“For pastors, Sunday can be the most draining day of the
week. As a result, we can make one or more these five mistakes.”
“It’s important to periodically ask ourselves what is
brewing below the surface of our lives.”
As a result, we can easily make one or more of the five
biggest mistakes pastors make on Sundays. Evaluate this list to find out how
many you make. Following the list are some suggestions on how to avoid these
mistakes.
1. Failure to Recognize Allostatic Load
This term describes the wear and tear on our body from
chronic stress. Our bodies have limits. Yet, when we are under stress for long
periods of time, our bodies suffer.
Prolonged stress causes sustained high levels of the stress
hormone cortisol, which, along with an overabundance of other neurotransmitters
and hormones, can cause heart problems, weight gain, impaired immunity,
decreased memory due to brain cell atrophy and diminished brain functioning.
If we don’t manage our stress during the week, we will
limit our ability to function at our best on Sundays.
2. Too Much Emotional Labor
Psychologists call the emotional work necessary for any job
emotional labor. It’s the effort required to put on a public face when
we interact with others. Unless you’re a grump or you hole up in your office
until right before the Sunday service, your role requires considerable
emotional labor as you interact with people on Sundays.
However, when we surface-act too much, putting on a fake
smile, we’ll quickly use up the energy stores God gave us for the day.
3. People Pleasing
I based my third book, People Pleasing Pastors: Avoiding the Pitfalls of Approval
Motivated Leadership, on extensive research of more than 2,000 pastors. I
discovered that over 70 percent of pastors self-assessed themselves as being
affected in some way by people pleasing.
As humans, we have a basic drive to be liked. Rejection
actually physically hurts because social pain registers in the same part of our
brains as does physical pain. On Sunday when we get sucked into trying to make
everybody happy (by saying yes too much and/or saying what people want to
hear), we quickly get drained.
4. The “Sacrifice Syndrome”
Richard Boyatzis and Annie McKee, authors of Resonant
Leadership, coined a concept called power stress to describe a kind of
stress unique to leaders: “Power stress is part of the experience that results
from the exercise of influence and sense of responsibility felt in leadership
positions.”
McKee and Boyatzis explain that when the demands of
leadership get so high and leaders fail to manage it, they risk becoming
trapped in what they call the Sacrifice Syndrome.
Sometimes we leaders feel so overly responsible for the
success of our churches that we get caught in a vicious cycle of unhealthy
sacrifice for others that leads to burnout. And often that weight drains us on
Sundays.
5. “Continuous Partial Attention” (CPA)
Linda Stone, author and consultant, developed this phrase
to describe the mental trap we easily fall into when we constantly scan our
surroundings to look for the best opportunities upon which to focus our
attention. It happens when we “skim” and pay attention, but only partially.
When this happens to you, you won’t focus on the most important
tasks at hand and will get further behind on mission-critical issues. Then, you
must rush to get the important things done, which in turn contributes to
chronic stress.
On Sundays when we are listening to someone and we try to
scan the crowd to see who else may want to talk to us (CPA), our energy stores
get burned up faster than if we paid full attention to one person.
So what can we do to avoid these Sunday traps? I’m still
learning to wisely manage myself on Sundays, but I’ve found that four practices
help me avoid those four mistakes.
1. Exercise on Sunday Morning
For years, research has shown that exercise benefits our
body. But recent research has discovered that it benefits our brains, as well.
When we exercise, it causes our brains to release a protein
called brain derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), which has been called the
Miracle-Gro for the brain. It encourages new neuronal growth and protects brain
cells from stress.
Exercise also releases pain-dampening
neurotransmitters—endorphins—which trigger positive feelings in our bodies,
similar to what morphine does. On Sunday mornings I usually exercise 30 minutes
about two hours before our service begins. This positive mood benefit can last
a few hours.
2. Statio
Statio describes a Christian monastic practice that we
might call a “mini-transition” between events of the day. It’s a moment between
moments when we pause from one task before going to the next. It allows us to
break our hurry, obtain closure from the prior task and prepare our hearts and
minds for what comes next.
Leaders who practice this can turn down their body’s
fight-flight system (the sympathetic nervous system) and engage the
rest-and-digest system (the parasympathetic system), which makes us calmer.
Try to practice this between tasks and interactions with
people on Sunday mornings. When I remember to do it, my racing mind calms down.
Read this post by Daniel Schroeder to learn more about statio.
3. Adequate Sleep the Night Before
I wrote the following in my book Brain-Savvy Leaders: The Science
of Significant Ministry:
“When we don’t get enough sleep, we rob our
brains of important neural functions because the brain is actually very active
during sleep. Although the brain never really shuts down, it’s only truly at
rest during non-REM sleep, which accounts for only 20 percent of our normal
sleep cycle. During the other 80 percent, sleep helps the brain encode,
strengthen, stabilize and consolidate our memories from the day. Our brain
replays what we have learned during the day to make our memories stick. Sleep
also plays an important role in learning.”
I can’t overestimate the benefits of getting a good night’s
sleep the night before Sunday. It works wonders in my ability to be at my best
on Sundays.
4. Strategic Use of Caffeine
Yep, I said” caffeine.” Moderate use of caffeine brings
several benefits, including blocking the sleep neurotransmitter adenosine
(that’s the mechanism behind caffeine as a waker-upper), increased energy, and
a better mood You can read my post here about caffeine.
Sunday is great day because it reminds us that Jesus rose
from the dead. Yet, it’s also a draining day. Consider applying one or two of
these pointers this Sunday and see if it helps you be your best.
What has helped you be your best on Sundays?
Source:
Charles Stone - the senior pastor of West Park Church in London, Ontario, Canada, the founder
of StoneWell Ministries and the author of several
books, including most recently Brain-Savvy Leaders: The Science
of Significant Ministry. This post was originally published on CharlesStone.com.
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