We all need friends as we travel through life. Pastors and leaders at times find this difficult; not knowing who they can trust or want to have close to them. Many have been burned, betrayed or abused and are reluctant to try again. Here are some reasons from Chuck Lawless why pastors/leaders have few close friends.
Originally posted by Chuck Lawless
Why pastors have few deep
friendships
I’ve heard it so many times
that I almost expect it: pastors are lonely. They often minister among people
they say they love, but don’t know well. They have few deep friendships. Here
are
10 reasons why we struggle with finding friends:
1. Someone taught
us never to have close friendships in a church. Several of my seminary professors and most of my early mentors
told me never to get close to church members. I’m grateful now that I didn’t
listen well – but I have friends who continue to follow that advice.
2. We’ve been hurt
in the past. I understand why my
professors and mentors said what they said. They had risked being vulnerable
with church members, and it cost them. Their openness led only to pain, and
they don’t the next generation of leaders to experience the same.
3. We assume this
ministry is not our last one. If we
think that this church is only one stop on our ministry journey, it’s harder to
develop deep friendships. Who wants to invest deeply when you know this role is
a fleeting one?
4. Many of us are
introverted. Even people who speak
publicly every week can be introverted and private. I suspect church members
would be surprised by how many of us are drained by events like fellowship
dinners. We sometimes seclude ourselves just to get some rest.
5. Others are
uncomfortable around us. I
remember a church member whose family never invited me to dinner because they
thought their dishes weren’t good enough for their pastor. That struck me as
odd, not only because I’m just a normal guy, but also because most of my
dinners at the time were delivered through a drive-thru window!
6. Our spouse has
been hurt. We can often handle it when our feelings are hurt,
but it’s tougher when our spouse has been wounded. Protecting our spouse from
hurt sometimes means avoiding deep relationships.
7. We don’t want
anyone to know us well. For pastors
who admit this reason, it’s often because we don’t like who we are. We know we
need to do better in our devotions. We fear others will see that we don’t
always love, evangelize, or minister like we should.
8. We get tired of
people. It’s not that we don’t love
people; it’s just that it feels like we’re around people all the time. Taking a
break from people, though, usually means closing the door to friendships.
9. Some of us were
raised in churches with superficial relationships. At some level, we’re all products of our upbringing. When you’re
raised around surface-level Christian friendships, that kind of relationship
might be all you know.
10. Even believers
get jealous and competitive. As pastors,
we fear getting too close to particular people, lest others get angry. And,
even among pastors, we struggle getting to know one another because we compete
against each other for members. In the end, everybody loses.
Regardless of your prior
experiences, what will you do (with His help) to build a few solid
friendships?
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