Ep. 325: Pastors Staying too Long
This episode of Trench Talk explores the question, “Can a pastor stay too long?” Brian Croft and Jim Savastio contrast the common problem of pastors leaving too soon with the less-discussed danger of overstaying. Drawing from Acts 20, 2 Timothy 4, and 1 Corinthians 16, they discuss ministry “expiration dates,” age and infirmity, loss of effectiveness, identity issues, succession planning, and the need for honest voices around a pastor. They conclude that faithfulness—not longevity—is the true measure of finishing well.
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(02:39) Framing the question: Can a pastor stay too long?
(02:46) Acts 20 & 2 Timothy 4 – finishing your course in ministry
(05:31) 1 Corinthians 16 – “open door” and “many adversaries” as stay/leave indicators
(08:00) High-profile examples: Alistair Begg and contrasting exit models
(09:33) Jim’s personal retirement aspirations and health/age as limits
(13:37) Practical markers that it’s time to step down (diminished gifts, effectiveness)
(17:18) Yes, pastors can stay too long; continuing ministry after leaving the pastorate
(19:25) Why some won’t let go: finances, lack of self-awareness, identity in ministry
(22:21) When no one can tell the pastor, “It’s time” – isolation and lack of accountability
(26:00) Succession planning in churches and ministries (Brian’s and Jim’s examples)
(29:30) Defining “finishing well”: faithfulness over visible success
(31:44) Spurgeon’s ending, realism about messy conclusions, and faithfulness to the end
(33:03) Final Word and Prayer