When Church Leadership Disappoints You
How do you keep following Jesus when the people who pointed you to Him let you down?
Thank you for being here. This article is part of an ongoing series about church hurt, healing, and learning to trust Jesus again. My prayer is that these conversations encourage you, challenge you, and remind you that you’re not walking this road alone.
If you’d like to explore the entire series, you’ll find every article together in the Premium Content Library. I hope they’ll encourage you wherever you are in your journey.
There are a few things more confusing than being wounded by someone who helped build your faith. It usually doesn’t happen all at once. Maybe it starts with a conversation that leaves you unsettled. A decision you can’t understand. A rumor you hope isn’t true. Or maybe your phone lights up with a text from a friend. “Have you heard?”
Your stomach sinks before you even open it. Another Pastor. Another ministry leader. Another apology. Another chuch trying to explain the unexplainable. Sometimes it’s someone you’ve never met.
Other times…
It’s the person who dedicated your baby. The mentor who prayed with you when your marriage was struggling. The Youth Pastor who helped you believe God has a purpose for your life. The leader who taught you how to read your Bible.
Suddenly, you’re not just grieving what they did. You’re grieving what they represented. You start replaying conversations. You wonder if you missed warning signs. You question your own judgment.
Then a deeper question quietly slips into your heart.
If I was wrong about them… what else have I been wrong about?
For some people, that’s the beginning of walking away from church. For others, it’s the beginning of walking away from God.
Maybe that’s where you are today. If so, I’m really glad you’re here. Because the Bible doesn’t pretend God’s people always get leadership right. In fact, some of scripture’s greatest stories are about faithful people trying to follow God under deeply disappointing leaders.
We don’t just lose trust in people
We lose confidence in ourselves. That’s one of the hardest parts. When a spiritual leader disappoints you, you’re not simply asking whether they failed. You’re wondering whether you can trust your own discernment again.
“How did I not see it?”
“Why did I ignore all the warning signs?”
“Was any of it real?”
Those questions can become exhausting. I’ve watched people wrestle with them for years. As a Pastor, I’ve sat across the table from people who still loved Jesus but couldn’t imagine walking into another church. Not because they hated God. Because every sanctuary reminded them of someone who had betrayed their trust.
Sometimes the hurt came from moral failure. Other times it was quieter. A leader who abused their authority. A mentor who became controlling. A Pastor who dismissed their pain. A church that protected its reputation instead of protecting people. Different stories. Same ache.
The disappointment reaches beyong the person. It beings coloring everything connected to them. That’s why it hurts so deeply. Spiritual leadership was never supposed to make it harder to see Jesus. It was supposed to make Him easier to see.
David knew this feeling
When people think about David, they usually picture a shepherd facing a giant. But Goliath wasn’t the greatest challenge David faced. Saul was. When David first met Saul, there was every reason to believe this relationship would flourish.
Saul was Israel’s king. God had chosen him. David admired him. When Saul’s troubled mind stole his peace, David would quietly sit nearby and play his harp until the king found relief.
Imagine that scene.
The room is silent except for the music. David isn’t trying to gain influence. He isn’t building a platform. He’s simply serving. Then David defeats Goliath. The nation celebrates. Women pour into the streets singing,
“Saul has struck down his thousands, and David his ten thousands.” (1 Samuel 18:7)
It’s just a victory song. But something breaks inside Saul. The applause that should have filled him with gratitude instead awakens jealousy. The leader God had appointed begins seeing David as a threat instead of a blessing. Not long afterward, David is doing what he’s always done. Playing music. Serving the king. Trying to bring peace into a troubled room.
Then...
A spear flies across the room. David barely escapes. Can you imagine the confusion? One moment you’re serving someone you deeply respect. The next moment they’re trying to kill you.
That’s the thing about disappointment. It rarely announces itself. It catches you by surprise.
What do you do when the person God used becomes the person who hurts you?
I think that’s the question underneath so many conversations about church hurt. Because here’s what’s complicated. God really had used Saul. He wasn’t a fake king. He wasn’t pretending. God genuinely appointed him. David wasn’t wrong for respecting him.
Likewise, many of the leaders who disappoint us really did point us toward Jesus. Maybe they baptized you. Maybe they taught you scripture. Maybe they encouraged you during one of the darkest seasons of your life.
God really used them. That doesn’t make their later failures any less painful. In some ways, it makes them more painful. Because now you’re left wondering which parts were real.
David could have asked those same questions.
“If Saul is like this...did I misunderstand God’s calling?”
“Did I put my trust in the wrong person?”
Instead, David discovered something that would carry him through years of heartbreak.
God’s faithfulness wasn’t dependent on Saul’s.
A lesson I’ve had to learn myself
Can I tell you something that’s uncomfortable to admit? As I was writing this article, I realized I’m not just someone who’s been disappointed by leaders. I’m also a leader. Which means there’s another side to this story.
I’ve probably disappointed people too. There have been phone calls I should have returned sooner. People I genuinely cared about but unintentionally overlooked. Moments I wish I could replay because I know I could have handled them with more wisdom and more grace.
I’ve never set out to hurt anyone. But I know I’m capable of it. Not because I don’t love Jesus. Because I’m still learning to become like Him. That realization has changed how I view the leaders who’ve disappointed me.
It doesn’t excuse abuse. It doesn’t minimize sin. It certainly doesn’t remove accountability. Some leaders should never remain in leadership. Some situations require firm boundaries, reporting abuse, and protecting vulnerable people. Scripture never calls us to ignore evil in the name of grace.
But it has helped me recognize something else.
Not every disappointment belongs in the same category. Sometimes we’ve been wounded by wolves. Other times we’ve simply been wounded by sheep who were carrying responsibilities too heavy for imperfect shoulders.
Wisdom learns the difference. And that difference matters.
The mistake we make without realizing it
I think one of the greatest dangers in the Christian life is also one of the quietest. We slowly begin expecting people to do what only Jesus can do. We would probably never say it out loud. But our expectations reveal it.
We expect our Pastor to always know the right answer. We expect our mentor to never struggle. We expect church leaders to be spiritually mature in every situation, emotionally healthy all the time, and available whenever we need them.
Then one day, they disappoint us. And it shakes far more than our opinion of them. It shakes our faith.
Why?
Because somewhere along the way, they became more than a guide. They became part of the foundation. But leaders were never meant to carry that weight. Only Jesus can. The healthiest leaders understand this. They don’t want followers. They want disciples of Jesus. They aren’t trying to build dependence on themselves. They’re trying to help people become dependent on Christ.
That’s why the Apostle Paul could confidently tell believers, “Follow my example, as I follow the example of Christ” (1 Corinthians 11:1).
Did you catch the order? Paul wasn’t asking people to follow him no matter what. He was inviting them to follow him only as he followed Jesus. Christ was always the standard. Never Paul. That’s an important reminder for all of us.
Every pastor. Every elder. Every ministry leader. Every Christian author. Every worship leader. Every mentor. At our very best, we’re signposts. Not destinations.
David refused to let Saul redefine God
David had every reason to become bitter. Years passed. He lived in caves. He ran through deserts. He slept with one eye open because the king who should have been protecting him was hunting him instead. There had to be nights when he wondered if life would ever feel normal again.
Then one day, everything changed.
Saul unknowingly walked into the very cave where David and his men were hiding. His soldiers could hardly believe it. “This is it,” they whispered. “This is the day the Lord told you about.” From a human perspective, they weren’t being unreasonable. Saul had tried to kill David multiple times. Surely this was justice. Surely God had finally opened a door. David quietly crept toward Saul. He had the opportunity to end years of suffering with a single swing of his sword.
Instead...
He cut off a corner of Saul’s robe. Then something remarkable happened. The Bible says David’s conscience was troubled because he had even done that.
He told his men,
“The Lord forbid that I should do such a thing to my master, the Lord’s anointed.” (1 Samuel 24:6)
I’ve always found that fascinating. David wasn’t denying Saul’s sin. He wasn’t pretending everything was okay. He wasn’t returning to the palace. He wasn’t removing the boundaries that had kept him alive. He simply refused to become the kind of man Saul had become. There is a difference between protecting your heart and allowing your heart to become hard. David chose protection without bitterness.
That’s much harder.
Grace and boundaries can exist together
For years, I thought forgiveness meant pretending I wasn’t hurt. That if I really forgave someone, I should trust them again immediately. Scripture paints a much wiser picture. David forgave Saul. But he didn’t move back into the palace. He honored Saul’s position. But he didn’t ignore Saul’s behavior.
He showed grace. And he maintained boundaries. Those things are not opposites. In fact, healthy boundaries often create the space where genuine forgiveness can grow.
If you’ve been hurt by a leader, hear me carefully. You do not have to pretend it didn’t happen. You don’t have to excuse sinful behavior. You don’t have to place yourself back into an unhealthy situation just to prove you’re a forgiving Christian.
Forgiveness releases your desire for revenge. Trust is rebuilt through repentance, humility, and consistent faithfulness. Those are different things. Sometimes trust can be restored. Sometimes it can’t. Both realities exist in scripture.
Don’t let one broken leader write the rest of your story
One of the saddest things I’ve seen in ministry isn’t when a leader falls. It’s when someone quietly decides that because one leader failed, every church will fail them too. I’ve watched people who once loved serving Jesus slowly pull away from Christian community. Not all at once. Just little by little. They stop serving. Then they stop attending regularly.
Then they stop opening their Bible because it reminds them of the person who hurt them. Eventually they conclude they’re done with church altogether. I understand why that happens. I’ve sat with enough hurting people to know those decisions rarely come from rebellion. Most of the time, they come from exhaustion.
But I’ve also learned something else.
The enemy doesn’t have to convince you to stop believing in Jesus if he can convince you to isolate yourself from the people who help you follow Him. That’s exactly what he wants. Not healing. Isolation. Not wisdom. Cynicism. Not discernment. Distrust of everyone.
Please don’t misunderstand me.
There are churches you should leave. There are leaders you should never follow again. There are situations where the healthiest thing you can do is walk away. But don’t confuse leaving an unhealthy leader with leaving Jesus.
Those are not the same thing.
Keep your eyes on the Shepherd
One of my favorite descriptions of Jesus is found in John 10. He calls Himself the Good Shepherd. Not simply a shepherd. The Good Shepherd. Why? Because every earthly shepherd eventually falls short.
Some fail quietly. Some fail publicly. Some simply grow tired. But Jesus never abandons His sheep. He never manipulates them. He never uses them for His own gain. He never grows impatient with those who come to Him honestly. The more I Pastor, the more comforting that truth becomes.
Because I know I can’t be everything people need. No pastor can. No ministry leader can. And we were never supposed to. Only Jesus can carry that weight.
One final picture
When Saul eventually died in battle, David finally had the freedom he’d been waiting for. The man who had chased him through the wilderness was gone. The threat was over. If anyone had a reason to celebrate, it was David. But he didn’t.
Instead, he wept. He wrote a song of lament. He honored the man who had spent years trying to kill him. That has always stopped me in my tracks.
David refused to let someone else’s sin determine the kind of man he would become. I think that’s the invitation for us too.
You may have been disappointed by a leader. You may have been wounded by someone you deeply admired. Your hurt is real. Your questions are understandable. Your grief matters. But don’t let another person’s failure become the foundation of your future.
Build your life on the One who has never failed you. Pastors will disappoint you. Mentors will disappoint you. Authors. Teachers. Friends. Eventually, every one of us will fall short.
Jesus never will.
That’s why our hope has never been in the undershepherds. It’s always been in the Shepherd.
And He’s still leading His people today.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I do if my pastor disappoints me?
Start by taking your hurt to God honestly. Then evaluate what happened carefully. Not every disappointment is abuse, but not every failure is minor either. If there has been sin or harmful leadership, seek wise counsel and don’t be afraid to establish healthy boundaries. Above all, don’t let one person’s failure pull you away from Jesus.
Is it wrong to leave a church because of leadership?
Not necessarily.
There are times when staying in an unhealthy environment causes more damage than leaving. If leaders refuse accountability, tolerate abuse, or consistently lead people away from biblical truth, it may be wise to find a healthy church where you can continue growing.
Leaving an unhealthy church isn’t the same as leaving Christ.
Can God still use leaders who fail?
Yes.
The Bible is filled with imperfect people whom God used in remarkable ways. Moses lost his temper. Peter denied Jesus. Mark abandoned Paul on a missionary journey before later becoming a trusted ministry partner.
God’s ability to work through imperfect people doesn’t excuse sin, but it does remind us that His power has never depended on human perfection.
How do I know whether I should forgive a leader?
As followers of Jesus, forgiveness is always the goal.
That doesn’t mean pretending nothing happened or immediately restoring trust. Forgiveness releases your desire for revenge. Reconciliation requires repentance, humility, and rebuilt trust. Sometimes those things happen. Sometimes they don’t.
Why does God allow spiritual leaders to fail?
That’s one of the hardest questions believers wrestle with.
While Scripture doesn’t answer every “why,” it consistently reminds us that every human leader is imperfect. God alone is flawless. Sometimes He allows disappointment to redirect our confidence away from people and back toward Christ, the only Leader who will never fail.
Can I trust church leaders again?
Yes, but trust should be given wisely.
Healthy churches welcome accountability. Healthy leaders invite questions. Healthy pastors point people toward Jesus instead of building their ministries around themselves.
Don’t stop trusting everyone because one person betrayed your trust. Ask God to give you discernment as you look for leaders whose lives reflect the humility and character of Christ.
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Thank you for this series, Chris. So needed and full of safe and practical advice.
Chris, thank you for another thoughtful and encouraging article. I especially appreciated your reminder that our faith must ultimately rest in Christ rather than in even the most respected spiritual leaders. Your use of David and Saul beautifully illustrates that God's faithfulness is never dependent upon the faithfulness of those He uses.
One thought that came to mind as I read your article is that Scripture calls us not only to forgive but also to exercise discernment and to establish healthy spiritual boundaries. Proverbs 4:23 reminds us, "Above all else, guard your heart, for everything you do flows from it." Likewise, Proverbs 13:20 teaches that those we walk closely with shape our lives, and Titus 3:10 instructs believers to separate from those who persistently sow division after loving correction. These passages remind us that biblical love and biblical wisdom are never in conflict.
I've found it helpful to remember a principle that summarizes several biblical teachings: we are called to love everyone, but not everyone should have the same level of trust or access. Jesus Himself demonstrated this. He loved all people, yet "did not entrust Himself to them, because He knew all people" (John 2:24). He also maintained different circles of relationship. The crowds, the seventy-two, the Twelve, and His closest companions, Peter, James, and John. Even when those in Nazareth sought to kill Him, He simply "passed through their midst and went away" (Luke 4:28–30), demonstrating that wisdom sometimes requires healthy boundaries.
Your distinction between forgiveness and restored trust was especially valuable. I believe adding a brief emphasis on guarding our hearts and practicing biblical discernment would make an already excellent article even stronger. Forgiveness releases revenge, but trust and access are wisely rebuilt through genuine repentance, humility, and proven faithfulness. Grace and boundaries are not opposites; they are both expressions of biblical wisdom.
Thank you again for faithfully pointing readers back to the Good Shepherd, who never fails His people (John 10:11). Articles like this help believers heal without becoming cynical, while encouraging them to keep their eyes fixed on Christ above all else.