Here is a excellent post by Paul David Tripp. This post will be useful for pastors to read as well as those who truly love their pastor and desire for him to be the pastor God has called him to be. I believe he hits the "nail on the head" when it comes to pastors setting themselves up for unrealistic expectations. Happy reading!
The Depressed Pastor: The Setup
I  was there the week it happened. His wife asked to see me. Tearfully she  told me that he'd walked into the church building that week and  announced to his staff that he was "done." He said he couldn't face  preaching another sermon; that all that he really wanted to do was to  run away from his own life. Sam was forty-five and the pastor of a  vibrant and growing church. I am convinced that there are important  changes needed in pastoral culture, and that the number of pastors who  find themselves in that range from discouraged to depressed gives clear  evidence.
Let me suggest four potential setups of this discouragement/depression cycle.
1.  Unrealistic Expectations.  I taught a class at Westminster Seminary on pastoral care and I was  alarmed year after year of how unrealistic the expectations of my  future-pastor students were. Year after year my students seemed to  forget the two things that consistently make pastoral ministry hard.   What are they? The harsh reality of life in a dramatically broken world  and what remaining sin does to the hearts of all of us. These two things  make pastoral ministry a day by day spiritual war. But there’s another  area of unrealistic expectations. It’s the congregation's unrealistic  expectation of the pastor. Churches forget that they've called a person  who's a man in the midst of his own sanctification. This tends to drive  the pastor into hiding, afraid to confess whats true of him and everyone  to whom he ministers. There's a direct connection between unrealistic  expectations and deepening cycles of disappointment.
2.  Family Tensions.  There's often a significant gulf between the public persona of the  ministry family and the realities of the day by day struggles in their  home. We almost assume that the pastor will feel regularly torn between  ministry and family and will often be forced to make "the lesser of two  evils" choices. Yet this tension isn't a major theme in the Pastoral  Epistles. Could it be that we're asking too much of our pastors? Could  it be that, as pastors, we're seeking to get things out of ministry that  we shouldn’t get and therefore make choices that potentially harm our  families? This tension between family and ministry robs pastoral  ministry of its joy and it’s seemingly insurmountability is a sure set  up for depression.
3.  Fear of Man.  The very public nature of pastoral ministry makes it fertile soil for  this temptation. I know what it's like to be all too aware of the  critical person's responses to me as I’m preaching on a Sunday morning. I  also know the temptation of thinking of what would win that person as  I'm preparing the sermon! Fear of man is actually asking people to give  you what only God can deliver. It’s rooted in a Gospel amnesia that  causes me to seek again and again for what I’ve already been given in  Christ. This tends to cause me to watch for and care too much about the  reactions of others, and because I do this, to feel that I get way more  criticism than I deserve. Each new duty begins to be viewed as another  forum for the criticism of others and with this, the emotional life of  the pastor begins to spiral downward.
4.  Kingdom Confusion.  It’s very tempting for the pastor to do his work in pursuit of glories  other than the glory of God, and for purposes other than the purposes of  God's kingdom. Personal acclaim and reputation, power and control,  comfort and appreciation and ministry success are the subtle little  kingdom idols that greet every pastor. Yet in pastoral ministry, the  kingdom of self is a costume kingdom. It does a great job of  masquerading as the kingdom of God because the way you seek to build the  kingdom of self in ministry is by doing ministry!
The reality  is that the God who the pastor serves has no allegiance whatsoever to  the pastor's little kingdom of self.  In fact I’m persuaded that much of  the ministry opposition that we attribute to the enemy is actually God  getting in the way of the little kingdom intentions of the pastor.  It’s  God, in grace, rescuing the pastor from himself. So as the pastor wants  recognition, his Lord wants Gospel transformation. As God is calling  the pastor to spiritual war, what the pastor wants is to be liked. As  the pastor is wanting just a little bit of control, God is demonstrating  that he’s in control. It's discouraging and exhausting to be serving  God, yet not be on God's agenda page. This kingdom confusion robs the  pastor of the deep sense of privilege that should motivate the service  of every pastor. My pastor friend said it well to his wife, "I just want  to go somewhere where life is easy!"
Depression in the pastor  may be set up by the culture that surrounds him, but it’s a disease of  the heart, and for that we have the presence, promises, and provisions  of the Savior. Pastor, he’s in you and with you and for you. No one  cares more about the use of your gifts than the Giver. No one cares more  about your suffering than the One who suffered for you. And no one  shoulders the burden of the church like the One who is the Head of the  church and who gave himself up for it. In your despondency, don't run  from him, run to him. Jesus really does offer you the hope and healing  that you can find no where else.
 
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