Is this the hidden factor that hinders change in your church?

Charles Stone

Is this the hidden factor that hinders change in your church?iStock

In my 40 years in ministry, change management has been one of the most challenging tasks I've faced. Most pastors would probably agree. Recently I learned an insight about how people's brains work that helped me see what I may have unintentionally overlooked when I initiated a change. This might be the hidden factor that most hinders change in your church.

Our brains are wired for us to want certainty in our lives. When something feels ambiguous or uncertain, we subconsciously feel threatened. When we feel threatened, it creates an away (avoid) response, rather than a toward (approach) response. In the case of church change, an away response might be negativity, fear, passive resistance, or complaining from people.

On the other hand, a toward response could be excitement, support, and good gossip, how we hope the church would respond. The more uncertain and ambiguous church change appears, the less support we'll get and the more difficult the change will become.

So how we can we make church change less ambiguous and easier to bring about? I've listed some pointers below based on some recent findings in neuroscience.

1. Stay close to your key influencers during the entire change process. Remember, the more threatened someone feels, the more they will resist change. Learn their unique personalities because some personalities respond better to change than others. (Brin Jr. & Hoff, 1957).

2. Remain sensitive to characteristics that impact a person's feeling of threat caused by the uncertainty change brings.

  • The more politically conservative they are, the more they may feel threatened by change (Jost et al., 2008).
  • The more personal anxiety they're experiencing, the more threatened they may feel from change (Bishop, 2007).
  • The lower a person's self esteem, the more resistant they can be to change (Ford & Collins, 2010).

3. Keep people informed with timely reports on how the change is progressing (helps minimize uncertainty).

4. Cast a compelling vision on how the new change can make things better (a form of reframing current reality).

5. Teach about characters in the Bible who created certainty through faith, believing God was in control despite difficult circumstances and uncertain futures.

6. Teach about how to keep a healthy Christ-centered self-esteem.

7. Teach on how to biblically manage anxiety.


Charles Stone coaches and equips pastors and teams to effectively navigate the unique challenges ministry brings. By blending biblical principles with cutting-edge brain-based practices he helps them enhance their leadership abilities, elevate their preaching/ teaching skills, and prioritize self-care. A pastor for over 42 years, he has served as a lead pastor, associate pastor, and church planter. He published seven books, and over 300 of his articles have appeared on various Christian leadership websites. He holds four earned academic degrees, including a D.Min. and a Ph.D.

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