Clarity Before Strategy
Or: why most churches aren’t stuck—they’re just unclear
TL;DR:
Most churches and nonprofits don’t have a strategy problem—they have a clarity problem. When you try to do everything, you lose focus, burn energy, and drift off mission. Clarity is what allows you to say no, align your work, and actually move forward.
I was recently on The Nonprofit Exchange talking about leadership, mission, and strategy. It was a good conversation, but the more I’ve reflected on it, the more I’ve come back to a simple conclusion: most churches and nonprofits don’t actually have a strategy problem. They have a clarity problem. You can listen to the full episode, but I want to reflect on a few ideas that have stayed with me since.
One of the hardest realities of leading in a church or nonprofit is that there is always more you could do.
There are more needs than you can meet, more opportunities than you can pursue, and more good ideas than you can possibly implement. And if you’re not careful, your organization slowly drifts into becoming about everything. Not because anyone explicitly decided that, but because no one made the harder decision to define what you’re actually about. Clarity rarely disappears all at once—it erodes over time.
One of the clearest signs that this erosion has taken place is the inability to say no. Not to bad ideas, but to good ones. Requests that sound meaningful, opportunities that feel important, initiatives that seem worth trying. Over time, saying yes to everything creates a kind of quiet fragmentation. You end up with a church or nonprofit that is very busy, doing a lot of things, but not actually moving in a clear direction.
Part of what drives this is deeply human. When something happens—especially something difficult or urgent—we feel the need to respond. We want to do something. In ministry contexts, that instinct can even feel spiritual. But action without clarity almost always pulls us away from our mission rather than toward it. Sometimes the most faithful thing a leader can do is pause, even briefly, and ask: is this actually what we are called to do?
There’s also a persistent assumption, especially in church life, that we are supposed to reach everyone. At one level, that instinct makes sense. But in practice, it often leads to vague communication, diluted energy, and a lack of meaningful connection. I’ve had to learn this myself. I’m someone who loves ideas, who takes in a lot of information, and who enjoys making connections across different domains. But not everything I find interesting is helpful to the people I’m trying to serve. Clarity requires restraint. It requires deciding who you are actually trying to reach, and shaping your work around that decision.
Another piece that stood out to me in the conversation is how little space leaders give themselves to think.
I feel this personally. When I’m overcommitted, I feel scattered. When I don’t take time to process decisions, I default to reacting rather than leading. But when I do create space to think—even if it’s just a small amount of time—I move forward with a different kind of confidence and focus. Thinking isn’t a luxury for leaders; it’s part of the work.
This lack of clarity often shows up in something as basic as a mission statement. Most organizations have one, but many function more like aspirations than actual guides. Saying “we want to show the love of God” is meaningful, but it doesn’t tell you what to do next. If a mission statement doesn’t create accountability—if it doesn’t help you decide what to say yes to and what to say no to—it won’t actually shape your work.
I’m seeing this play out right now in a nonprofit I’m working with. People are doing good things, but it doesn’t feel like those efforts are adding up to anything cohesive. It feels like energy being spent in parallel rather than converging toward a shared goal. And over time, that kind of misalignment leads to fatigue. Not because people don’t care, but because they can’t see how their work connects to something larger.
When leaders feel stuck, the instinct is often to look for a big solution—a new strategy, a major pivot, a breakthrough idea. But in my experience, clarity usually comes through smaller steps. Small decisions, small wins, small movements that begin to create traction again. Those moments don’t solve everything, but they remind you that forward movement is still possible.
At the end of the interview, I was asked for one word that defines great leadership. I said curiosity.
The more I think about it, the more I believe that’s true. Curiosity keeps you from assuming you already understand the situation. It keeps you open to people, to context, to what’s actually happening beneath the surface. And in a time when churches and nonprofits are navigating so much change and uncertainty, that posture matters.
If you’re feeling stuck in your leadership, it may not be because you need a better strategy. It may be because you need clearer direction. And the good news is, that’s something you can begin to recover with intention, reflection, and a willingness to make harder decisions about what you are—and what you are not—called to do.
If you want to listen to the full conversation, you can find it here:
👉 https://synervisionleadership.org/2026/03/31/clarity-before-strategy-getting-your-mission-straight/



One of the best bits of wisdom gathered in earlier years of parish ministry was "You won't really know what to say 'No' to until you understand what you've said 'Yes' to. The source was an Episcopal priest, Kevin Martin, who is on Substack and I think he's one of your subscribers. Thanks for doing the thinking, praying, and reflecting and even more thanks for writing about it afterwards.