In every organization, including the church, conflict is inevitable. Unfortunately, many avoid addressing it for fear of disrupting the appearance of peace. Today, we'll explore how this conflict avoidance harms church staff culture, hindering growth and building a fragile team environment.
Conflict avoidance can manifest as a culture where disagreement is quietly suppressed and critical issues are left unaddressed. The pressure to maintain harmonious appearances can lead to forced consensus. It gives birth to 'false peace', where people appear agreeable publicly while venting their true feelings privately.
Unfortunately, many mistake this conflict-free environment as a sign of maturity, deceptively labeling this avoidance as being spiritual or scriptural. However, avoiding conflict doesn't create holiness; rather, it cultivates unhealthiness that can lead to burnout and unexpected departures. This is not peace but pretense.
In contrast to conflict avoidance, real unity is birthed from the fires of honest conversations. The need of the hour demands norms for feedback, up, down, and sideways, creating a psychologically safe environment where hard truths can be communicated without fear. Healthy teams don't shy away from conflict - they manage it productively and use it as a source of deeper understanding and growth.
If you find your church staff always agreeing and there's hardly any tension, it might not be a sign of health but a harbinger for unaddressed issues. Your team must create space for disagreements and honest discussions to foster real unity and growth. Remember, Jesus and the early church leaders didn't shy away from hard conversations, and neither should we.
For more insights into how to build a culture that embraces healthy conflict, tune into today’s Healthy Church Staff Podcast episode. Together, let’s learn to enrich our church staff culture by encouraging healthy conflict and fostering real unity through honest conversations.