What Great Coaches Know About Developing Human Potential That Pastors Should Learn
The great sports coaches — the ones who consistently develop athletes to levels that exceed what natural talent alone would predict — share a set of practices and convictions about human development that are genuinely instructive for pastoral leadership. Not because ministry is a sport, but because the challenge of helping specific human beings develop their specific gifts toward their full potential is a challenge the coaching world has thought about with extraordinary intensity and remarkable practical result.
One of the most consistent characteristics of the great developmental coaches is their capacity to believe in a person's potential before the evidence for that potential is fully available. The great coach sees something in the athlete and commits to developing it before the outcome is certain. This prior belief tends to function as a self-fulfilling prophecy — not through wishful thinking but through the sustained investment that the belief motivates. The pastoral application: the pastor who sees and names the gifts in their congregation, who invests in the development of people before those people have demonstrated that the investment will pay off, is practicing one of the most generative forms of pastoral leadership available.
"The great coach believes in a person's potential before the evidence fully supports it — and that prior belief, sustained through investment, tends to produce the evidence."
The Specificity of Good Feedback
Great coaches are extraordinarily specific in their feedback. Not "you need to improve your defense" but "when the ball goes to the left corner, your first step needs to be toward the baseline — watch this clip." The specificity of the observation, the concreteness of the suggested change, and the connection to observable behavior rather than general assessment are what make the feedback actionable. Most pastoral feedback to developing leaders is far less specific than this — general encouragement with occasional general concern. Developing the capacity to give genuinely specific developmental feedback is one of the most significant pastoral development investments a leader can make.
The great coaches are also famous for their patience with the developmental process. They understand that genuine development takes more time than impatient culture wants to acknowledge. They invest in building the foundation before expecting the structure, in developing the character before the skill, in forming the whole person before optimizing the specific performance. This is precisely the posture genuine pastoral mentorship requires. The pastor investing in the development of the next generation is engaged in a long-game process that will not produce its most significant fruit during their own tenure. The willingness to plant trees under whose shade they will not sit — to invest in human development whose fullest expression will be realized long after the investing pastor has moved on — is one of the most significant and most undervalued forms of pastoral faithfulness.
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