When Your Calling Outgrows Your Community
Find the people who see what you see — Substack Seminary
Picking up from last week
Last week, I wrote about how we can’t imagine the future alone—drawing on insights from the book Imaginable: How to Create a Hopeful Future by Jane McGonigal.
The core idea from that blog, based on her book is this:
Imagination doesn’t fail because we lack ideas. It fails because we lack the right people.
If you missed that piece, it’s worth going back—because what follows builds directly from it.
Clarity without movement
One of the hardest moments in ministry isn’t confusion. It’s clarity.
You see the shifts.
You understand the limits.
You can name what needs to change.
And yet—nothing around you seems to move.
That right there is what’s so hard. You see things so clearly, yet others do not…
The missing piece
In Imaginable, McGonigal describes how our relationship to the future depends on more than calling or urgency.
It depends on belonging—meaning, finding a group of people who can understand, support, and encourage your imagination.
This is especially important for pastors and church leaders, as your church community may not initially be that community where you find belonging.
The point is this—many leaders don’t lack vision.
They lack a community that shares it.
Where burnout actually begins
Burnout is rarely about workload. People will work long and hard when there is energy and momentum towards a hopeful future.
But, when you feel like you are carrying all of that yourself? Well, that’s absolutely a recipe for burnout
Holding urgency no one else feels.
Seeing limits no one else names.
Trying to move something that isn’t ready to move.
Clarity without belonging is not sustainable.
What we’re trying to build
If your calling has outgrown your current community, there are only a few real options:
Find others already doing the work
Step into a different community
Or begin to build one
Not later.
Now.
This is why Substack Seminary exists.
Not as content, but as alignment.
Not as ideas, but as shared imagination.
If your calling has outgrown your current community, the answer isn’t to shrink your vision. It’s to find the right people.
That’s what we’re trying to build here.
Join us.




