Saturday, July 12, 2025

How Joy Can Overcome Burnout Why delighting in God is the secret to finishing your calling well. July 11th, 2025 • Estimated Reading Time: 5 minutes

 

How Joy Can Overcome Burnout

Why delighting in God is the secret to finishing your calling well.

Statistics about leaders who fail to finish well can be daunting. A well-known study by Dr. J. Robert Clinton found that only one in three biblical leaders ended their race faithfully. That number may be even lower today. But if we believe the promises of Philippians 1:6 and 2 Timothy 1:12, we know that ending well is not only possible it’s the will of God for His people.

So why do so many struggle? Why do capable, passionate servants of God burn out or fade away?

More often than not, two issues lie at the root disappointment and insecurity. Deep-seated pain from ministry wounds and a sense of inadequacy can erode joy and leave leaders emotionally and spiritually exhausted. But Scripture offers a path back to joy a joy that isn’t shallow or fleeting, but rooted in the unshakeable love and sovereignty of God.

1. Learn to Lament

Ministry is fertile ground for frustration. People disappoint. Efforts fail. Sacrifices go unnoticed. Paul writes in Romans 8:20–23 that frustration is woven into our current experience even for believers with “the firstfruits of the Spirit.” Pain, rejection, and apparent failure are normal.

But what we do with that frustration is critical.

Paul himself faced rejection, imprisonment, even desertion by fellow believers (2 Timothy 4:16). Yet from prison, he writes, “I have learned in whatever situation I am to be content” (Philippians 4:11). How did he learn contentment? One answer lies in the practice of lament.

To lament is to groan with creation (Romans 8:22–23), expressing our pain honestly before God. Over a third of the Psalms are laments raw, unfiltered prayers that cry out to heaven. These aren’t faithless grumbles; they are the language of trust in a God who hears.

Lament breaks the chain reaction where pain becomes bitterness. It invites God’s comfort into our wounds. It opens us to healing. And it prepares us to experience joy again.

2. Let Sovereignty Unseat Insecurity

The second root issue insecurity can fuel burnout more than any workload. Leaders who are unsure of their worth or identity often drive themselves to overwork, trying to prove their value by worldly metrics of success.

Romans 8:28 silences those fears with a thunderous promise “For those who love God all things work together for good.” Even our worst days are woven by God into His greater plan. That confidence disarms insecurity at the root.

In Christ, we are more than conquerors (Romans 8:37), not because of our competence, but because of His love. As we trust God’s providence, we abound in hope hope that fuels joy and peace (Romans 15:13).

Time spent in God’s presence daily, even when it feels dry builds this security. Scripture like Deuteronomy 33:27 (“The eternal God is your dwelling place, and underneath are the everlasting arms”) slowly shifts our identity from performance to belovedness. Over time, insecurity begins to dissolve.

3. Enjoy God’s Covenant Love

In the final verses of Romans 8, Paul scales the mountaintop of God’s love. Nothing—no suffering, no attack, no failure can separate us from it (Romans 8:35, 38–39). And that love does more than comfort; it produces joy.

Romans 5:5 tells us that God’s love is poured into our hearts by the Holy Spirit. This isn’t a theological concept; it’s a felt reality that can shield us from bitterness and revive our weary souls.

Joy is not optional in ministry it’s essential. Jesus told His disciples that His joy would be in them, and that their joy would be full (John 15:11), right before calling them to sacrificial love (John 15:12). Joy fuels sacrifice.

There’s wisdom in the words of a 90-year-old missionary who, after 72 years of service, stood before a youth group and said simply, “The joy of the Lord is your strength. When the joy goes, the strength goes.”

Even Jesus, “for the joy that was set before him,” endured the cross (Hebrews 12:2). Joy not only sustains ministry it makes it holy.

Real Joy, Real Strength

So many Christian workers burn out not because they worked too hard, but because they lost their joy. Disappointment festered into bitterness. Insecurity led to striving. Eventually, joy flickered and faded.

But joy is not out of reach. It can be recovered by:

  • Lamenting honestly before God

  • Resting in His sovereign goodness

  • Abiding in His covenant love

These truths practiced daily, remembered faithfully, savored slowly build a foundation that no storm can shake. They turn groaning into glory and hardship into hope.

So if you feel weary or burned out, don’t just ask for relief. Ask for joy. Ask God to remind you of His nearness, His providence, and His unwavering love. Because when the joy of the Lord returns, so will your strength.

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Freddie McNabb • 9 hours ago

I am going through a season of major burnout. Beginning in 2018, I became my mother's main caregiver. Fortunately, I have some help during the day, but it is still quite difficult. It got much tougher after Covid. During the pandemic, several friends either died or moved away. I miss their support. Since 2023, I have had to take care of my aunt--Mom's sister, too. Now both are on hospice, though their death is not imminent. It has really been taking a toll on me. In addition, I also have a serious disability and struggle with depression. Though graduating with honors and earning a Master's, I was never able to obtain suitable employment in my field. I also have never dated and see no prospects of marriage. My depression is getting worse, and in fact, I am growing cynical and angry with God, the church, my family, and life itself. Thanks for this article. We believers often forget how many f the Psalms are lament and just how beautiful they are.

The user involved in the comment

Freddie McNabb • 9 hours ago

I am going through a season of major burnout. Beginning in 2018, I became my mother's main caregiver. Fortunately, I have some help during the day, but it is still quite difficult. It got much tougher after Covid. During the pandemic, several friends either died or moved away. I miss their support. Since 2023, I have had to take care of my aunt--Mom's sister, too. Now both are on hospice, though their death is not imminent. It has really been taking a toll on me. In addition, I also have a serious disability and struggle with depression. Though graduating with honors and earning a Master's, I was never able to obtain suitable employment in my field. I also have never dated and see no prospects of marriage. My depression is getting worse, and in fact, I am growing cynical and angry with God, the church, my family, and life itself. Thanks for this article. We believers often forget how many f the Psalms are lament and just how beautiful they are.

The user involved in the comment

Gail Zink • 20 hours ago

I’m taking care of my husband’s brother who is in assisted living. We’ve taken care of him for 8 years and the last 11 months in assisted living. He has Parkinson’s, hallucinations, delusions and paranoia , yet enough with it to make everyone’s life very hard. He tells all the staff that we’ve stolen all his money. His latest is he hasn’t spoken to us in three weeks. This article helped me so much. Thank you for such a practical help. Bless you

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