Saturday night, gunshots at the White House Correspondents' Dinner. The President was rushed out. The room hit the floor.
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By Sunday morning, half your church thought it was real. The other half was already calling it staged.
And Monday, you walk into staff meeting. Now what?
As church leaders, we regularly face moments when national events divide our congregations and test our leadership.
Let me start here: this isn't about politics. But here's the thing—something happened this weekend that you can't pretend didn't happen. And the people in your church felt it in five different directions.
Some are scared. Some are angry. Some are quietly satisfied (though they'd never say it). Some think it was staged. Some are just numb and have had enough.
All of them are sitting in your room next Sunday.
These temperature-shifting moments seem to pop up with increasing regularity. We've had several in the past year alone. And as church leaders, we're caught in an impossible position: address it and alienate half your congregation, ignore it and appear irrelevant to everyone.
Here's what I see pastors doing wrong on weeks like this:
Option A: Pretend it didn't happen. Preach Colossians 3 like nothing's going on.
Option B: Address it head-on from the pulpit. Make it the message.
Both are mistakes.
We learned this lesson the hard way during COVID. In our work at Chemistry Staffing, we saw an incredible number of pastors who were either fired or needed to leave their churches because of how they led through the pandemic. Mask or no mask, meet or don't meet—any decision a pastor made isolated half their congregation.
Pretending these events didn't happen sends a message that your church isn't real. Addressing them head-on sends a message that your church has a political take.
There's a third way. And it's harder.
Now listen—the pulpit is not a cable news desk.
Your job this week is not to explain what happened. Your job is to pastor people who are processing what happened. That's a completely different job.
This pastoral work happens in:
Here's the truth: This week is not about the shooting, the suspect, or the political implications.
The shooting is a symptom. The disease is a country that has lost the ability to disagree without dehumanizing.
And the church—the big-C church—has caught this disease. Not in every congregation, but in enough of them that you can feel it. We work with churches all day, every day at Chemistry Staffing, and we see it regularly.
Your job this week is not to cure the country. Your job is to make sure this disease doesn't take root in your room.
1 Corinthians 1:10 - "I appeal to you, brothers and sisters, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that all of you agree with one another in what you say and that there be no divisions among you, but that you be perfectly united in mind and thought."
Ephesians 4:2-3 - "Be completely humble and gentle; be patient, bearing with one another in love. Make every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit through the bond of peace."
You can't pastor a temperature you won't acknowledge. You also can't pastor a moment by chasing it.
Name what's happening. Don't take a side. Lift up Jesus. That's the assignment this week.
So what do you actually do? Here are some concrete actions:
Your staff is already talking about it, whether it's on the agenda or not. Acknowledge what happened this weekend—not in political terms, not to take sides, but to tell your team how you need them to show up this week.
They need to be: calm, present, and pastoral.
This could be as simple as adding one sentence to a pastoral prayer. Not a political take, but a prayer for the country, for leaders on every side, and for the church to be a refuge.
These moments aren't going away. If anything, they're becoming more frequent and more divisive. As church leaders, we need to develop the skills to navigate them without losing our witness or our congregations.
This means learning to:
Remember: your church doesn't need another political voice. It needs a pastoral one.
The goal isn't to make everyone agree politically—that's neither possible nor necessary. The goal is to maintain unity around Jesus while allowing space for people to process difficult national moments.
Your congregation is watching how you handle this. They're not just listening to your words; they're observing your spirit, your tone, and your priorities. Show them that the church can be a place where people disagree politically but remain united spiritually.
If you're a pastor or staff leader navigating this kind of week and want to talk it through, I'd love to hear from you. Send me an email at podcast@chemistrystaffing.com.
When your church is in transition or you need help with anything healthy-staff related, that's what we do at Chemistry Staffing every day.
These moments test us, but they also give us opportunities to show our communities what unity looks like when it's centered on Jesus rather than politics. Lead well this week.