Step Off the Stage and Learn to Lead Like Jesus
Some pastors burn out dramatically. Others just keep running—from meeting to meeting, crisis to sermon, never quite catching their breath. The work is never done. There are always more people to see and sermons to plan. The danger is that in the middle of it all, we lose ourselves.
In The Present Pastor, pastor and author James Williams invites his fellow pastors and church leaders to stop. Not to quit ministry, but to remember what called us here in the first place—not a stage, but a relationship. Not performance, but presence.
With unflinching honesty and deep pastoral care, James shares how the wounds of his own story—a Southern gothic childhood marked by addiction and violence, the sudden death of his sister moments before he preached, and the relentless pressure to perform in a growing church—shaped the way he led. Until a staff member asked the question that changed everything: "Do you know how exhausting it is to work for someone who never seems tired?"
This book was written for pastors—but not just senior pastors. If you're carrying the weight of ministry, this is for you.
Rooted in Scripture and contemplative wisdom, The Present Pastor guides readers to:
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Recognize the performance trap that substitutes polish for presence
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Name the wounds and trauma we've carried into ministry without addressing
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Understand how our refusal to be vulnerable keeps others from being real
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Embrace the paradox that weakness, not strength, is what people need most from us
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Learn what it means to lead like Jesus—who never hurried, never performed, and was always present
This isn't a book about doing less ministry. It's about discovering that the most powerful thing you can offer is not another program or polished sermon, but yourself, present and open.
If you've ever felt like you're running on empty, this book is an invitation to step off the stage, to stop running, and to discover that presence—not performance—is what heals.