Article

The Necessity of the Trauma-Informed Pastor

Spiritual leadership requires us to know the stories of our people.

Drawing of The Scream by Edvard Munch

Heritage Images / Getty

I lost 15 minutes looking out the window in a fog after a Zoom call with a trusted, central staff member who was tendering her resignation. This loss came during significant financial stress and personnel conflict after years of departures, accusations, mistrust, and attempts to rebuild. Her departure triggered more questions about my leadership abilities and the viability of our future.

Bits of memory associated with past departures, low staff morale, and extra workloads floated by. I was experiencing a small-t trauma, and I needed to engage the terrain of what trauma brings before I took my next steps.

Understanding the Definition of Trauma

More than a few of you will dismiss the premise that trauma was involved in that scenario, as well as the value of calling an organizational disappointment “trauma.” If that is your initial impulse, I am grateful. It is essential to question the cultural zeitgeist of referring to losses, disappointments, or insults as traumas.

However, the experience of trauma is not merely a matter of the severity of the event but instead what we each bring to the experience of living east of Eden. Small-t trauma, as I describe it—such as being passed over for a well-deserved promotion, losing a friend who moves away, or feeling unresolved conflict in a marriage—is connected to an event but often has unaddressed stories that fuel its fire. Capital-T trauma involves any significant loss or violation that is a soul earthquake—death; severe illness or injury; divorce; financial disaster; or loss of a job, home, or reputation. It is actually often more difficult to recognize and confront small-t trauma because we are prone to dismiss lesser harms as inevitably normal, and the expectation is to press on and get over it.

Biophysicist and clinical psychologist Peter Levine says, “Trauma is not what happens to us, but what we hold inside in the absence of an empathic witness.” Indeed, the severity of the insult, loss, or injury plays a role in trauma, much the way the speed at which one is traveling affects a car crash. Still, our history and stories of past harm are the interpretative and experiential grid determining the trauma level of an event. As in my staff resignation example, even small-t trauma has the potential to cause significant aftershocks of unresolved heartache.

Trauma involves a wound that threatens our being—whether physical, relational, personal, or communal. Traumatic experiences seldom remain embedded in the body (leading to post-traumatic stress disorder) if the person feels empowered to respond and the threat is diminished or resolved over time. Trauma becomes wired in the body and brain when the threat is ongoing and there is a lack of safety and attunement that allows the trauma to be processed and addressed.

Why is it crucial to become a trauma-informed pastor?

Becoming a trauma-informed pastor provides a context in which to engage with the deepest questions and struggles of the heart and seek what it means to be deeply human and pursue God. Unresolved trauma significantly ruptures our relationships with God, others, and ourselves. When we feel under threat, our thinking gets scrambled as stress-related biochemicals diminish our cognitive processes. We feel vulnerable, and emotions other than fear (flight) or anger (fight) go offline. We become numb, and the more out of control we feel, the more likely we are to isolate.

As we disconnect from our internal world and others who can provide a compassionate witness, we become more self-protective and invulnerable. It is tragic that many consider toughness and self-reliance a form of trusting God and spiritual maturity.

Understanding trauma helps pastors see the ways the kingdom of evil offers faux solutions that only add to trauma and take hearts far from God. We enter trauma to war on behalf of the gospel. Understanding trauma is knowing the ground on which the battle is fought.

We are story people, shaped by and living out a character formed by broken moments where shame and heartache intruded into our lives. The loss of the valued employee triggered my long history of feeling responsible for keeping a “system” intact and stable. The story undergirding that unwieldy burden is my history of taking care of a mother with borderline personality disorder. It was my job to soothe her, absorb her rage and insecurity, and shrug it off as no big deal when she was once again sane.

Trauma—big T or small t, surfaces the brokenhearted stories that call for the prisoner to be set free, for the blind to receive sight. Healing comes as we enter the stories, present and past, that we are most reluctant or scared to feel the weight of what occurred. Deborah van Deusen Hunsinger writes in Spiritual Trauma Care, “Healing begins as the traumatized manage to piece together a coherent narrative, creating a web of meaning around unspeakable events while remaining fully connected emotionally both to themselves and to their listener.”

We can’t find coherence and meaning by hovering high above our heartache and attaching a Bible verse or a great theological truth as a palliative to the wound. We must enter the debris to piece together the crime scene where the harm occurred.

The trauma-informed pastor needs to walk the terrain of the valley of the shadow of death before accompanying another on that journey. (Notice, this is not a normal part of the curriculum of most seminaries). We don’t need to suffer every loss, insult, or injury our people may endure; we only need to know what debris any of our trauma triggers and what it tempts us to become instead of wrestling with God. You can only take someone as far as you have been willing to travel in your own trauma.

The trauma-informed pastor will be story engaged, caring for the trauma in the moment yet aware of other stories impinging on what is being experienced in the present. A tender, wise witness invites the struggling heart to enter the complex narratives of our story with the story of Jesus’ death, resurrection, and ascension. These are more than truths; they are also windows into our experience of trauma (death), rescue (resurrection), and return (ascension).

Engaging with the trauma of those you lead will invite you to a deeper engagement with the core questions that need the presence of God more than mere answers. The healing path is not only transformative, but life-giving and holy. The people you lead and serve will undoubtedly experience the benefits of your journey.

When you become trauma informed, you develop capacity to weep with those who weep and to rejoice with those who celebrate the healing power of God’s presence.

Dan Allender, PhD, is a leading Christian counselor and founder of The Allender Center. He also serves as professor of counseling at The Seattle School.

Posted September 1, 2025

Also in this issue

One of the great crises in the church today isn’t just the fallout of leadership failures—it’s the growing disbelief that pastors can still embody Jesus’ good and cruciform authority. Most pastors aren’t building empires. They’re proclaiming the Word, seeking the kingdom, and quietly laboring for lives to change and the gospel to advance. In this issue, Michael Keller encourages and equips those who pastor and preach to the institutional skeptic. Matthew Z. Capps makes a case for a healthy vision of church membership wherein shepherds can actually shepherd their people. Pastors Hannah Miller King (ACNA), Jonathan Leeman (9Marks), Gabriel Saguero (Assemblies of God) and Hershael W. York (SBC) talk about what makes their church governance models work. Walter R. Strickland II writes on the current state of Black evangelicalism and the institutional tensions of discipleship. Tailored mental and emotional health insights—for the pastor and the congregation—come from Dan Allender, Carey Nieuwhof, James Sells, and Curt Thompson. The theme of this issue is anchored with an essay from Taylor Combs on why we venerate and vilify leaders, written through the lens of Acts 14, along with a conversation between Rich Villodas and Richard Foster on the role of the pastor’s own discipleship in the health of a ministry. A pastor shares his account of how, by God’s grace, something beautiful was replanted out of the ashes of Mars Hill Church. Last, there is a robust books section, complete with a practical excerpt and a roundup of pastors sharing the must-haves in their personal libraries. This issue of Leadership Journal will strengthen weary hands, offer timely wisdom, and cast a vision for ministry that is both grounded and hopeful—one that reaches the disillusioned and points to the ultimate authority worth trusting: the crucified and risen Christ.

The Safeguard of Good Church Governance

Strong ecclesiology is more important than ever. Four church leaders weigh in on the function of their church governments.

The Scars of Spiritual Formation

In Nailing It, Nicole Massie Martin offers personal, poetic reflections that invite pastors to embrace their wounds—and the God who heals through them.

I’m Grateful for My Bishop

Episcopal governance structure provides both discipline and care for its ministers.

When They Trust Jesus but Not His Church

Preaching and pastoring in an age of skepticism.

Why We Venerate and Vilify Christian Leaders

One moment we’re singing their praises; the next we’re questioning everything. Maybe we’re asking the wrong things of them.

When a Single Institution Isn't Enough

Why Black evangelicals often look beyond any one institution—even beloved ones—to meet their full needs of discipleship.

There’s Safety in Meaningful Church Membership

Churches have misused it and culture hates commitment. But don’t throw out the body with the bathwater.

Spiritual Formation Has a Local Address

Richard Foster discusses healthy pastoral leadership, his daily routine, and how to practice solitude in an age of distraction.

Proudly Independent. Humbly Collaborative.

Individual cooperation makes the Southern Baptist Convention a reckoning force.

Leadership That Doesn’t Flinch

Friedman’s classic The Failure of Nerve reveals how self-differentiated leaders resist the pull of anxiety and lead with clarity.

Curious Questions to Engage Skeptics

From the files of Tim Keller

It Is Never Good to Be Alone

In an anxious age, pastoral health requires more than better systems. It requires being known.

Formation That Transforms

Ken Boa’s Conformed to His Image lays out twelve distinct pathways toward holistic discipleship rooted in God’s character.

Reclaiming the Church's Role in Mental Health

We have a holy opportunity to return to our roots—a chance to recover the kind of care that once marked every aspect of the early church.

Teaching Tough Passages with Authority

How should Bible teachers and preachers handle Scripture that seems morally problematic?

Shepherding at Home

In Managing Your Household Well, Chap Bettis calls pastors to lead their families with the same intentionality they bring to their churches.

Who Holds the Keys to the Kingdom?

A case for elder-led congregationalism.

Of Mountains & Mars Hills

How can faithful pastors lead when trust is broken, power is abused, and cynicism is everywhere?

Honest Prayers for a Hurried Life

With pastoral warmth, Paul E. Miller’s A Praying Life helps leaders bring their messy lives to a Father who listens, understands, and stays.

Not Because You’re Strong, But Because He Is

A benediction for the pastor who feels too fragile for the task—but stays anyway.

A Marriage of Independence and Authority

A hybrid model of governance helps Assemblies of God churches succeed.

From Mars Hill’s Rubble to a Church at Rest

Out of the ground once shaken by the collapse of Mars Hill Church, something steady is growing.

Timeless Questions, Timely Answers

Founder Billy Graham’s vision for pastoral leadership finds new life in an age of institutional distrust.

View issue


Our Latest

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube
Down ArrowbookCloseExpandExternalsearch