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First person: When a ministry leader commits ‘serious sin’

"Maybe the most spiritual thing a fallen or disgraced leader could do is step away for a few years and live a normal life. Get a regular job. Work at Home Depot. Sell insurance. Learn humility again. Rebuild a marriage. Restore trust with family."
  • March 19, 2026
  • Phil Cooke
  • Church Life, First Person, Latest News
(Unsplash photo)

First person: When a ministry leader commits ‘serious sin’

When a pastor or ministry leader commits serious sin, the usual response is predictable: announce a “restoration process,” keep him near the platform and quietly plan for his comeback.

I’m not convinced that’s biblical — or healthy.

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Let’s be honest about what happened. A leader didn’t just make a mistake. He sinned in a way that dishonored God, betrayed the trust of the church and deceived the very people he was called to shepherd.

That’s not a small issue. That’s a crisis of character. And a crisis of character isn’t fixed in a few months.

Yet in today’s church culture, we often seem fixated with getting leaders back behind the pulpit as quickly as possible. Why? Because they’re gifted? Because they founded the ministry? Because the brand depends on them?

Maybe the most spiritual thing a fallen or disgraced leader could do is step away for a few years and live a normal life. Get a regular job. Work at Home Depot. Sell insurance. Learn humility again. Rebuild a marriage. Restore trust with family.

Sit in a church instead of leading one.

Restoration matters.

But restoration to Christ and restoration to ministry are not the same thing.

Sometimes the most honest evidence of repentance is the willingness to live faithfully outside the spotlight.

And if a leader can’t accept that, the problem probably isn’t resolved yet.


EDITOR’S NOTE — This story was written by Christian media expert Phil Cooke and originally published by philcooke.com. 

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