babylonians. During the first year of his reign, I, Daniel, learned from reading the word of the LORD, as revealed to Jeremiah the prophet, that Jerusalem must lie desolate for seventy years.” Daniel 9:1-2 (NLT)Prayer is one of God’s best gifts in a crisis, not because it helps you manage stress, but because it puts you back in front of the only one who can actually carry what’s too heavy for you.Daniel modeled that.When Daniel realized the clock was running out on Israel’s exile, he didn’t just feel hopeful. He also felt the gap: The people weren’t spiritually ready for what God was about to do. That burden drove him to prayer.But notice where Daniel started. He let God speak to him before he spoke to God.Daniel “learned from reading the word of the LORD, as revealed to Jeremiah the prophet” (Daniel 9:2 NLT). Before he prayed, Daniel listened. Scripture steadied him, reminded him what God had already said, and gave him the right frame for what came next.That’s a word pastors need, especially on a Monday.When pressure is high, it’s easy to treat prayer like a quick download: “God, here’s what’s on fire. Please handle it.” But Daniel’s approach is slower and better. God speaks first. God moves first. God leads first. Then we respond.So how do you listen to God when problems and stress seem to be all around?You open the Bible—not to hunt for a verse to share, but to meet with the Lord.Here’s one simple way to do it today:Read a short passage (even a few verses).Sit with it long enough for the noise in your head to settle.Ask, “Lord, what are you saying to me?”Then pray one honest response based on what you just read.Daniel didn’t come to God ready to give a speech. He came ready for a conversation. And he let God set the tone.The more Scripture shapes you, the more your prayers will stop sounding like panic—and start sounding like trust.
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