BOBBICKFORD.COM
  • Home
  • Blog
  • About
  • Resources
  • Contact

Gentle Inquiry vs. Aggressive Inquiry: Leading Like Jesus in Church Crisis

5/6/2025

1 Comment

 
Picture
In the middle of ministry storms—whether it's staff tension, a surprise resignation, or some unexpected firestorm—how a leader asks questions can either restore calm or stir more chaos. As pastors and leaders, our posture in these moments matters more than we think.

Too often, the stress of uncertainty pushes us into fear-based leadership. We default to control, interrogate decisions, and protect our ego. But Jesus-style leadership doesn’t posture with suspicion—it moves with trust, curiosity, and grace.


Let’s unpack two radically different approaches to inquiry in crisis:
aggressive inquiry and gentle inquiry.

Aggressive Inquiry: Fear Wearing the Mask of Authority: We’ve all seen it. Leaders feel out of the loop and assume the worst.

Questions become weapons:
  • “Why wasn’t I told about this?”
  • “Who gave you permission to do that?”
  • “What were you thinking?”
This posture flows from a need to control, often triggered by insecurity. It creates:
  • Fearful teams that withhold instead of share.
  • Frustrated staff who lose motivation.
  • Tense atmospheres where silence feels safer than speaking up.

This is not servant leadership—it’s self-protection in a collar.


Gentle Inquiry: The Posture of Curiosity and Trust: Gentle inquiry doesn't mean we don’t ask questions—it means we ask from a place of security, trust, and maturity.
These questions sound different:
  • “Help me understand how that decision came about.”
  • “Walk me through the context behind this.”
  • “I’d love to learn more about what led to this step.”

Instead of fear, this creates:
  • Psychological safety where staff feel seen and heard.
  • Greater engagement from leaders who feel trusted.
  • A culture of growth that reflects the fruit of the Spirit.

Gentle inquiry says: “I trust you. I’m with you. Let’s figure this out together.”


Why It Matters: Shepherds, Not Gatekeepers

At the heart of gentle inquiry is the biblical call to shepherd. We’re not bouncers at the door of ministry decisions—we’re under-shepherds pointing others to Jesus. We model his gentleness, even in crisis.
In seasons of disruption, we have a choice:
  • React in fear and clamp down.
  • Or respond in faith and invite dialogue.

Gentle inquiry is the higher road. It's the Jesus road.
Let’s lead like Jesus. Let’s ask better questions—with open hands, not clenched fists.


Questions for Personal Reflection

Before your next staff meeting or hard conversation, take a moment to reflect:
  1. What’s driving my inquiry—curiosity or control?
    Am I genuinely seeking understanding, or just trying to reassert authority?
  2. How does my presence impact the emotional temperature in the room?
    Do people feel safe with me, or are they guarded and cautious?
  3. Am I assuming the best or preparing for the worst?
    Trust builds bridges—suspicion builds walls.

What would it look like to lead with gentleness today?

How can I mirror Christ’s posture in my tone, words, and reactions?
1 Comment
Melody Bean
5/6/2025 06:36:12 pm

As Christian’s we should alway’s know and practice the Fruit’s of the Spirit in Galatians 5:22-23 . Purposely being people of Integrity, knowing what’s right from wrong and choosing to do the right thing no matter if the person is a best friend , family member , person’s in high place’s etc….. So we can hear from the Lord one day , “ Well Done , My Good and Faithful Servant Matthew 25:21 , and because we let the Love of God have His perfect work in us .

Reply



Leave a Reply.

    Archives

    October 2025
    August 2025
    July 2025
    June 2025
    May 2025
    February 2025
    December 2024
    November 2024
    October 2024
    August 2024
    July 2024
    June 2024
    May 2024

    Categories

    All
    Church Renewal
    Following Jesus
    Fun
    LEADERSHIP
    Throwback

    RSS Feed

  • Home
  • Blog
  • About
  • Resources
  • Contact