“Whew! Glad that’s over with!”
I’d just come out of a situation that had threatened to undo all the good we’d accomplished in five years of pastoral ministry in that church. At no time had I feared for my job, and I had not seriously anticipated anyone leaving the church. But still, the existence of division within the membership was a matter of great concern. It boded ill for new ministries we planned to do in the near future.
Something about conflict sucks all the air out of the room. It stifles creativity, dampens the joy, weakens the enthusiasm of your best workers, and absorbs all the energies of leaders trying to deal with it. Like the Arizona forest fires, once these infernos build up their own momentum, nothing seems to quench them. So, once you see the smoke rising, you rush to the conflagration and try to put it out before it spreads.
Now it was out. The problem was resolved.
The storm clouds had dissolved, the sun was out, the birds were singing. And the preacher–me–would live to serve another day.
No healthy-minded spiritual leader loves conflict. However, no God-called pastor with an ounce of faith runs from one, either.
The best way to deal with conflict is to head it off before it starts. And the best way to do that is to fortify your people in peaceful times on how to recognize a conflict-in-the-making and neutralize it.
Train them right and you’ll prevent most battles before they get a chance to take root.
Here is my blueprint for preparing your people to stop conflict in its tracks.