Wednesday, March 18, 2026
Antagonists book
Church AntagonistsCan't Live With Them, Can Live Without Them
By Kenneth C. Haugk
Over 1,000 people had crowded into the sanctuary of a California church to celebrate Pastor Smith's installation. He had successfully served a congregation in Oklahoma for 15 years and was looking forward to the opportunities and challenges of his new pastorate.
Early in his ministry in Oklahoma, Pastor Smith had weathered a vicious attack from an antagonist. Fortunately, the situation had been handled with a limited amount of damage, the antagonist had left the congregation, and the congregation had thrived during the remainder of his years there.
Life is good, the pastor thought as he entered the fellowship hall for a reception after the service. He gazed over the crowd gathered for the festivities. That's when he saw them. The Oklahoma antagonist and his wife had traveled 1,500 miles to attend the installation and sow discrediting rumors about him.
Antagonism is a painful reality in many congregations. It leaves in its wake broken lives and people who are hurt, discouraged, and apathetic toward their new life in Christ. Words can hardly express the tragedy of antagonism in the church. A broken world ought to be able to echo the words of Tertullian, "See how they love one another." Instead, the scenes played out in public lead people to say, "They fight more than the rest of us put together."
Many church members — even pastors — find it hard to believe there are people in their congregation who wantonly, selfishly, and destructively attack others. These attacks can mean repeated disruption of boards, committees, even the ministry of the entire congregation.
We must not confuse antagonism with mere criticism or healthy conflict. People sometimes used the word antagonists to describe those on different sides in an argument. For healthy conflict the church would do well to adopt the terminology of the British Parliament, calling those with differing opinions the honorable opposition. This is not the intended use of antagonism in this article. Antagonism is unhealthy conflict, and antagonists are not honorable people.
If you already have someone in mind you think might qualify as an antagonist, ask yourself:
- Is this person's behavior divisive?
- Is the attack irrational?
- Does the person go out of the way to initiate trouble?
- Are the person's demands insatiable?
- Are the concerns upon which he bases the attack minimal or fabricated?
- Does the person avoid causes that involve personal risk, suffering, or sacrifice?
- Does his motivation appear selfish?
If you answered yes to several of these questions, you have enough evidence to suggest you have an antagonist on your hands, and you need to take a closer look.
Who Are Antagonists?
Antagonists are not just misguided and misunderstood people. They are out to hurt others, and they do. Sooner or later most individuals and congregations encounter antagonists. In addition to churches, they turn up at school board meetings and in health-care settings. You find them among parents at Little League games or band booster associations. They disrupt neighborhood associations, fraternities and sororities, as well as volunteer organizations. In short, they can be anywhere.
Antagonists, although few in number, have the potential for disproportionately disrupting or destroying the ministry of any congregation, as well as the peace of mind and well-being of everyone in the congregation.
The word antagonists is defined and used throughout this article in this way: Antagonists are individuals who, on the basis of nonsubstantive evidence, go out of their wayto make insatiable demands,usually attacking the person or performance of others. These attacks areselfish in nature, tearing down rather than building up, and are frequently directed against those in leadership.
Some key phrases in this definition deserve closer attention.
Nonsubstantive evidence
The arguments that antagonists present are typically founded on little — or grossly misrepresented — evidence. They tend to quibble over trifles, providing strong proof of irrelevant points, or exaggerate the positions of their opponents. A favorite tactic is to make an assertion that cannot be disproved and then claim that the inability to disprove it makes it true.
Go out of their way
Antagonists initiate trouble; they do not wait for trouble to come along. This often goes hand-in-hand with hypersensitivity on their part. They tend to take every word and action as a personal attack and respond aggressively. For example, their response to something seemingly as minor as your being preoccupied and passing them in the hallway without speaking could result in an attack. Antagonists would rather cause trouble than give anyone the benefit of the doubt.
Insatiable demands
Antagonists are never satisfied. No amount of appeasement on your part or the congregation as a whole will suffice. Instead of calming antagonists, attempts to placate them only encourage them to make more demands. Many antagonists fight until there is nothing left but rubble. Sometimes even that doesn't stop them.
Attacking
Harsh as the word attacking is, it accurately applies to antagonists. Although they may present some valid points, antagonists generally don't offer constructive criticism. Their implicit goal is control, no matter what it costs others.
Selfish in nature
The attacks of antagonists are self-serving. They often seize on a slogan or pick some side of a valid issue and pretend that is what they are fighting for. It rarely is. An antagonist will quickly drop a particular slogan or issue once it no longer serves his ambitions.
Tearing down rather than building up
When people are at odds with each other, it is the result of an antagonist's actions. Instead of pulling God's people together, an antagonist divides them. Show me a divided and strife-torn congregation, and I will show you a congregation that has one or more antagonists in its midst.
At times most of us are selfish or headstrong. Without excusing such behavior, we can be sure that occasional surly behavior does not make an antagonist. What separates us from antagonists is the ferociousness of the attacks and the insatiable or tenacious quality that drags out problems interminably.
Why Does Antagonism Happen In Congregations?
Antagonists surface in congregations because of their own natures, the support they receive from others, and the structure of congregations.
The nature of antagonists
Antagonists exist in the church because they exist everywhere. If they were not antagonistic in your congregation, they would be antagonistic at another church, at work, at the PTA, or any place they frequent. They are antagonistic by nature. Antagonism is part of their psychological makeup; it's part of their personality. (See sidebar Types of Antagonists.)
Support from others
Antagonists tend to attract followers because most people have a tendency to follow powerful leaders. But those who actively support antagonists allow this tendency to blind them. The assistance of these followers accounts in part for the escalation of antagonistic conflict in congregations from teapot tempests to the level of devastating typhoons.
The structure of congregations
For too long, antagonists have operated successfully in congregations. They find that their risks in a congregation are relatively small with few repercussions because people don't believe they have the right to stop them. Many Christians believe they are to love one another at all costs, to live peaceably with each other, and not to confront another Christian.
Because congregations are often relatively small, antagonists also find them ideal places to gain the attention they crave. In the small and friendly fishbowl of a congregation, antagonists more easily fill their need for attention — the need to be a big fish.
Antagonists often flourish in congregations because church is where issues are openly prayed about, preached about, studied, and discussed. Tensions over doctrinal points and practical issues can be healthy and will be part of church life until Christ returns. However, when an antagonist takes hold of such issues, the result is often destructive and divisive.
Since we are all human, won't there always be conflict in congregations? The simple answer is yes. On a values scale, conflict is neutral. It can be good or bad, healthy or unhealthy, creative or destructive. Antagonism makes up only a small percentage of the wide range of conflict that exists in congregations. But recent literature in the area of conflict resolution recognizes that there are individuals who initiate and thrive on unhealthy conflict, persons who have no desire whatsoever to see conflict resolved. These are true antagonists.
What Does The Bible Say About Antagonists?
Antagonists are not a new phenomenon, a development in the church of the last few decades. The Bible speaks straightforwardly about their existence and motivations, their effects, and the necessary treatment.
Causes of antagonism
"For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms" (Ephesians 6:12).
Types Of Antagonists
Hard-core antagonists are seriously disturbed — often paranoid — individuals who are out of touch with reality. They tend to have incredible tenacity and an unbelievable desire to make trouble. The apostle Paul may have had them in mind when he warned the leaders of the congregation at Ephesus: "Keep watch over yourselves and all the flock of which the Holy Spirit has made you overseers. … I know that after I leave, savage wolves will come in among you and will not spare the flock" (Acts 20:28,29).
Major antagonists have a character or personality disorder but are not as severely disturbed as hard-core antagonists, although they may at times exhibit similar behaviors. They carry a great deal of hostility, coupled with an overwhelming drive for power.
Moderate antagonists can be distinguished from the others in two ways. First, they lack the self-starting quality of the others. An opportunity must be more closely available to a moderate antagonist before he becomes actively antagonistic. Second, they lack the tenacity of hard-core and major antagonists. However, they do make good followers of hard-core or major antagonists.
—Kenneth C. Haugk, Ph.D., St. Louis, Missouri
The spiritual forces that stand in rebellion against God and God's claim on people lie behind — indeed, precipitate — the behavior of antagonists. Antagonists play into the hands of forces that are intent on destroying the healing and caring mission of the church. The fruit of the Spirit (Galatians 5:22,23) ought to characterize the life of a Christian community. But antagonists sow seeds of bitterness, anger, and hatred. The tragedy is that not only are the antagonists in the grip of evil forces, they also enjoy it. Because an antagonist refuses to participate in church life as a repentant and forgiven sinner but insists on the way of hatred and strife, his presence means trouble for a congregation.
Effects of antagonism on the church
"By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another" (John 13:35).
When arguing and antagonism wrack a congregation, its witness to the God of love is destroyed. Antagonists choose not to live out the love of Christ. Strife is introduced in love's place, and with strife goes jealousy and anger. The primary effect of antagonism on God's people is destruction. Visible expressions of the unconditional love of Christ are among the first casualties of active antagonism. Antagonism destroys the unique, loving witness of Christians and the vitality of the congregation, calling forth God's anger.
Treatment for antagonism
"I urge you, brothers, to watch out for those who cause divisions and put obstacles in your way that are contrary to the teaching you have learned. Keep away from them" (Romans 16:17).
This is always the first step toward dealing with antagonism: watch out for it, be aware of it. The apostle Paul did not leave to his readers' imaginations whom they were to watch. They were to watch for those who created dissension and caused divisions.
The Bible speaks definitively about the final treatment for those who persist in causing division and heartache in the church: "Warn a divisive person once, and then warn him a second time. After that, have nothing to do with him. You may be sure that such a man is warped and sinful; he is self-condemned" (Titus 3:10,11).
Dismissing someone should not be done lightly. But the wordshave nothing to do with him are a clear-cut response to an individual who persists in divisiveness after the first and second warnings. Paul told Titus not to engage in extensive attempts to smooth things over with the troublemaker; he was simply to avoid having anything to do with that person.
The apostolic guideline is clear: When confronted with an antagonist, face the probability that change simply will not occur. He is "self-condemned." Stay away from that person.
How Can I Recognize An Antagonist?
Most antagonists will come at you proudly waving red flags. Chapter 8 in my book, Antagonists in the Church: How To Identify and Deal With Destructive Conflict, describes 20 red flags that announce the presence of an antagonist. Even one of these red flags should signal the pastor to be alert. Here are a few of the most significant red flags.
Previous track record flag
Some antagonists will wave a red flag announcing: "See how antagonistically I behaved before." If you discover that person in your congregation has attacked one or more pastors or other people in the past, watch out. It is sometimes tempting to think you will be immune to attack because you try to be a good pastor. This is dangerous thinking. Antagonists do not exempt good pastors from their attacks.
Parallel track record flag
Individuals who behave antagonistically in other arenas — civic gatherings or the workplace — are prime candidates for becoming active antagonists in the church. They may even gloat about their antagonistic behaviors. You might expect these people to keep quiet about their involvement in destructive conflict, but they often do not. Because of their grandiose natures, they are often convinced that no one could possibly disagree with them.
"Nameless others" flag
Be alert if someone criticizes you and couples the criticism with "and others agree with me about this." Those who are not antagonists don't need to talk about others who feel the same way; they simply express their own thoughts and feelings. To test it out, ask who the others are. If the person lists a few names, you probably are not facing an antagonist. On the other hand, an antagonist is more likely to answer: "I can't tell you. They came to me in the strictest of confidence."
Predecessor-downer flag
Steer clear of the person who cozies up to you with inside information about how worthless or ineffectual your predecessor was. If he flatters you while criticizing your predecessor, be wary. He is waving a scarlet flag.
Church-hopper flag
Keep an eye on someone who consistently moves from one congregation to another. Any reasonable person tries out several churches before settling on one. But someone who moves from church to church — and never has anything good to say about other congregations — is not looking for the church that best matches his beliefs and practices. Watch out.
Flashing $$$ flag
Anyone who conspicuously uses money to draw attention to himself has a better-than-average chance of being an antagonist. Churches are ideal places for antagonists to demonstrate this characteristic. An antagonist is likely to make a special contribution to a particular program, and he will be sure his contribution is visible to all. As a church leader, you might be tempted to disregard the flashing $$$ flag. The need is always great. But be careful not to sell out for money. The long-term costs are too great.
Avoid making snap judgments about people, but remember that for the sake of the congregation and God's mission and ministry, discernment is necessary. People who wave these red flags merit close scrutiny. After some consideration, you may relax, or you may decide to pay closer attention.
What Are The Warning Signs Of An Imminent Attack?
Just as antagonists reveal themselves by their red flags, they also exhibit warning signs that telegraph their intentions to begin an attack.
Early warning signs
By being alert to the early signals of an antagonist's attack, you can minimize potential damage by dealing effectively with the person before major problems erupt.
A chill in the relationship. When a person who has been exhibiting red flags changes his manner of relating to you, beware. An icy coldness or blatant rudeness, especially in group situations, is often an initial sign of an antagonistic attack.
Honeyed concerns. As an antagonist begins activity, he might pay you a visit or send you a letter of concern. Consider the visit or letter as only the opening volley. More will follow — how much more depends on your response to these initial moves.
Nettlesome questions. A red flag might begin by asking a number of picky questions, checking out details like, "Where do we buy our computer paper?" or "How many times did the board meet last year?" You may find yourself feeling nettled as the antagonist becomes a constant fly-in-the-ointment, often checking out things that aren't any of his business.
Mobilizing forces and pot-stirring. To wage an effective campaign, an antagonist must gather support and create discord, conflict, and doubt. He might try any number of approaches to accomplish this end. The behavior could be as innocuous as whispering to others during a committee meeting. The antagonist might also call unofficial meetings, usually not held at the church. He might flood the congregation with rumors, destructive, insinuating gossip strategically directed against key people. As a result, others could indeed become critical, swept along in the antagonist's wake. The force of numbers may give you pause: Could something be wrong with me or my leadership? Ask yourself that question, but don't be overly introspective if the source of the confusion is someone who has been waving a number of red flags.
Resistance. You might detect growing resistance from a red-flag person — openly ridiculing the leadership of the congregation, defying your authority as pastor or lay leader, blocking the approval of certain matters that ordinarily glide through the governing machinery with ease. An antagonist may also exhibit passive resistance, such as withdrawing from an activity while making a public issue of it — emphasizing that his nonparticipation is connected with the concerns he is expressing about the church.
Later warning signs
Antagonists are not stamped from the same mold. Nevertheless, from the diversity of their behaviors certain patterns emerge. A partial list follows, describing typical behaviors of antagonists when their attacks are well under way. If you encounter an active antagonist, you will witness at least some of these characteristic behaviors.
Sloganeering. Antagonists often use one or more emotionally laden slogans to spread troublesome dissension. For example, "Pastor John is a good man, but just not right for this congregation."
Accusing. When an antagonist's concerns are no longer sugarcoated, you might hear: "You are never (or always) in the office." Or, "You are too old (or too young) to adequately meet the needs of this congregation."
Spying. In more or less obvious ways, an antagonist may begin to spy on you. He might telephone to where you are or even follow you. Antagonists sometimes tape-record their phone conversations. A wise rule is: Be as noncommittal as possible when talking on the telephone with a red-flag person.
Distorting. Antagonists frequently distort reports of incidents, leaving grains of truth to maintain credibility. For example, if one of the deacons becomes slightly vexed during the course of a meeting, an antagonist might comment to someone: "Did you see how John blew up. Such a lack of control cast a cloud over the entire meeting. How was a person like that ever elected?"
Misquoting Scripture. Antagonists frequently misquote the Bible to prove their campaigns or behaviors are legitimate. By excising passages from their contexts, imparting their own idiosyncratic meanings to words, or using various other methods, they appeal to a congregation's loyalty to Scripture, falsely equating their causes with the Bible itself.
Smirking. An antagonist might wear an inappropriate smile or a cocky grin when he encounters the person under attack. Such a smirk says, "I've got you on the run." It is infuriating, but will gratify the antagonist only if you allow its effect to be perceived. Smirks and other mean-spirited facial expressions may take place in meetings, too.
Pestering. Antagonists sometimes pester church leaders by constantly calling on the phone or by hanging around after a service or a meeting, saying, "I'djust like a brief word with you." Their constant pestering substantiates the tenacious character of an antagonist.
Copiously communicating. Antagonists frequently barrage leaders with e-mails, memos, or even letters. Acknowledge these at first — perhaps with a very brief phone call or by sending a response such as this:
Dear _______,
Thank you for your concern. I appreciate responsible feedback.
(Signed or initialed)
One of the most counterproductive courses of action is to respond at length in a long letter refuting the antagonist's accusations point by point. That only adds fuel to the antagonist's fire rather than quenching it.
Here is a fundamental assumption about antagonists that you need to apply as a guiding principle in dealing with them: Normal ways of dealing with conflict and criticism not only do not work with antagonists but make things worse. Once you make this adjustment in your thinking, much of the battle is won.
Sources of information
Knowledge about the warning signs is helpful, but you may still be wondering how you can gather the information you need to tell whether or not an attack is about to begin.
Keep your eyes and ears open. Be aware of what is happening around you. If you know the 20 red flags of an antagonist and can recognize when someone is waving one or more flags, you have a major advantage.
Pay attention to the observations of trusted church members. When people you trust and respect make assertions about those whom you might have already recognized as red-flag wavers, you would be well-advised to consider what they say.
Ask questions. Take care how you do this. You need to be extremely sensitive to the time, place, occasion, and recipient of your questions. A trusted board member who has served faithfully for many years may have observed something. Ask, but be discreet and caring.
Trust your sixth sense. Sometimes you may sense that something is wrong — a vague uneasiness that a certain individual cannot be trusted. Don't become overly suspicious, but at the same time grant your sixth sense a fair hearing.
Whatever you do, keep your eyes and ears open. Don't close your eyes and hope that what you don't like will go away. It won't.
What Is The Best Way To Deal With An Antagonist?
In the face of Christ's commands to love our enemies and turn the other cheek, pastors and lay leaders are sometimes confused and baffled as they have tried to deal effectively with antagonists. Pastors are often torn between wanting to minister to the antagonists out of vulnerable love or attacking that person with the full force of law and judgment. Pastors begin to feel ineffective and defenseless. They may even begin to feel that almost everyone in the congregation is against them and that their ministry has been compromised.
Even beyond the harm done to the pastor, an antagonist's attack is very destructive to the whole congregation. The church's lay leadership often spends many wasted hours in attending meetings, writing letters, making phone calls, or preparing documents — all to deal with one person or a group of people stirred up by that person. Occasionally, the vindictive spirit is allowed to fester until it pervades the congregation. People become hurt, indignant, and apathetic. Some stop contributing money to the church, thinking that they want their contributions used for doing ministry, not just fighting. Others end up transferring their membership. The conflict has gone on so long they no longer feel their spiritual needs are being met at the church.
To avoid the damage an antagonist can generate in your congregation, it is important to act quickly when you see antagonistic activity begin.
Nipping the problem
When antagonists attack, they usually want power and authority — your power and authority. Your response needs to show that this authority is indeed still yours, and you do not plan to give it up.
As the attack broadens, an antagonist may begin to publicly call you names and make senseless charges, trying to make you fight back. The greatest show of your power is to avoid falling into such a trap. Do not immediately return the attack; do not wonder aloud how anyone could say such stupid things; do not do anything. In this way, you will show you are above such tactics and you do not think such accusations worthy of response. Open confrontations are not desirable. An emotional public scene lessens your authority and gives credence to the antagonist. Power is shown by calm, controlled action, working through committees and other established channels.
While refusing to respond to an antagonist's irrational attacks can effectively remove credence from those attacks, the time may come when, by actively using your authority, you can nip the problem. For instance, if an antagonist is using a biblical passage inaccurately as the basis for criticizing you, use your authority to say, "That is not a correct interpretation of that passage." Do not argue about the interpretation. Rather, if necessary repeat again that it is an incorrect interpretation and, in as few words as possible, give the correct interpretation.
Pastors may want to prevent the antagonist from achieving any positions of power in the congregation. If the antagonist already has a position of power and threatens to quit, accept his resignation. It is best not to let the fox keep watch over the chicken coop.
Sometimes antagonists become so angry their attacks continue with increased vehemence. This is time to deal with them quickly and effectively.
Dealing effectively with antagonists
With the turmoil and confusion an antagonist produces, it is tempting for a pastor to begin to believe he is the sole cause of the problem. Remember, the reason an antagonist is attacking you and your ministry is usually not your fault; the reasons lie deep within the antagonist. You are just the recipient of his anger and hostility.
Educate your church leadership about antagonists so they can help you deal with the problem. The church is under attack, not just you. When the pastor and church leadership work together, they can form an effective defense against the antagonist. Antagonists can only be successful if there are people who believe and support them. Forming a phalanx with the congregation's leadership can help eliminate any support for the antagonist.
Your public image — the way your congregation sees you while under attack — should be one of business as usual. In your dealings in the congregation, be consistent, responsible, and self-controlled. Don't politic. Don't use your pastoral visits as an opportunity to convince people of the rightness of your cause. That will only cause confusion and resentment.
Neither should you use your public communications as media for bringing up the problem with the antagonist. Sermons are for proclaiming the gospel and building up the body of Christ, not for defending oneself or for subtly reprimanding someone. Church bulletins, newsletters, and other communications should not reflect any anxiety nor be used to obliquely refer to the problem. If you begin to speak about the controversy with any degree of concern, you are admitting weakness to your attackers as well as dragging your congregation through the gutter.
When Leaving Is Necessary
Although resignation is usually unnecessary, it is still one alternative for dealing with an antagonistic situation. Since the decision to resign is often made in circumstances less than conducive to clear thinking, here are a few good reasons for resigning.
Consider resigning:
- if you have made many serious mistakes or committed great and actual offense.
- when a significant majority is against you.
- when you have lost effectiveness as a leader.
- when staying poses a risk to your physical or emotional health.
- if one or more judicatory officials in all love and honesty recommends it.
When you have considered these factors well and resignation seems proper to you, here are some ways to proceed.
1.Be honest.Your honesty can educate your constituency, but don't stoop to the level of name-calling or mudslinging. One congregation went through four pastors before one was assertive enough to confirm openly what most suspected: He, like the others, was leaving, not because God was calling him elsewhere, but because of an exceptionally obnoxious antagonist.
2. Leave no time bombs behind. Do all you can to smooth the transition to a new leader.
3. Arrange for an exit interview with appropriate leaders. Leaders have a right to be fully informed about your reasons for leaving.
4. If you were the victim, resign your office according to a schedule that suits your convenience. If you were in the wrong yourself, move on as soon as possible.
5. Sincerely apologize if, in any way, you are to blame for what has transpired. Confess and ask for forgiveness from those you offended.
Resignation is never an easy choice and calls for a great deal of prayer, thought, and personal struggle.
—Kenneth C. Haugk, Ph.D., St. Louis, Missouri
Avoiding the compassion trap is also vital for a pastor under attack. Many pastors thrive on the acceptance and gratitude they receive from those to whom they minister. They see themselves as all-giving servants of their people. They may feel guilty if they must be confrontive and hard. Combined with this is the fact church members often expect their pastors to be superhumanly compassionate and willing to suffer. All of these factors may cause pastors to be compassionate with an antagonist rather than challenging his destructive behaviors. Church members may even try to convince their pastor to apologize to the antagonist in an effort to make peace. However, this kind of compassion almost never works with antagonists. They will often take this as a sign of weakness and redouble their attacks. When you are asked to step into the compassion trap, simply refuse by saying, "It will not work."
The time may come when all efforts to control the activity of an antagonist are to no avail. The antagonist's attack continues, and the church is being split by his efforts. In this situation, there are two more options: the pastor may resign or the antagonist may be removed.
If the pastor resigns, the problem has not been solved. The congregation not only loses a good, experienced pastor, but the antagonist will still be present, ready to attack the next pastor who comes, as well as the next, and on and on. (See sidebar When Leaving Is Necessary.)
Sometimes an antagonist's attack reaches the point where a decision has to be made between excluding that person from the church or having very little church left. The antagonist's behavior has to be such that the church bylaws mandate removal. The extreme measure of removing the antagonist is a last resort, a step that must be approached with fear and trembling — and much prayer. This is a hard step to take, but it is sometimes necessary to ensure the stability of the congregation.
Preventing Antagonism
A single antagonist in a congregation can so affect the pastor and church leaders that they expend what seems to be 90 percent of their time and energy dealing with that person and the havoc he raises. Prevention is the best cure. The two primary avenues of prevention are creating an antiantagonist environment and educating church leadership about antagonism.
Create an antiantagonist environment
When effective policies and procedures are in place for church administration, an antagonist has less chance of wreaking havoc in a congregation. Several measures can go a long way toward creating this environment.
Follow established policies. Everyone should follow established congregational policies and procedures. Leaders must never practice or tolerate corner-cutting because these procedures are safeguards against antagonists.
Establish functional feedback channels. Establish and use clear channels of communication. Two-way, open communication between church leaders and members is vital. To facilitate this, leaders must clearly explain to the congregation appropriate channels of communication — and reiterate them frequently. When clearly spelled-out means of response are available, an antagonist who blatantly disregards them is more easily detected and exposed.
Create job descriptions. Clear job descriptions create an unfavorable environment for antagonists. Pastors, elders, deacons, church board chairpersons, and others in positions of authority need to clearly understand their jobs and their relationships with other leaders. Church members need to be apprised of this as well. The risks of encouraging unhealthy conflict will then diminish.
Establish a broad base of responsibility. A strong, broad base of authority in matters of administration and program can do much to thwart antagonistic attacks. When a single individual holds power in a congregation, a one-on-one struggle (usually antagonist versus pastor) often results. When an antagonist realizes that power is carefully distributed among a group of people, then he will think twice before instigating trouble.
Discipline as necessary. Functional disciplinary measures are also essential to maintaining an antiantagonist environment. Congregations in which discipline is minimal or absent tend to encourage antagonists. The crucial factor is this: Whatever your denomination or congregational procedures are about discipline, follow them.
Establish a united front. Church staff and lay leaders must maintain a united front with no room for backbiting or unhealthy friction. An antagonist will discover unhealthy conflict among leaders and use it. A united front does not mean agreement on all things but, instead, the mutual respect and support of others in their roles.
Educate church leadership about antagonism
Education equips people to do what must be done, no matter how uncomfortable the task — and few tasks are more uncomfortable than dealing with antagonists. Education about antagonists falls into two categories: general and specific.
General education. Prevention is the first purpose of general education. The goal of general education is to communicate an understanding of the dynamics of antagonism and ways to handle it effectively. Include as many church staff and lay leaders as possible in the process. When church leaders are cognizant of antagonists' ploys, they are better equipped to lead. The second purpose is to provide a foundation for specific education when or if it becomes necessary.
Specific education. This educates leaders about specific individuals who are beginning to behave antagonistically. You are not talking about the subject of antagonism; you are talking about specific people. Specific education differs from general education with respect to audience. Specific education is only for leaders who bear legitimate responsibility for the problem. If your congregation assigns a separate committee or board to handle disciplinary issues, members of that board, along with those directly involved in the attack, might be the ones to receive specific education.
The purpose of specific education is twofold: First, leaders are enabled to assess accurately the particular situation. Second, specific education paves the way for planning strategies to solve the problem, ultimately permitting the appropriate leaders to deal with the situation.
Conclusion
Whose problem is antagonism? It's everyone'sproblem. In the ark of salvation, that is the church, no one can afford to say, "Your end of the boat is sinking." An attitude that "We are all in this together" provides an immensely powerful, effective antidote to the disruptive poison of antagonism.
A congregation is uniquely structured to undertake this obligation because a church is a Body — Christ's body — and is considerably more than the sum of its parts. It resembles an organism more than an organization, pulsing with the very life of Jesus flowing through its members by means of the Holy Spirit.
Antagonism is like a virulent disease in the body. A body cannot regard attack on a single part as an inconsequential threat requiring no response by other parts. Antagonism poses a threat not only to an isolated organ but to the entire organism which suffers until the disease is overcome. The whole body must work to overcome it.
Overcoming antagonism is not a hopeless cause. Learning skills for dealing with antagonists and methods for preventing their attacks is a source of hope. Most important, the church is the Lord's. He has called it into being, and He will not fail it. This is hope beyond measure.
Kenneth C. Haugk, Ph.D., a pastor and clinical psychologist, is founder and executive director of Stephen Ministries, St. Louis, Missouri. He has authored numerous books and resources on Christian caregiving, grief, assertiveness, church and business antagonism, inactive member ministry, spiritual gifts discovery, and leadership.
Tuesday, March 17, 2026
Lamentations 5 The Prayer Of Despair
Hosea 6: A Call to Repentance 1Come, and let us return to the LORD; For He has torn, but He will heal us; He has stricken, but He will bind us up. 2After two days He will revive us; On the third day He will raise us up,That we may live in His sight. 3Let us know, Let us press on to know the LORD.
Prayer and EM Bounds
Have you ever wondered what happened to the weapon that once won revivals?
What if the greatest power God ever gave his church—the power that shook cities, broke chains, and opened heavens—is the very one we've stopped using? Everyone talks about miracles, strategy, and platforms. Few still talk about prayer.
But history remembers a man who didn't just talk about it; he lived it until heaven bent low. His name was Edward McKendry Bounds, a quiet pastor from Tennessee. No crowds, no cameras — only a candle, an open Bible, and three hours before dawn.
For 40 years, he met God at 4:00 a.m., and the world still feels those meetings.
Before we speak of revival, we must enter the fires that birthed it — the hidden flames that turned one man into a living weapon in God's hands.
Fire Nr 1 – Discipline Before Dawn
It began in the dark - every morning. While others dreamed, Bounds rose at 4:00 a.m. No alarm, no reminder — just hunger. He believed the world belongs to those who meet God before it wakes.
He once wrote, "The men who gain heaven's attention are those who give heaven their time."
Discipline was his altar. He walked to the same wooden bench, lit the same candle, and whispered the same names — his flock, his town, his nation.
The floor was cold, the air still, but his words were fire.
He learned that true prayer is not emotion but consistency — the courage to keep showing up when nothing moves. Power is not found in moments of passion; it is forged in years of persistence.
While the world scrolls through screens and calls it connection, he was already connecting with heaven. And heaven answered, not with noise but with nearness.
The stillness became a classroom where he learned the rhythms of God's heart. There, prayer stopped being a duty and became a dwelling. Every dawn became a covenant. He had nothing to prove — only Someone to meet. He said, "To be alone with God in prayer is the highest privilege and the holiest discipline."
But every fire that burns for God will be tested. The same knees that touched heaven would soon kneel among the ashes of war.
Fire Nr 2 – Pain That Purifies
When the Civil War tore through America, Bounds served as a chaplain. He walked through fields heavy with death, through cries of boys who would never return home. He prayed over bodies, preached over graves, and learned that faith must stand when hope has fallen.
Twice he was captured. Twice imprisoned. In those cold cells he discovered that suffering doesn't silence a calling— it sanctifies it.
He later wrote, "Prayer is born of need. It is the language of the helpless." He was helpless now, and that helplessness became holy. Pain stripped him of ambition and pride until only hunger for God remained.
When he returned to Franklin, Tennessee, the town was in ruins — houses charred, families divided, churches empty. Yet he saw what others couldn't: ashes or altars waiting for fire.
He prayed, not preached, before rebuilding walls. He rebuilt fellowship with heaven again, for God found him on his knees pleading for a people who had forgotten how to hope. Slowly the ashes began to breathe. Enemies reconciled. A widow sang again. Bars emptied. Altars filled.
He learned that pain can purify a man until his very breath becomes intercession. When God breaks you, He's not punishing you — He's preparing you to carry someone else's burden.
And yet, even when revival touched Franklin, Bounds refused applause. He knew every flame fades if discipline ends. He kept a schedule — every dawn, every whisper. Years passed, crowds left, silence grew, but he stayed. He once said, "The praying man is not the one who talks most of prayer, but the one whose heart is always talking to God."
Fire Nr 3 – Silence That Speaks
The revival quieted, but something deeper remained. Pain had carved endurance into his soul. He had seen God move in tragedy, and now he would learn to meet Him in silence.
Not every revival starts with noise; some begin in rooms where no one hears you. After Franklin's awakening, Bounds faded into obscurity. No headlines, no applause— only early mornings and prayer.
He called silence "the holy stillness that prepares a man for God's voice." There were mornings when heaven felt closed, when his prayers echoed back unanswered. But he discovered that silence speaks louder than applause. Stillness is not God's absence but His invitation. He learned to trust the presence more than the proof.
When no miracles came, he kept praying. When no voices answered, he kept listening. Silence turned faith into fire. Our generation runs from that kind of quiet—we fill every pause with noise, every minute with motion. But fire needs oxygen, and oxygen is found in stillness.
He waited, and the waiting became worship. Those who met him said he carried the presence like a fragrance. He didn't know it yet, but these unseen years were shaping the words that would one day ignite nations.
Fire Nr 4 – Intercession That Wrestles
In the silence, a new burden was born. He began to feel the weight of entire cities pressing on his heart. Prayer became warfare. He stood between heaven and earth and refused to move until something shifted. Those who joined him said it felt like thunder rolled through the room even when he whispered.
He once wrote, "God shapes the world by prayer. The more prayer there is, the more power there will be." To him, prayer wasn't preparation for battle — it was the battle.
He left those mornings drenched in sweat, face shining with quiet intensity. When he walked through town, people sensed peace following him. That's what happens when a man has been in God's war room. But this fire would not remain his alone. The same hands that fought in prayer would soon hold a pen that burned like a sword.
Fire Nr 5 – The Word That Burns
When prayer becomes your life, words eventually become fire. Bounds never planned to be an author; he wanted only to pray. But the same Spirit that drove him to his knees began pressing truths into his mind — truths too heavy to keep silent.
He wrote between prayers, sentences soaked in devotion, paragraphs born in agony. "Books are sermons that continue preaching when the voice is still," he said. Every line felt like a spark from the altar he had built in secret. He wrote by candlelight in worn notebooks. His hands trembled; his eyes tired; the fire inside refused to rest.
Most of his writing circled one theme: prayer is the strongest force on earth because it connects weak men to an almighty God. He finished manuscript after manuscript, piled them in boxes, and received only rejection. Still, he kept writing: "If men will not read them now, heaven will find a way to release them later."
He believed prayer itself would carry his words where his name could not.
Fire Nr 6 – A Legacy That Lives
Bounds passed from this world on August 24, 1913. No grand funeral, no public honor—only a few friends and a simple headstone. He died with a trunk full of unpublished manuscripts. But prayer never dies with the praying man.
Years later, Homer W. Hodge discovered those dusty boxes, opened the yellowed pages, and realized he held treasure. He edited, published, and released them — and suddenly, the world caught fire.
POWER THROUGH PRAYER spread through seminaries. THE WEAPON OF PRAYER found pastors in revival tents. Missionaries carried his books into jungles and deserts. Whole movements were born around his ideas. Ravenhill quoted him constantly. Rees Howells studied him. Billy Graham said every preacher should read him. A century later, believers still rise at 4:00 a.m. whispering the same words he once did.
He died unknown, but now his fire burns on every continent. God proved that when a man hides in prayer, heaven ensures his influence cannot be buried. The enemy buried the body, but not the flame.
Fire Nr 7 – The Flame We Carry Now
More than a century has passed, but the same hunger remains. We post more than we pray. We plan more than we wait. But the secret that shook heaven still waits for anyone willing to kneel long enough to rediscover it. Bounds proved that one life set on fire can illuminate a century of darkness.
His secret wasn't talent or intellect — it was surrender. He met God before dawn until the dawn met God through him.
If the church today feels powerless, it is because the altars are empty. We build programs when God is asking for prayer rooms. We chase strategies when heaven is searching for servants who will stay until the fire falls again.
The story of E.M. Bounds is not nostalgia — it is a summons. The fire that burned in Franklin still searches for hearts to ignite. Bounds once wrote, "Prayer succeeds when all else fails because God never fails."
If your fire is fading, this is the moment to rebuild the altar. It begins not with eloquence but with returning. Go back to your secret place. Wake before the world. Whisper until heaven leans down again.
The revival we long for will come not through noise but through kneeling.
The next great awakening will not be televised — it will begin in someone's room at 4 in the morning. Maybe yours. Because the fire that burned in Bounds was never meant to die — it was meant to multiply.
Choose your hour. Guard it. Meet God there.
Let it be said of you as it was said of him: He touched heaven every morning, and heaven touched earth through him.
The hidden fires of E.M. Bounds still call to a prayerless generation:
Wake up. Light the candle. Open the Bible. Kneel again.
Because prayer is not the work before the work—it IS the work. And the weapon that still burns is waiting in your hands.
Revival begins with you.
Forgiveness by Ray Galea
Deep down we each have a quota of pain. Each of us has been sinned against by someone—in our family, in our church, or in the world. It could have been a one-off event of sin, or an ongoing sin against us, that requires our forgiveness. The thing we need to forgive could have been done thoughtlessly or maliciously. But however it got there, it is now there. There is some sin against us that needs forgiveness.
At some point, we all have put a fence around our pain. We have said to ourselves, to others, and even to God, "This is so bad, what was done to me so wrong, the wounds are so deep, that not even God would ask me to ever consider forgiving the one who wounded me.
Let me say up front that first, forgiveness is rarely a one-off decision. It's an ongoing process. Second, you can forgive a person who you report to the police. Third, you can forgive a person you set boundaries around. Fourth, you can forgive and still not be reconciled with the person because there is no repentance.
But what makes it forgiveness—real, true, and genuine forgiveiness—is that you will eventually and from the heart want to do good to the person who wounded you.
no limits on forgiveness
The apostle Peter was aware that sin happens, both inside and outside the church. And so he asks Jesus a question: how often must I forgive? Matthew 18:21:
Then Peter came to Jesus and asked, "Lord, how many times shall I forgive my brother or sister who sins against me? Up to seven times?" (NIV)
Peter is trying to out-grace Jesus. Rabbis required people to forgive only three times. Peter himself offers the perfect number, seven times.
I think I would have asked Jesus another question with Peter's one. I would have asked not just, "How many times?" but "How bad does the sin have to get before I can say, that's it, no more forgiveness?"
Jesus' answer haunts us in our pain even today. Matthew 18:22, "Jesus answered, 'I tell you, not seven times, but seventy-seven times.'"
The phrase translated "seventy-seven times" might more accurately be rendered "seventy times seven"—that is, 490 times. Both are ways of saying unlimited, never ending forgiveness.
You can almost feel abandoned by God in your pain. But the word is for us to never stop forgiving. There is to be no limit to the forgiveness we offer.
Here, Jesus is reversing the language of Lamech, a descendant of Cain. In Genesis 4:23, Lamech boasts to his wives, "If Cain is avenged seven times, then Lamech seventy-seven times." And so it is clear that the opposite of revenge is forgiveness, and the opposite of forgiveness is payback!
Forgiveness is where you choose to absorb the sin and not retaliate. It involves enduring and bearing the pain of injustice of being in the right, and yet suffering, and not lashing back at the one who caused the injustice. Not only is Jesus saying to conquer the urge for revenge, but he is also saying, "Don't ever stop fighting that impulse to retaliate".
At MBM, we have twice interviewed Gladys Staines. Her husband and two sons were burned alive in India by radical Hindus. They were medics and Christian missionaries in India, helping lepers and the poor. Gladys said, "I have no anger, I have no hatred." I asked Gladys how she was able to forgive, and so quickly. She said, "I think it was because I learned to forgive the little things." What wise words! We are either cancelling debts or holding on to them.
There are two reasons given by Jesus for us to forgive in his story. The first is tied to the amount of forgiveness we have received. The second is tied to amount of judgment that will fall upon us if we don't forgive.
First, we live in light of a breathtaking forgiveness. Matthew 18:23-25:
Therefore, the kingdom of heaven is like a king who wanted to settle accounts with his servants. As he began the settlement, a man who owed him ten thousand bags of gold was brought to him. Since he was not able to pay, the master ordered that he and his wife and his children and all that he had be sold to repay the debt.
The man's debt to the king was enormous. Some say the debt was the equivalent to a national debt of a country—15 billion dollars. Others say it was the wages of 60,000 working days. This was a time when you couldn't file for bankruptcy. You and your family were personally responsible for your debt.
Like this man, you and I owe a debt to God which we cannot pay, and we face a punishment we cannot bear as we stand at the edge of hell and stare into the place of utter darkness, facing our own hopeless eternity.
With the enormous debt before him, the man cries out, Matthew 18:26:
At this the servant fell on his knees before him. "Be patient with me," he begged, "and I will pay back everything."
He has no idea how much he owes. He thinks he can pay the king off, like so many who think that they can buy God off with their good works. And yet in a God-like way, the king had mercy on him. Matthew 18:27:
The servant's master took pity on him, cancelled the debt and let him go.
Can you feel the relief? Imagine I came to your home this afternoon and paid off your car loan, or the mortgage on your house, or your credit card debt. Imagine all of that debt gone! This is a picture of God`s forgiveness. The whole debt is wiped away. The king does not postpone the payment of the debt. The king does not ask for 10 cents in the dollar. The king wipe the slate clean.
It's why Paul says that "Love keeps no record of wrongs". To forgive is to release someone from a debt.
In 1991, some time ago now, I read in the Telegraph that "Australia forgave Egypt a 200 million debt". Australia said to Egypt that Egypt didn't ever have to pay that 200 million dollars back.
So why doesn't Jesus put limits on how many times we ought to forgive? I will tell you why: because God puts no limit on the amount of sins that he forgive us. Every day we grieve his Spirit and every day he forgives them. By not forgiving we show that we have absolutely no idea of what it cost Jesus, the innocent Son of God, to enter the horror of the cross to win our forgiveness. By not forgiving we show we have no idea how bad the hell is that we have been delivered from. By not forgiving we show we have no idea how bad we all are. We might sing, "Amazing Grace how sweet the sound that saved a wretch like me", but what we really mean is "Amazing Grace, how sweet the sound that saved a rascal like me". We have no idea that forgiveness is just not an optional extra. Matthew 18:28-30:
But when that servant went out, he found one of his fellow servants who owed him a hundred silver coins. He grabbed him and began to choke him. "Pay back what you owe me!" he demanded. His fellow servant fell to his knees and begged him, "Be patient with me, and I will pay it back." But he refused. Instead, he went off and had the man thrown into prison until he could pay the debt.
This guy is often called 'the unmerciful servant'. He also is called 'the ungrateful servant'. He was forgiven so much, but now he refuses to forgive so little. What he had to forgive was just loose change compared to what he had been forgiven. He didn't hear that the man begging for mercy used the same words as he had not long before used with the king. Matthew 18:29:
His fellow servant fell to his knees and begged him, "Be patient with me, and I will pay it back."
His name was Albert Tetzler. He won the lottery a while a back in the US. The amount he pocketed was 7 million dollars. That's alot of money: 7 million dollars. Two years after winning the 7 million dollars, he was sent to prison because he failed to pay child support which totaled just $35,000. He got 7 million dollars but couldn't pay $35,000. You reckon that's bad. Try telling God why you don't have to forgive when he has forgiven you so much.
He is the ungrateful servant, and so are you when you allow our pain to swamp the grace of God. Freely you have received, freely forgive.
This is not saying that you haven't been sinned against and that the sin you suffered was not wrong. This is not saying that the pain you suffer is not real, or that God doesn't care. This is not saying that church discipline should not be applied or in some cases that the cops should not be called. This is not saying that comfort can't be found in knowing that God will punish those who refuse to repent.
What it is saying is that when you set limits on forgiveness you deny the full extent of your own sin against God, and the full extent of God's kindness to you.
Too often revenge conquers us instead of us conquering revenge by the grace of God. We must stop playing God, who alone says, "Vengance is mine […] I will repay."
When the king finds out that the man he forgave refused to forgive another so little, he is angry. Matthew 18:32-34:
Then the master called the servant in. "You wicked servant," he said, "I canceled all that debt of yours because you begged me to. Shouldn't you have had mercy on your fellow servant just as I had on you?" In anger his master handed him over to the jailers to be tortured, until he should pay back all he owed.
Do you understand what Jesus is saying? Forgiveness is not an optional extra for those who follow Christ—it's a must. Think back to 'The Lord's Prayer.' "Forgive us our sins as we forgive those who sin against us." Jesus has thrown us a curve ball. When we pray the Lord's Prayer, we are asking God to treat us in the same way we treat others. By not forgiving others you are inviting God to not forgive you.
So both God's grace and God's coming judgement demand that we show forgiveness to those who've sinned against us.
Jesus ends the story with the stinging warning. Matthew 18:35:
This is how my heavenly Father will treat each of you unless you forgive your brother or sister from your heart.
Take the grace of God lightly and you will end up taking his judgment severely. If the grace of God won't move you to forgive, then maybe the fear of God will.
It's as clear as a bell, isn't it? Don't wallow in the pain. Now is the time to start to forgive. Seize the moment and conquer the urge to punish. Let the Spirit do his work in your right now.
Do you know why I think forgiveness is not an optional extra, but necessary? It's because God loves us. He is saying, "I don't want you to waste your life filled with bitterness, where you spend your days replaying those stories in your mind over and over again to feed your rage. Jesus says, "I don't want you to let those who sinned against you keep punishing you. I want you to know the freedom of forgiveness."
But that won't happen unless you forgive from the heart. It is not a pretend forgiveness where we play games and say, "I don't care, it doesn't bother me, I can laugh it off". Living in denial is not forgiveness. It's not even a duty where you go through the motions while you curse your enemy from the heart, or find some joy in their suffering.
You may say, "Ray, you don't understand! I can't even pray that God would help me forgive!" The journey to forgiveness may begin further back for you. You may need to pray to want to pray, or pray to even want to forgive. But at some point you have to get on that train, even if it's in the last carriage.
Aren't you tired of not forgiving? I know you are.
There was a year when I held on to a hurt in my marriage. I noticed I was sulking for longer periods of time. On one occasion I sulked for five long weeks, but Sandy barely noticed. No eye contact, a slight shift in tone, for five weeks I was aloof. It went for so long that I forgot why I was sulking.
Then I had to make myself remember. I was exhausted and ashamed. When I eventually did forgive, I was so relieved. My refusal to forgive caused me have a growing bitter heart. Has it not weighed you down long enough?
One of the messages to Australia from the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse captured the importance of not holding onto the hurt but progressing to forgiveness.
"It's my choice to be a victim or a survivor. It's my choice to forgive or hate. It's my choice to look forward or back. So I have chosen to love the life I have. I have chosen to forgive those who hurt me, because I don't know who hurt them. My 'Message to Australia': I ask you to do the same. The action of hate fixes nothing."
I have been in awe of so many at MBM who have endured so much suffering and who eventually decide to forgive and enjoy the freedom it brings. This reminding us yet again that God's way is the best way