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Leadership Formation3 min read

How to Respond When the Internet Comes for Your Church

March 23, 2026

The scenario has become familiar enough that it is no longer rare: something happens in the church — a leadership decision, a disciplinary action, a statement made from the pulpit — and it becomes the subject of a social media conversation that is angry, widely shared, and largely outside the pastor's ability to manage or respond to in real time. The church's name is trending on local social media. Emails are arriving that assume the worst. Former members are adding their grievances to a thread that is growing by the hour.

This situation is relatively new in the history of pastoral ministry and there are very few resources that prepare pastors for it well. The default pastoral responses — silence, defensive denial, or the premature and inadequately considered public statement — tend to make a manageable situation significantly worse.

The First 24 Hours

The most important thing in the first 24 hours is usually to resist the impulse to respond immediately and publicly. The impulse is understandable — the situation feels urgent, the misrepresentation feels intolerable, silence feels like tacit agreement with what is being said. But the public response drafted in the emotional heat of the immediate crisis is almost always worse than the one drafted after 24 hours of gathering accurate information, consulting with wise advisors, and allowing the initial wave of attention to crest. Use the first 24 hours to gather accurate information about what actually happened, consult your elder board and any relevant legal counsel, and listen — actually listen, with genuine openness — to the concerns being expressed even in their most heated form to identify whether any have legitimate merit.

"The public response drafted in the emotional heat of the first hours is almost always worse than the one drafted after 24 hours of gathering information and genuine prayer."

The Response That Helps

When a response is appropriate — and not every online situation requires a public response — the response that tends to help rather than inflame shares several characteristics. It acknowledges the concern or the hurt without either capitulating to the characterization or defensively dismissing it. It provides accurate information where genuinely useful, without attempting to manage the narrative in ways that will be recognized as spin. It expresses genuine pastoral concern for the people who are hurting, whether or not their account of the situation is entirely accurate. And it is brief. The lengthy, defensive, extensively self-justifying response tends to be read as evidence of guilt and anxiety rather than the clearing of the record it is intended to be.

Every online pastoral crisis, however painful, contains something worth examining honestly when the immediate intensity has passed. Was there a kernel of legitimate concern in what was expressed? Were there things about the church's culture or practices that the crisis surfaced that deserve genuine reflection and possible change? The pastor who extracts only the narrative of victimization from a difficult online moment has missed an opportunity. The one who does the harder work of listening to even the most unfairly expressed concern for what it might legitimately contain has grown in ways the crisis made possible.

James Bell

James Bell

James Bell is the founder of LiveWell and writes on faith, culture, and the Christian life. He leads from the conviction that behavior modification was never the point—heart transformation is.

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