Skip to content
  • The Alabama Baptist
  • The Baptist Paper
  • The Alabama Baptist
  • The Baptist Paper
  • Log In
  • Subscribe
  • Renew
  • Donate
  • The Alabama Baptist
  • The Baptist Paper
  • The Alabama Baptist
  • The Baptist Paper
  • Log In
  • Subscribe
  • Renew
  • Donate
The Baptist Paper
The Baptist Paper
  • SBC 2026
  • The Kids Edition
  • Trending
  • Sunday School Lessons
  • Classifieds
  • SBC 2026
  • The Kids Edition
  • Trending
  • Sunday School Lessons
  • Classifieds

Leadership and how to avoid the pendulum effect

Discussing some of my leadership shortcomings with a colleague reminded me of a common mistake often made during leadership transition.
  • November 9, 2023
  • Gateway Seminary
  • Church Life, Latest News
yellow and black swing chair
(Unsplash photo)

Leadership and how to avoid the pendulum effect

Discussing some of my leadership shortcomings with a colleague reminded me of a common mistake often made during leadership transition.

While trying to compensate or recover from the weaknesses of an outgoing leader, people overreact and choose a new leader who swings the organization too far in the other direction. This is called the pendulum effect — moving from one extreme to another, rather than correcting out-of-balance practices with healthier options.

Consider these examples. A church loses their pastor who was a strong preacher but not as gifted in relational skills. They shift their pastoral model from prophet to counselor, correcting the imbalance but perhaps creating new problems in the process. Or consider an intuitive worship leader who lacks solid organizational skills. Her replacement gets the program on schedule, but feels too regimented to those accustomed to a different leadership style. These examples illustrate the negative aspect of too much correction — the pendulum effect.

RELATED: Check out more stories on leadership, culture and ministry here.

This dynamic can also be observed in church or organizational design. For example, a church has bureaucratic decision-making so they streamline their governance by eliminating all committees and public decision-making meetings. Or a pastor had an overbearing elder board in his former church, so he demands a more hands-off approach in his new one. The pendulum effect can impact either individuals or organizations.

The opposite extreme, however, can also be problematic.

Searching for a new leader who is just like the departing one overlooks an opportunity for healthy change. No leader is perfect and every leader creates flawed organizations. When leadership change happens, the situation is ripe for healthy change — correcting mistakes of the past without over-correcting and creating unhealthy disruption. Failing to address organizational shortcomings resulting from past leadership weaknesses means needed correction — the resulting positive progress — never happens.

Finding ‘the sweet spot’

If you are a supervisor replacing a staff member, a search committee looking for a senior leader, or a present leader fine-tuning your organizational design, find the sweet spot of needed correction by choosing new people and processes who offset shortcomings and fix resulting organizational flaws — without swinging the pendulum too far in the opposite direction.

Leadership change and organizational adjustments are important inflection points which should lead to healthier function. Making needed adjustments, without the whiplash felt from the pendulum effect, is the optimal path to more balanced organizational function.


EDITOR’S NOTE — This story was written by Jeff Iorg and originally published by the Gateway.

Share with others:

Facebook
X/Twitter
LinkedIn
Email
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Email

Latest News

  • New slate of SBC officers elected in Orlando
    New slate of SBC officers elected in Orlando
    June 10, 2026/
    0 Comments
  • Messengers approve Mohler amendment in first of required two years
    Messengers approve Mohler amendment in first of required two years
    June 10, 2026/
    0 Comments
  • Couldn’t be in the room? Watch the Pastors Conference and SBC business session recordings
    Couldn’t be in the room? Watch the Pastors Conference and SBC business session recordings
    June 10, 2026/
    0 Comments

Sign up for the Highlights

Get all latest content delivered to your email a few times a month.
Email is required Email is not valid
Thanks for your subscription.
Failed to subscribe, please contact admin.

Related Posts

New slate of SBC officers elected in Orlando

Alabama’s Craig Carlisle was elected first vice president of the SBC in a runoff vote Wednesday morning (June 10). Don Currence was reelected registration secretary unopposed.

Messengers approve Mohler amendment in first of required two years

Mohler’s proposed constitutional amendment about pastoral qualifications passed after a short discussion and balloting at the SBC Annual Meeting in Orlando, Florida, June 10. 

Couldn’t be in the room? Watch the Pastors Conference and SBC business session recordings

If you couldn’t make it to Orlando, Florida, this week for the SBC Pastors Conference and Annual Meeting, you can view the recordings of the

Southern Baptists celebrate 63 newly commissioned IMB missionaries

From a grandfather returning to the mission field to a former atheist answering God’s call, 63 newly commissioned International Mission Board missionaries shared their testimonies during a Sending Celebration nestled in the opening session of the Southern Baptist Convention Annual Meeting on June 9.

Want to receive news highlights throughout the week? Sign up here!

Email is required Email is not valid
Thanks for your subscription.
Failed to subscribe, please contact admin.

About

  • Our Story
  • Our Team
  • Our Partners
  • Advertise and Promote
  • Classifieds
  • Contact us
  • Our Story
  • Our Team
  • Our Partners
  • Advertise and Promote
  • Classifieds
  • Contact us

Explore

  • The Kids Edition
  • State-specific news
  • Archive
  • Opinion pieces
  • Sunday School lessons
  • Persecuted Church
  • Podcasts
  • Videos
  • The Kids Edition
  • State-specific news
  • Archive
  • Opinion pieces
  • Sunday School lessons
  • Persecuted Church
  • Podcasts
  • Videos

Submissions

  • Story suggestions
  • Your Voice/Letter to the Editor
  • Photos / Videos
  • Corrections/other
  • Submission Policy
  • Story suggestions
  • Your Voice/Letter to the Editor
  • Photos / Videos
  • Corrections/other
  • Submission Policy

Subscribe

  • Subscribe
  • Renew subscription
  • Gift a subscription
  • Start a new member subscription
  • Start a new group subscription
  • Hosted Church
  • Manage your group
  • Manage your account
  • Request free trial
  • Subscribe
  • Renew subscription
  • Gift a subscription
  • Start a new member subscription
  • Start a new group subscription
  • Hosted Church
  • Manage your group
  • Manage your account
  • Request free trial
The Baptist Paper
Address:
3310 Independence Dr.
Birmingham, AL 35209
Copyright © 2026 TAB Media Group
  • Privacy/Terms of Use
  • Help
  • FAQ
  • Privacy/Terms of Use
  • Help
  • FAQ

Email:
news@thebaptistpaper.org

About

  • Our Team
  • Advertise and Promote
  • Classifieds
  • Donate
  • Contact us
  • Hosted Church
  • Our Team
  • Advertise and Promote
  • Classifieds
  • Donate
  • Contact us
  • Hosted Church

Explore

  • The Kids Edition
  • Latest News
  • Trending
  • Your State News
  • Persecuted Church
  • Editorials
  • Opinions
  • Podcasts
  • Videos
  • Archive
  • Submit your news
  • The Kids Edition
  • Latest News
  • Trending
  • Your State News
  • Persecuted Church
  • Editorials
  • Opinions
  • Podcasts
  • Videos
  • Archive
  • Submit your news

Subscribe

  • Manage your group
  • Manage your account
  • Subscribe
  • Manage your group
  • Manage your account
  • Subscribe

Our mission is to serve the Church through trustworthy journalism.

As a nonprofit Christian news ministry, we seek to provide grace-filled, trustworthy reporting from a Christian worldview while keeping our content freely accessible online.

Support from readers and ministry partners allows us to continue equipping churches, informing individuals, and providing ministry resources at affordable rates. Would you prayerfully consider supporting this work?

Support Our Ministry

Log Out?

Lost your password?

Log In

Lost your password?

Log in

Become a part of our community!
Forgot your password? Get help
Privacy/Terms of Use

Reset password

Recover your password
A password reset link will be e-mailed to you.
Privacy/Terms of Use
Back to
Login
×
Close Panel