You wake up Monday morning, check your calendar for the week, and feel... nothing. Not excited. Not dreading it. Just fine. The fire that used to burn when you thought about ministry isn't entirely gone, but it's not really there either.
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Welcome to what I call the dangerous middle.
If that description sounds uncomfortably familiar, you're not alone—and you're in the right place. This isn't about burnout. It's about something potentially more insidious: the slow fade from passion to professionalism, from "I can't believe I get to do this" to "I can do this."
Recent research reveals a troubling trend: a growing number of pastors and church staff members say their jobs simply aren't deeply fulfilling anymore. But here's the catch—they're not burned out. They're not ready to quit. They're just... not fired up like they used to be.
They've drifted from love to duty. From passion to paycheck. From calling to career.
And here's why this matters more than you might think: this kind of drift flies completely under the radar. You're still competent—maybe even more competent than ever. You show up, do good work, and go home. But something fundamental has shifted.
Burnout has an endpoint. It forces a crisis. It demands attention and change.
The dangerous middle? You can function there indefinitely while your calling slowly dies. That's what makes it so insidious.
This middle ground can last a year. Five years. Believe it or not, it can last twenty years. You don't flame out. You don't make headlines. You just gradually shift from leading ministry to managing it.
Your team feels it even when you don't say it. The church senses something's missing but can't quite name it. And meanwhile, you're going through the motions with an expertise that masks the growing emptiness inside.
"Yet I hold this against you: You have forsaken the love you had at first. Consider how far you have fallen! Repent and do the things you did at first." — Revelation 2:4-5
The dangerous middle doesn't announce itself. It sneaks in quietly, disguised as maturity or professionalism. Here are the telltale signs:
Now, let me be clear: there's nothing wrong with professionalism in ministry. We're pastors, for crying out loud. We should be professional. But when professionalism replaces passion, everyone loses—including you, your team, and the people you're called to serve.
If you're recognizing yourself in these descriptions, don't panic. Your calling hasn't disappeared—it's just gotten buried under competence and familiarity. The good news? Sometimes passion needs to be rekindled, not rediscovered.
Here's where you start:
Ask yourself this question: What originally called you to this ministry role?
Not the generic "God called me" answer. I'm talking about the specific thing. What broke your heart for this church, for this community? What was that moment in time where you felt, "This is where God is calling me"?
You know your story. Maybe you haven't thought about it for a while, but it's there—the burden, the vision, the holy discontent that brought you to this place.
This week, write down three specific reasons you originally said yes to your current role. Not generic spiritual language—the actual, specific, personal reasons.
Put it somewhere you'll see it daily. Not on a poster on your wall, but on your desk, in your journal, on your mirror—somewhere personal where you'll encounter it regularly. Let those reasons reignite what routine has dampened over the months or years.
One of the great ironies of ministry is that the better you get at it, the more danger you're in. Competence can become a substitute for dependence on God. Experience can replace faith. Skill can mask the absence of anointing.
The dangerous middle thrives in the gap between what you can do and what God has called you to do.
"Whatever you do, work at it with all your heart, as working for the Lord, not for human masters, since you know that you will receive an inheritance from the Lord as a reward. It is the Lord Christ you are serving." — Colossians 3:23-24
The dangerous middle doesn't have to be your permanent address. But getting out requires more than positive thinking or trying harder. It requires honest assessment, intentional steps, and often, support from others who understand.
Start with the challenge above. Write down those three specific reasons. Sit with them. Pray over them. Let them stir something that's been dormant.
Then take the next step: have an honest conversation with someone you trust. A mentor, a peer, a counselor. Name what you're feeling. Bring it into the light. The dangerous middle loses much of its power when you stop pretending everything is fine.
Your calling most likely hasn't disappeared. It just got buried under competence and familiarity.
The fire isn't gone—it's under a pile of routine, unmet expectations, relational complexity, and the daily grind of institutional religion. But fire buried is not fire extinguished.
It's time to dig back in. To push aside what's been covering the calling. To blow on the embers until they flame again.
Because the church needs leaders who are fully alive, not just fully functional. Your team needs to see passion, not just professionalism. And you—you deserve to experience the fullness of what God called you to, not a diminished version that feels safe but leaves you empty.
The dangerous middle is just that—a middle. It's not the end. And with intentionality, honesty, and God's grace, it doesn't have to be your future either.
I'd love to hear your story. Are you in the dangerous middle? Have you been there before? What helped you find your way back to passion?
Todd Rhoades serves church leaders through Chemistry Staffing and hosts the daily Healthy Church Staff Podcast. With decades of experience in church leadership and staffing, Todd is passionate about helping ministry leaders not just survive, but thrive in their calling.