When the Man in the Pulpit Is Falling Apart
He stood at the pulpit last Sunday and preached about the peace of God that surpasses understanding. He made people laugh at the illustration in the second point. He gave a compelling invitation. He shook hands at the door afterward and told three different people he was doing well when they asked.
And on Monday morning, he sat in his car in the church parking lot for thirty-five minutes because he could not make himself go inside.
This story is not hypothetical. Some version of it is being lived by more pastors than anyone in most congregations suspects. The gap between the man in the pulpit and the man in the car is one of the most painful and least-discussed realities in contemporary ministry. This article is an attempt to speak honestly into that gap.
Why Pastors Hide It
The reasons are obvious once you examine them, but they are worth naming explicitly because they are so deeply embedded that many pastors have stopped seeing them as choices. The pastor hides because the role demands a kind of public strength that feels incompatible with personal admission of struggle. The congregation looks to the pastor for faith, for stability, for the reassurance that the things they believe are actually worth believing — and the pastor, rightly or wrongly, has internalized the conviction that showing too much of their own struggle will undermine the very thing they are trying to give.
There is also the practical dimension: the pastor's job security is, in many contexts, tied to congregational confidence. A pastor who is struggling may fear, often with some justification, that full transparency about their condition would cost them their position. This fear is not paranoia — there are genuine cases where pastoral vulnerability has been handled badly by congregations more invested in the image of a healthy church than in the actual health of their pastor.
"The gap between the man in the pulpit and the man in the car is one of the most painful and least-discussed realities in ministry."
What Hiding Costs
The long-term cost of sustained concealment is enormous. What begins as a reasonable professional judgment — "I need to maintain the confidence of the people I lead" — gradually becomes a comprehensive performance that exhausts the performer. The energy required to maintain the gap between the public face and the private reality grows over time, drawing from reserves that are already depleted. The pastor who has been hiding for years is simultaneously doing the work of ministry and the work of maintaining the illusion of health — two full-time jobs running on the same diminished fuel supply.
Hiding also forecloses the possibility of help. A pastor who cannot tell anyone how they are really doing cannot receive what they most need. The isolation deepens. The internal condition worsens. And eventually, the gap becomes impossible to maintain — not because the pastor chose to be honest, but because the performance collapsed.
What Getting Help Actually Looks Like
Getting help does not necessarily mean full public disclosure. A pastor can begin the process of honesty in a targeted, appropriate way — with a counselor, with a spiritual director, with a trusted pastoral peer outside their own congregation — without making an announcement from the pulpit. In fact, starting small and targeted is almost always more effective than dramatic transparency that has not been properly prepared for.
The first step is finding one person who is not your spouse, not your staff, and not a member of your congregation — someone with professional competence and personal trustworthiness who can hold what you actually share without it affecting your employment or your marriage. This is not deception. It is the beginning of the kind of care that should have been in place all along.
What Congregations Need to Know
Congregations that care about the long-term health of their church need to understand that they have a role in creating the conditions under which their pastor can be honest. A culture that expects perfection from its pastor, that treats pastoral struggle as a pastoral failure, that has never demonstrated the capacity to receive vulnerability with grace — that culture is producing the concealment it claims not to want.
The most health-producing thing a congregation can do for its pastor is to create explicit, repeated, and genuine permission for them to be human. Not to abandon their role or neglect their duties, but to be a person who has bad weeks, who struggles with faith sometimes, who does not always have the answer, and who is walking the same road as the people they are walking with — a few steps ahead, perhaps, but on the same road, in the same dust, with the same need for grace.
The Pastors Connection Network exists because pastors need a place where the gap can close — where the person in the pulpit and the person in the car can finally be the same person. If you are holding that gap right now, please know: there is a table with your name on it. You do not have to keep doing this alone.

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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