Tag Archives: gentleness

Understanding Pastoral Anger and Healing

A Kind Word to the Angry Pastor

There’s a particular kind of Sunday morning you don’t forget. The sermon starts fine — maybe even tender. But somewhere around the third point, the volume climbs. The jaw tightens. The pulpit becomes less a place of proclamation and more a place of prosecution. And by the time the closing prayer comes, the congregation isn’t sure if they just heard good news or got scolded by a man who needed a nap and a counselor.

I know that pastor. I’ve sat under him. I’ve worked alongside him. And if I’m telling the truth, I’ve been him.

Anger in the pulpit is one of those open secrets of church life. Nobody puts it on the website. It rarely shows up in an elder report. But ask anyone who has spent a few years close to ministry, and the stories pour out. The blow-up in the staff meeting. The passive-aggressive text at 11pm. The sermon that felt less like Jesus and more like a man wrestling something the congregation couldn’t see. We don’t talk about it much, but it’s there. And the cost is enormous — to families, to churches, and to the watching world. Long before we had words like burnout or dysregulation, James said it plainly: “the anger of man does not produce the righteousness of God” (James 1:20, ESV). That sentence has been quietly indicting pastors for two thousand years.

So let’s talk about it.

Most of Our Anger Isn’t Righteous

Pastors love to baptize their anger. You and I both know the move. We have a category for it: righteous indignation. Jesus flipped tables, after all. Paul rebuked Peter to his face. Paul did say “be angry and do not sin” (Ephesians 4:26, ESV), but the very next breath was a curfew on it — don’t let the sun go down on it. Most of our anger has been carrying us for years, not hours. So when your temper flares in a deacon’s meeting or your voice gets sharp with your spouse on the way home from church, you reach for the theological label that makes it holy. I’ve done it too.

But here’s the thing. Most of our anger isn’t righteous. Most of it is wounded. It’s tired. It’s afraid. It’s the slow accumulation of unmet expectations, financial stress, criticism we never processed, comparison with the bigger church down the road, sermons prepared late at night, and a prayer life thinner than we’d ever admit from the platform. We live in a culture that grades everyone on performance, and pastors step onto a stage every single week to be graded in real time. The gap between the man in the pulpit and the man at home grows wider until something has to give. Usually what gives is the temper.

The gospel is for the ungodly, and that includes you. You are not first a problem to be solved. You are a sinner loved by the same Jesus you proclaim. That doesn’t excuse the anger. But it locates it. You are not above your own sermons. You are their first hearer. And that is good news.

Your Anger Is Data

Three honest points, offered with care.

  1. First, your anger is data, not destiny. When you snap at your wife, when you simmer through the staff meeting, when you preach with an edge you can’t quite explain, that’s information. It’s telling you something underneath is unhealed. Delight in God is meant to be the loudest thing about us. When anger gets louder, something underneath has gone quiet. Something else has slipped into the place joy was meant to hold — approval, control, vindication, being right. Anger is the smoke. Go find the fire. Jesus is not afraid of what you’ll find there.
  2. Second, Jesus is not embarrassed by your need for help. Going to therapy is not a failure of faith. It is, often, an act of faith — the faith that says my soul is worth examining, my marriage is worth protecting, my congregation is worth a healthier shepherd. Talk to someone. A counselor. A spiritual director. A trusted friend who is not on your payroll. Pastors need other pastors in their lives who can tell them the truth. Find those people. And if you don’t have them yet, that itself is the first thing to fix.
  3. Third, the people in your pews deserve a shepherd, not a prosecutor. Spurgeon once warned his students that a minister’s usefulness can be wrecked by his temper faster than by almost anything else. Your flock can forgive a clumsy sermon. They have a harder time forgiving the Sunday you made them flinch. Worship is the fuel and the goal of mission, and angry preaching does not fuel worship. It fuels fear. The nations will not be glad because we shouted them into submission. They will be glad because they met a Savior, often through a preacher whose own gladness in Christ was visible from the back row. Peter, of all people, told pastors to shepherd the flock “not domineering over those in your charge, but being examples to the flock” (1 Peter 5:3, ESV). The man who once swung a sword at a servant’s ear is the one warning us about the edge in our leadership. He knew.

What Actually Helps

Practically, a few things have helped me and other pastors I know. Get the sleep. Get the exercise. Get the Sabbath you keep telling your people to take. Anger thrives in exhausted bodies. Find a therapist who understands ministry, and go every other week whether you feel like you need it or not. Build one friendship outside your church where you don’t have to be the pastor. Confess your anger specifically — not the generic “Lord, forgive my sin” of the pastoral prayer, but the specific “Lord, I was cruel to her on Tuesday, and I need to apologize.”

And remember whose pulpit it is. It was never yours. When you preach like the church belongs to you and the people are failing you, the edge comes back. When you remember the church belongs to Jesus and you are all being met by him together, your voice settles.

One Last Thing

Here’s the thing. The gospel is not less true for pastors who struggle with anger. It might actually be more obviously true, because we of all people know how much we need it. The good news you preach on Sunday is the same good news you need on Monday when you replay the argument in your head and feel the shame creep in. Jesus did not call broken men into ministry by accident. He called you on purpose. And he keeps calling you, and he keeps healing you, slowly, one honest conversation at a time.

If you’re reading this with a knot in your stomach because you know — really know — that this is you, here’s the truth your anger has been drowning out: Jesus is not angry with his people. Jesus is not angry with you. Not the version of you who finally gets the temper under control. You, right now. The Savior you preach described himself with two words: gentle and lowly (Matthew 11:29, ESV). Not gentle with everyone except his pastors. The same gentleness you keep trying to offer your congregation is the gentleness already being offered to you. So before you step into the pulpit, or even into your week, let the gospel be preached to your own soul first. Before the visits, the meetings, the outcomes you’re chasing — let Jesus speak to you. And then, with curiosity instead of pressure, ask, what it might look like to step in this time without the same edge?