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There Are Times To Push Hard And Times To Coast

What You’ll Learn:

  • How to recognize push seasons vs. coasting seasons in ministry
  • Ways to recover after high-intensity church moments
  • Why Sabbath and strategic downtime protect long-term zeal
  • How to empower your team so everything doesn’t hinge on you
  • How to lead for longevity instead of burnout

Most worship leaders live with the gas pedal down. Christmas. Easter. Fall kickoff. Big conferences. Special weekends. The calendar rarely slows. But here’s the tension: Scripture calls for spiritual fervor, not perpetual exhaustion. There is a difference.

This article reframes Romans 12:11 in a way that might save a ministry career. Keeping zeal doesn’t mean constant acceleration. It means understanding rhythm. There are seasons to push hard. And there are seasons to coast.

Big church moments demand focus and intensity. That’s normal. But wisdom says to simplify afterward. Choose easier sets. Trim complexity. Take the Monday off. Protect recovery like it matters—because it does.

The piece also highlights predictable push seasons like recruiting, reorganizing, or major church projects. Instead of feeling ambushed by them, plan for them. Hit the gas intentionally. Then intentionally ease off.

And here’s the leadership gut-check: maybe the reason everything feels overwhelming is because everything runs through one person. Empower others. Give trusted leaders the green light. Let the church grow beyond one bottleneck.

There’s also a loving nudge toward family and team health. High-capacity leaders often love running at full speed. But those around them may not. Coasting can be a gift to spouses, kids, and volunteers.

This isn’t permission to drift into maintenance mode. It’s a strategy for staying in the game long-term. Push when it’s time. Coast when it’s wise. And lead in a way that lasts.

Read the full article.

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Taylor Brantley

Taylor Brantley

Taylor Brantley has three passions in life: God, people, and writing (with an honorary mention to food and fitness). Taylor was raised in a Christian homeschool environment, which encouraged a freedom to be who God made him and resulted in an interest in storytelling and writing.

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