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How Pastors Find Strength When They Feel Empty

May 29, 2026
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You can love the Lord, love His people, and still feel dangerously thin. That quiet burnout doesn’t always show up in your calendar or your sermon outlines, but it shows up in your soul, and many pastors and church leaders know it well. I’m Dr. Timothy Mann, and this message is for the shepherd who is carrying real weight while trying to stay faithful.

We start where strength actually begins: not in personality, routine, or raw discipline, but in dependence on God. From Isaiah 40:29–31, we hear a promise that cuts through shame and posturing: the Lord gives power to the weak and renews strength for those who wait on Him. Then we turn to 1 Peter 5 to remember a freeing truth that steadies anxious leaders: the flock is God’s flock, not ours. There is a difference between carrying responsibility and trying to carry sovereignty, and confusing the two is a fast path to discouragement and exhaustion.

From 2 Corinthians, Paul shows us that God’s design is not “impressive leaders with flawless energy,” but fragile earthen vessels carrying a glorious treasure so the excellence of the power is clearly of God. And when weakness feels unavoidable, 2 Corinthians 12:9 brings the kind of comfort that is actually strong: Christ’s grace is sufficient, and His strength is made perfect in weakness. Along the way, we offer a sober warning about the hidden life, a clear call to guard your soul, and practical counsel for ministry fatigue, pastoral burnout, and sustained faithfulness.

If you’re tired, don’t settle for techniques that ignore your heart. Come back to Christ, preach the gospel to yourself, and let the Shepherd restore your soul. Subscribe for more biblical teaching, share this with a weary leader, and leave a review so more shepherds can find real help.

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Guest (Male): Welcome to Foundations of Truth, the biblical teaching ministry of Dr. Timothy Mann. Our mission is to help you build your life on the unshaken foundation of God’s Word. Rooted in Scripture, anchored in the grace of the gospel of Jesus Christ.

Dr. Timothy Mann: Well, welcome to Foundations of Truth. I’m so glad you’re here today. Now, if you’ve been with us for a while, you know that most of what we do on this program is expository preaching. We open the Bible, we work through a passage, and we let the text do the talking. That is my conviction, and that is not changing.

But I do believe that we need to do something a little different from time to time. And I want to take just a moment to tell you why. Across evangelical churches right now, there are some significant conversations happening—conversations about grace and holiness, about biblical counseling, about the health of the local church, about what it means to be a man, a man of God, about the pastoral office, about worship, and about how we sustain faithful ministry in a season when the numbers are not always encouraging.

And there are so many other issues. These are not fringe issues. They’re showing up in pulpits, in small groups, in pastors’ studies, and in the lives of ordinary believers trying to follow Jesus in a very complicated moment. I believe it is right for us to speak directly to those conversations. So settle in, grab your Bible if you have it nearby, and we’ll spend the next few minutes thinking together about the things that matter most. We’re just getting started.

I want to speak today to pastors, ministry leaders, elders, Sunday school teachers, and really to every faithful servant of Christ who knows what it is to feel tired in the work. I’m talking about strength for shepherds today because there is a kind of weariness that only shepherds understand. It’s not just physical tiredness; it is deeper than that.

It is the weight of loving people, praying for people, teaching people, grieving over people, warning people, and sometimes being misunderstood by the very people you’re trying to help. It is the burden of wanting to be faithful to Jesus while feeling your own weakness every step of the way. So if you are serving the Lord and your heart is heavy, this is for you.

If you are pouring out and wondering how much more you have left to give, this is for you. If you are trying to lead your family, your church, your class, your small group, or your ministry with sincerity but you feel thin, this is for you. God never calls His shepherds to serve in their own strength. He calls us to serve in dependence on Him.

That matters because many of us know how to keep going outwardly while running empty inwardly. We know how to stand up and preach or teach. We know how to lead the meeting. We know how to answer the text, make the visit, finish the lesson, and show up again on Sunday. But sometimes underneath all of that, our soul is tired. The good news is that the Lord who called you is the Lord who sustains you.

I want to remind you that the shepherd’s strength does not begin within himself. Listen to Isaiah chapter 40, verses 29 through 31. Maybe get your Bible and open it up, or open your Bible app and turn to Isaiah chapter 40, verse 29 through 31 in the New King James Version. Look at it as I read it.

The Bible says, "He gives power to the weak, and to those who have no might He increases strength. Even the youths shall faint and be weary, and the young men shall utterly fall. But those who wait on the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings like eagles, they shall run and not be weary, they shall walk and not faint."

That is not a scripture for inspirational posters alone. That is a lifeline for weary servants. I want you to notice who receives strength. It is not the self-sufficient. It is not the proud. It is not the man who thinks he has it under control. The Bible says the Lord gives power to the weak. He increases strength to those who have no might.

Your weakness is not the end of usefulness. In the hands of God, weakness becomes the place where His grace is displayed most clearly. I know that some of us have been trained to hide weakness. We think that strength means projecting confidence at all times. We think maturity means never feeling strained. We think leadership means acting unshaken, no matter what is going on inside.

But Scripture does not teach us to pretend. Scripture teaches us to depend. The Lord does not ask you to be the source. He asks you to stay near the source. I believe that is one of the great dangers in ministry. You can get so busy speaking for God that you begin neglecting fellowship with God. You can get so consumed with serving others that you stop feeding your own soul.

You can start giving out truths that you have not freshly enjoyed for yourself. You can speak about grace while forgetting how deeply you still need God's grace yourself. So let me ask you plainly: are you drawing strength from Christ, or are you trying to manufacture it from discipline, your personality, or routine?

Discipline matters, absolutely. Routine matters; that's a good thing. Faithfulness matters; it's so very important. But none of those things can replace communion with the living Christ. Shepherding is glorious, but it is costly. First Peter chapter 5, verses 2 through 4 says:

"Shepherd the flock of God which is among you, serving as overseers, not by compulsion but willingly, not for dishonest gain but eagerly; not as being lords over those entrusted to you, but being examples to the flock; and when the Chief Shepherd appears, you will receive the crown of glory that does not fade away."

That passage reminds us of both the calling and the cost. You are called to shepherd the flock of God. Not your flock, His flock. That means ministry is holy work. It also means the burden is not ultimately yours to carry as if the church belongs to you. We need to be careful about saying my church, my deacons, my trustees, or my Sunday school teachers.

We should be very careful about that. In fact, maybe just take it out of your vocabulary altogether because the church doesn't belong to you. Christ purchased the church with His own blood. Christ loves His people more than you do. Christ is building His church. Christ is the Chief Shepherd. That truth steadies a shepherd's heart.

If you forget that Christ is the Chief Shepherd, you know what will happen? You will start acting like everything rises and falls on you. Do you know how I know? I've done it before. When that happens, anxiety grows. Fear grows. Pride grows. Discouragement grows. And eventually, exhaustion grows.

There is a difference between carrying responsibility and trying to carry sovereignty. One is your calling, the other is not. You are called to be faithful; you are not called to be Christ. You are called to shepherd; you are not called to be the Savior. You are called to labor; you are not called to control outcomes.

That truth is freeing—deeply freeing. Yes, a shepherd must work hard, he must pray, he must teach sound doctrine, he must confront error, he must lead with courage, and he must love people enough to tell them the truth. But after doing all of that, he must still rest in this: God gives the growth.

I was thinking about the Apostle Paul. The Apostle Paul knew what it was to be weak. I love how honest Paul is in Second Corinthians. I just recently completed a study of Second Corinthians, and it really amazed me. He does not write like a man trying to project an image. In fact, he writes like a man who has been crushed, helped, sustained, and humbled by the grace of God.

Second Corinthians 4:7 says: "But we have this treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellence of the power may be of God and not of us." That is shepherd ministry right there. The treasure is glorious; the vessel is fragile. The gospel is powerful; the preacher is weak. The message is eternal; the messenger is dust.

That is not a flaw in God’s design. In fact, that is part of His design. Why? So that the power would clearly be of God and not of us. So, pastor, leader, servant of Christ, you do not need to be impressive to be useful. You need to be faithful. You need to be yielded. You need to be clean in heart to the best of your ability, honest before God, and dependent on the Holy Spirit.

Later in Second Corinthians, Paul speaks about what he called a thorn in the flesh and a messenger of Satan sent to buffet him. He wanted the Lord to take that away from him, and he prayed three times that God would do it. Ultimately, this is what God said: "My grace is sufficient for you, for My strength is made perfect in weakness."

Therefore, most gladly I will rather boast in my infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest upon me. That is not natural. Our flesh wants strength without weakness, fruitfulness without struggle, influence without pain, and leadership without tears. But God often deepens shepherds through the very things that we would have chosen to avoid.

There are lessons that you only learn in pressure. There are depths of prayer you only discover in need. There are comforts from Christ that you only know in suffering. There are truths about grace that move from theory to reality when you are emptied of self-reliance. Sometimes the Lord allows the shepherd to feel his weakness so that he will stop leaning on his gifts and start leaning on his God.

Shepherds need both conviction and comfort. A shepherd cannot lead without conviction. He must know what he believes. He must stand on the Word of God. He must not bend with every pressure or shift with every mood in the culture. He must preach truth when it is welcomed and when it is resisted.

He must be willing to say the hard things with a broken heart and a clear conscience. But shepherds also need comfort. Not flattery, not ego stroking, and not a platform. Real comfort. That comfort comes from God Himself. Second Corinthians chapter 1 says: "Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercies and God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our tribulation, so that we may be able to comfort those who are in any trouble."

Do not miss that. The God who sends shepherds also comforts shepherds. He is not only the God of truth; He is the God of all comfort. He knows the private burdens no one else sees. He knows the criticism that cut deeper than you let on. He knows the prayer requests that stayed on your heart all night.

He knows the family concerns that you carry while still trying to minister publicly. He knows the sermons that are preached through tears. He knows the strain of trying to stay tender and gentle in a very hard world. He knows, and He comforts His servants. There is something powerful about remembering that before you ever comfort others in Christ, you are yourself a man in need of Christ's comfort.

The shepherd is still a sheep. The undershepherd is still dependent on the Chief Shepherd. You cannot neglect your soul and lead well for very long. I think this is where some of us need a loving warning. You cannot give what you are not receiving. You cannot starve your soul all week and expect to have strength for shepherding.

You cannot substitute sermon preparation for prayer. You cannot substitute ministry activity for fellowship with God. You can't run on adrenaline and call it anointing. You cannot ignore your wife, neglect your children, live hurried and distracted, and expect that to not touch your ministry. The hidden life matters. The inner man matters.

Paul told Timothy in First Timothy 4:16: "Take heed to yourself and to this doctrine. Continue in them, for in doing this you will save both yourself and those who hear you." So take heed to yourself. Not just your outlines, not just your calendar, and not just your visible ministry—yourself. That means guarding your walk with God.

That means guarding your thought life, your motives, your humility, your marriage, your purity, and your joy in Christ. There is no strength for shepherding without nearness to the Shepherd. Christ is the model and the source for every shepherd. When we talk about strength for shepherds, we have to talk about Jesus.

He is not merely an example to admire; He is the living Savior who strengthens His servants. In Matthew chapter 9, Jesus saw the multitudes and He was moved with compassion for them because they were weary and scattered, like sheep having no shepherd. His heart was not cold; it was full of compassion.

In John chapter 10, He reveals Himself as the Good Shepherd who lays down His life for the sheep. In Hebrews chapter 13, He's called the Great Shepherd of the sheep. And in First Peter chapter 5, He is the Chief Shepherd. Everything good in shepherding is found perfectly in Him.

His compassion never ran dry. His courage never failed. His truth was never compromised. His love never wavered. His obedience was complete. And ultimately, He laid down His life for the sheep. That's the heart of the gospel. The Greatest Shepherd did not come merely to instruct wandering sheep; He came to save them.

He came to bear our sin and take the judgment that we deserved. He came to rise again in victory so that all who trust in Him would be forgiven, reconciled, and kept forever. That means the shepherd himself is saved the same way everybody else is saved. Not by ministry, not by effort, and not by being useful, but by grace alone through faith in Christ alone.

That is a needed reminder because sometimes a ministry can slowly begin to draw a man’s identity from what he does for Jesus more than what Jesus has done for him. Your hope and my hope is not that you serve Christ. Your deepest hope is that Christ died and rose for you.

Your standing with God is not built on the quality of your ministry, but on the finished righteousness of Jesus Christ. When that truth settles into your heart again, strength will begin to rise. Not the strength of flesh, but the strength of settled grace in your heart. Sometimes strength looks quieter than we think.

We often think strength means a lot of visible momentum, big days, full schedules, and constant energy. But often biblical strength looks quieter than that. Sometimes strength is simply staying faithful. Sometimes strength is praying when you feel dry. Sometimes strength is opening the Bible again when your heart feels heavy.

Sometimes strength is just refusing to grow bitter. Sometimes strength is telling the truth kindly when compromise would be easier. Sometimes strength is repenting quickly. Sometimes strength is resting without guilt because you know you are not the Messiah. Sometimes strength is getting up on an ordinary day and loving your people one more time.

Galatians chapter 6, verse 9 says: "And let us not grow weary while doing good, for in due season we shall reap if we do not lose heart." That verse does not deny weakness or weariness. It actually acknowledges it, but it calls us to not lose heart because God sees and He knows. God works.

In due season, there is reaping. It is not always on your timetable or in the way you expected, but it is never in vain. First Corinthians 15:58 says: "Therefore, my beloved brethren, be steadfast, immovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, knowing that your labor is not in vain in the Lord."

That hospital visit was not in vain. That quiet counseling session was not in vain. That sermon preached to a distracted room was not in vain. That prayer that was offered in secret was not in vain. That tear that was shed over someone's soul was not in vain. That act of faithfulness that no one applauded was not in vain.

Let me give you just a few practical exhortations before we wrap up. First, go back to the Lord before you go back to the work. Do not just ask what do I need to get done; ask yourself how is my soul before God. Open His Word and pray honestly. Stop performing. Just sit before the Lord. Be still long enough to remember that you belong to Him before you serve Him.

Second, remember that faithfulness is the goal, not self-importance. I think every shepherd struggles with this. A shepherd can slowly begin to believe that he must be everywhere, solve everything, and carry everything. That's not humility. Sometimes that's pride. Christ is the Savior; you are the servant. Be faithful in your assignment and leave to God what belongs to God.

Third, let suffering deepen you, not harden you. Every shepherd gets wounded somewhere along the way. If you stay in ministry, you will experience disappointment. Do not let pain make you cold. Let it drive you nearer to Christ. Let it make you gentler, wiser, humbler, and more prayerful.

Fourth, guard your private life fiercely because what you are alone matters. What you feed your mind with matters. Whether you walk with God when no one else is around matters. Public ministry can hide private drift for a while, but not forever.

Fifth, preach the gospel to yourself. You are not justified by your strong weeks, and you're not condemned by every imperfect moment of service. Christ is enough. His blood is enough. His righteousness is enough. And His grace is enough. I want to give a word to the shepherd who feels very near empty.

I've been there, and maybe that is where you are right now. You love the Lord, you love the truth, and you love His people, but you are tired. Hear this clearly: the answer is not to run ahead harder in the flesh. The answer is to come again to Christ. Come to Him with your fatigue, your disappointment, your fears, your weakness, and your sin.

Come with the pressure you’ve been carrying and remember that the Lord is gentle and lowly in heart. Remember that His grace is sufficient. Remember that He does not break bruised reeds. Remember that He restores souls. We often read Psalm 23 at funerals, but it's for shepherds too.

The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want. He makes me to lie down in green pastures. He leads me beside the still waters. He restores my soul. Not my image, not just my schedule, but my soul. Maybe that is what some of us need most right now. Not a new method or a better system, but our souls restored by the Shepherd of our souls.

Strength for shepherds is not found in pretending you're strong. It's found in knowing where strength comes from. It is found in waiting on the Lord, drawing near to Christ, remembering the gospel, and embracing dependence. It's found in serving under the care of the Chief Shepherd.

One day, every faithful undershepherd will see Him. The Chief Shepherd will appear and the labor will be over. The strain will be gone, the wounds of the journey will give way to joy, and every act of hidden faithfulness done for Christ will be seen in the light of His presence. Until then, stay near Jesus.

Guest (Male): If today’s message has encouraged you, we invite you to visit us online at firm-foundations.org. There you can listen to additional broadcasts, learn more about the ministry, and support Foundations of Truth financially. Join us next time as Dr. Timothy Mann continues the series, "Saved: Understanding God’s Work in Us." Until then, may you rest in the faithfulness of the Good Shepherd who knows His sheep, calls them by name, and holds them securely forever.

This transcript is provided as a written companion to the original message and may contain inaccuracies or transcription errors. For complete context and clarity, please refer to the original audio recording. Time-sensitive references or promotional details may be outdated. This material is intended for personal use and informational purposes only.

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About Foundations of Truth

This is Foundations of Truth, the podcast of Firm Foundations Ministries. Our mission is to help you build your life on the unshakable foundation of God’s Word, rooted in Scripture and anchored in the grace of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Each episode is designed to strengthen your faith and encourage you to stand firm in a shifting world.

About Dr. Timothy Mann

Dr Timothy Mann is the founder of Firm Foundations Ministries. Pastor Tim grew up in Western North Carolina and became a follower of Jesus as a teenager. While serving in the U.S. Army, he responded to God’s call on his life to preach the Gospel and left military service to begin pastoring in a local church.


Pastor Tim is the founding Pastor of Providence Church and has pastored churches in Missouri, North Carolina, and Florida. He attended Southwest Baptist University in Bolivar, Missouri; Luther Rice Seminary in Atlanta, Georgia; and Anderson University in Anderson, South Carolina. He has a Bachelor of Arts in Religion, a Master of Arts in Christian Studies, a Master of Divinity, and a Doctor of Ministry degree in Biblical Preaching. He is a member of the Evangelical Homiletics Society, and his philosophy of ministry is centered upon being used by God to help others become committed and mature followers of Jesus and leading the church to glorify God through fulfilling the Great Commission that Christ gave his followers. What he loves most about ministry is when others understand God’s Word and grace and love Him more fully.


Pastor Tim and his wife, Patty, have been married 30+ years, and they have two adult children and one grandson.



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