Is It Okay for Pastors to Have Doubts about Their Faith?

We doubt the promises God has made. We doubt the abilities God has gifted us with. We doubt the provision God has over our lives. We doubt that God has joy set apart for us, because our current suffering doesn’t seem as appealing as our neighbor’s prosperity. We doubt that God is working out all things for His good.

Sometimes we just have questions that we don’t have the answers to, and the quest for those answers turns up empty. Yes, we can even doubt God’s existence.

“Spiritual doubt has been a reality of the Christian journey since the disciples — and today is no different,” said Roxanne Stone, managing editor of the Religion News Service and former editor in chief of Barna Group. “Just like first-century Christians, their twenty-first-century counterparts question aspects of their theology, doubt the existence of God, and mourn His seeming absence during hard times. Doubt remains a flip side on the same coin as faith.”

Many Christians, understandably so, seek answers for these doubts both in their own studies of the Bible and from pastors or leaders at their local church. But what do we do when our pastors and church leaders experience doubts as well? They’re supposed to have the answers for us, right?

Pastors Can Have Doubts, Too
First, it’s important to understand that it is normal for pastors to experience doubt.

“I have had doubts and, in fact, sometimes pastors have more doubts than those in the pews, given the pressures pastors face in terms of leadership and the depth of human brokenness pastors see on a daily basis,” said Daniel Darling, a pastor and author in Nashville, Tennessee. “I think most of our doubts center around the mystery of what God is doing in the moment. I think of spiritual leaders in Scripture who doubted like David and Habbakuk and Jeremiah and Paul.

“The key to answering doubts is to rest and remember what we know to be true about God, what we’ve seen him do in Christ, what we know of his goodness and grace. This is where a foundation of thick theology, a reservoir of hymn lyrics, and a community of saints is vitally important.”

While our pastors will indeed have many answers, we cannot expect them to have all the answers. God is a marvelous mystery. He is an infinite being. Our finite minds simply cannot fathom or understand everything about God, nor were we created to.

None of us — even pastors — were given the capacity to fully understand God. This is why we have faith.

Responding to Those Who Doubt
Expecting our pastors to have all the answers is simply unrealistic and puts too much pressure on someone who, like us, is merely human. Pastors are susceptible to the same sins, temptations, heartache, and — yes — even doubts that everyone else is. Oftentimes, as Darling noted, it’s the trying seasons or traumatic events that bring about doubts, even with pastors.

As churchgoers, it is vital that we understand the reality that our pastors can and will experience doubt, and it’s equally important that we pray and support them during seasons of doubt. We must encourage them in their quest for a deeper understanding of who God is and pray for them to find contentment in their limited earthly understanding of God.

“I think churchgoers should welcome a spiritual leader who has doubts in terms of understanding the mystery of what God might be doing in the world,” Darling said. “I think a good shepherd is vulnerable with his own real wrestling with God. Pastors are not content machines or Bible bots, they are flesh and blood people.

“I do think when pastors face doubts, they can model a way to navigate them in ways that help others find their way back to what they know is true. I’d be concerned if a spiritual leader was openly doubting and questioning the basic tenants of the Christian faith. It may be time for a season of rest and stepping away from leadership. But a pastor who has doubts — like David, Abraham, Habbakuk, Jeremiah, Paul — about what God might be doing in a given moment: this is the stuff of real-life as we walk by faith and not by sight.”

When someone expresses doubt in their faith, they are sometimes met with judgment, as if enduring a season of doubt is an affront to God. That misconception can be amplified when the doubt comes from the pulpit. How could a pastor have doubts about God?

Here’s how Adam Weber, pastor of Embrace Church in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, put it on Twitter:

“Note to Christians: One of the best answers you can give in response to someone’s questions about God, life, Bible, Heaven,… that you don’t know is: ‘I don’t know,’” he tweeted. “Don’t try and dance around their question. Don’t make up an answer. Thank them for asking and say, ‘I don’t know.’

“You can faithfully search for an answer in addition and share it with humility if you do find answers. I think often we think we lose credibility if we don’t have all the answers to questions. Not true! We lose so much more when we try and sound like we know something that we don’t.”

Not knowing an answer is not always the result of doubt, but accepting that “I don’t know” is a legitimate answer for any Christian will remove any pressure that we might feel to understand it all or seek to understand it all. We simply can’t, and we won’t. And that’s okay.

8 thoughts on “Is It Okay for Pastors to Have Doubts about Their Faith?

  1. Very well stated.I also had doubts but now I don’t doubt God’s presence but I know that my son can get all the good things I have so long he is with me.If he wishes to go to some other place for his future career then he has to wait for my help because of the distance.That’s it ,he will certainly not deny my existence but will know that we are far away from each other so helping each other is time consuming. Thank you very much for sharing such a significant post .God bless.Take care.🌹😊🙏

    Liked by 1 person

  2. The biggest trout in the milk about this topic are those who make a career out of their doubts, as the Anglican/Episcopal world was reminded of yesterday: https://www.vulcanhammer.org/2021/09/12/john-shelby-spong-goes-to-meet-god/
    But I think it is important for our ministers to be up front when they don’t know something. It’s like when I ask a question in class (I teach Civil Engineering) and get silence. Part of the problem is that no one wants to be wrong, even if half their colleagues are!

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Bishop Spong decided to be relevant and ended up accomplishing very little. I do think, coming from the Episcopal church and am clergy, that it is ok to challenge people and their beliefs, he seemed to say what worked for each day, instead of having a concrete plan of his so called radical revolution of thought. Most people have doubts, but it has been my experience, that if they honestly go to Scripture, they can find answer, though they may not like them. No where in the Bible does it say that becoming a Christian will suddenly make your life easier or without problems. This is where faith comes in. C.S. Lewis, wrote his book, Mere Christianity< with the intent to debunk Christianity and converted from being an atheist or at least agnostic, to a true believer. He was once quoted as saying, "No one in their right mind would be a Christian, because it is not easy; rather, it is a daily work in progress to become a follower of Jesus, because it takes work on the believer's part to stay on the path that leads to the kingdom of heaven.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. I think that many times doubts simply come because the devils are whispering lies to our spiritual ears. We hear these lies, and doubts spring up until they are dealt with. Then there is the devils ability to temporarily fill us with darkness. Then we will doubt because we can no longer see the truth. We become temporarily spiritually blinded. But later as the inner light overcomes this darkness, we again see clearly and the doubts go away. And then we see things that seemingly contradict what the Bible tells us. Without proper understanding we will naturally have doubts. The greatest secret then is to keep moving forward even though we have doubts knowing that they will eventually go away if we just keep going, and we do not quit.

    Like

Leave a comment