Church Leadership | Chemistry Staffing

What Ministry Leaders Can Learn from Emergency Room Nurses

Written by Todd Rhoades | Aug 7, 2025 10:00:00 AM

Leading Your Church Like an ER Nurse: A Guide for the Unpredictable Ministry

In an emergency room (ER), every second counts. Nurses juggle multiple tasks, handle constant pressures, and always prioritize what matters most. Now imagine your ministry operating like an ER- chaotic, unpredictable, and often overwhelming, and you the leader, navigating it like an ER nurse. Might sound unconventional, but there are lessons to be learned here about effective leadership in an unpredictable ministry.

Triage: The Compassionate Leadership

In an ER, nurses use triage to treat the most urgent cases first, not the loudest. Church leaders should take note. The loudest problems aren't always the most urgent. Apply the triage principle to your church staff and mission. Prioritize what matters most first. This isn't a cold approach, but instead a compassionate way to lead your team.

Staying Calm amidst Chaos

ER rooms face constant chaos, but you never see nurses panic. As a leader in a ministry, you too should inspire calm amidst chaos. Be that regulating force when things go haywire. As budgets dwindle, staff drama ignites, or sermons fall flat, your role is to ground the room and bring peace into a panic.

Emotional Debriefing: A Critical Survival Skill

Post-traumatic events, ER nurses debrief to cope with the emotional weight of their job. This practice is vital for those in ministry as well. Ministry involves carrying invisible wounds, and we seldom debrief our teams after emotionally draining situations. Normalize emotional processing as part of your regular staff rhythm.

Ask your team, "That was heavy, how are you doing?" Not just doing a logistical debrief, but genuinely caring for their emotional wellbeing. This practice can uphold team morale during distressing times.

Lead with Purpose and Smart Work

The bottom line here is that ER personnel aren't just hard workers, they're smart workers. They function under pressure and do so with a clear purpose. As a church leader, you can do the same.

In the unpredictable world of ministry, leading like an ER nurse — prioritizing effectively, staying calm in chaos, and valuing emotional debriefing — can revolutionize your approach. It helps build a resilient and healthier church staff, capable of withstanding pressures and forging ahead with purpose.

Want more insights on adapting the leadership lessons from an ER nurse to your ministry? Listen to today's Healthy Church Staff Podcast episode for some thought-provoking insights on navigating church leadership in times of pressure and burnout.