You walk into the office Monday morning, and before you can even sit down, three people need you right now.
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Your worship leader's laptop died Sunday night, so he's practically panicking about what to do next. A key volunteer just quit via text message. And of course, the youth pastor needs an answer about summer camp immediately.
By 10 AM, you're already behind on everything you were excited to tackle. By lunch, you're putting out fire number seven. Sound familiar?
If this describes your typical Monday (or Tuesday, or any day ending in "y"), you're not alone. But here's the hard truth: this isn't leadership—this is crisis management, and it's slowly killing you and your team.
Here's what most church leaders don't realize about crisis mode: it feels an awful lot like effective leadership. You're busy. Everyone needs you. You're solving problems left and right. You feel important, maybe even heroic, because you're the only person who can fix these urgent situations.
But there's a fundamental problem with this approach: if everything's a crisis, nothing actually is a crisis.
Crisis mode becomes addictive because it feeds our need to feel needed. It validates our role and makes us feel indispensable. But what feels like leadership in the moment is actually reactive management—and it's creating more problems than it's solving.
When crisis becomes your default operating mode, you're not just exhausting yourself. You're training your entire team to operate in dysfunction. Here's what happens:
Why would they plan when they know you'll swoop in and fix everything at the last minute? Crisis leadership actually discourages proactive thinking.
Have you noticed team members making things sound more urgent than they really are just to get your attention? When crisis is the only way to access leadership, people learn to manufacture crises.
Today's fires always win over tomorrow's vision. You never get to the important work because the "urgent" work consumes every available moment.
High-capacity leaders want to work in environments where they can grow and contribute meaningfully. Constant chaos drives away the very people you need most.
When every decision has to flow through you, you don't just slow down progress—you stop it entirely whenever you're unavailable.
It's impossible to think creatively about the future when all your mental energy is consumed by surviving today.
"Suppose one of you wants to build a tower. Won't you first sit down and estimate the cost to see if you have enough money to complete it? For if you lay the foundation and are not able to finish it, everyone who sees it will ridicule you." —Luke 14:28-30
I know what it's like to live in crisis mode—I've dwelt there for more time than I'd like to admit. And I know you didn't choose this. Crisis mode chose you. But here's what you can do to break the cycle:
Healthy leaders constantly ask themselves: "What could have been done six months ago to prevent this?" This simple question helps you identify which crises are actually systems failures in disguise.
Block off time for strategic thinking and guard it like it's a meeting with Jesus—because in many ways, it might be. This isn't luxury time; it's essential leadership work.
You cannot be the bottleneck for every decision. Train your team to handle situations without you. Yes, they'll make some mistakes, but they'll also develop into stronger leaders.
If the same "emergency" happens twice, it's not an emergency—it's a broken system. Healthy leaders build processes that prevent repeated fires.
This might be the hardest one. Sometimes excellent opportunities come along that would derail your main mission. Healthy leaders protect their focus by declining even good opportunities that don't align with their core priorities.
Proverbs 27:14 - "Surely you need guidance to wage war, and victory is won through many advisers."
Wisdom comes through planning and seeking counsel, not reacting to every crisis alone.
Here's a reality check that might sting a little: your team is watching how you handle pressure, whether you realize it or not.
When you panic, they panic. When you're reactive, they become reactive. But when you model calm, strategic thinking, they learn to do the same.
Crisis leadership teaches your staff that planning doesn't matter. Strategic leadership, on the other hand, teaches them that preparation prevents panic.
"For God is not a God of disorder but of peace—as in all the congregations of the Lord's people." —1 Corinthians 14:33
The goal isn't to eliminate crises entirely—you'll always have genuine emergencies. The goal is to stop living like everything's a crisis when most things aren't.
Here are two practical steps you can take this week:
Write down every urgent request that comes your way this week. I'm a firm believer in pen and paper—something about the physical act of writing helps process thoughts more clearly.
By Friday, review your list and ask yourself: "How many of these were actually urgent versus simply important?" You might be surprised by what you discover.
It's still early in the week—block off a couple of hours on your calendar for strategic thinking. Don't let anyone book over it. Use this time to ask: "What fires are we fighting right now that we could prevent next month?"
Your congregation doesn't need you to be a hero who saves the day by putting out every fire. They need you to be a leader who builds systems, develops people, and creates a culture where ministry can thrive without constant crisis.
This shift won't happen overnight. You've probably been operating in crisis mode for so long that your team expects it. But as you begin to model strategic thinking and proactive planning, you'll notice something remarkable: your team will start doing the same.
Remember, healthy church culture doesn't happen by accident. It's built by leaders who choose to think strategically rather than react constantly.
You've got this. I know you do.
Breaking the crisis cycle takes intentionality and practice. If you're feeling overwhelmed by the gap between where you are and where you want to be, remember that every healthy leader started exactly where you are right now.
What resonated most with you from this post? What's the biggest barrier preventing you from moving from crisis mode to strategic leadership? I'd love to hear your thoughts and challenges—send me an email and let's continue the conversation.
And if you're looking for support in building healthier systems for hiring, staff development, or team culture, that's exactly what we do at Chemistry Staffing. We've given our ministry lives to helping church leaders build stronger, healthier teams. Learn more about how we might be able to come alongside you.
Your church needs the leader God called you to be—not the firefighter you've become by default.