Three Ingredients for a Healthy Soul

By Tim Dowdy

Leading in ministry requires more than vision, skill, or endurance. It requires a healthy soul. As leaders, we often pour ourselves out for others, but over time, the weight of ministry, family pressures, and spiritual warfare can leave us depleted. Many pastors and church leaders today are running on empty, pressing through each week on fumes. The question isn’t whether we can keep going, but how long before we collapse. 

In Psalm 23, David reminds us of a truth that we can’t afford to miss. “He restores my soul.” Those four words hold the foundation for our spiritual health. God is the Restorer of our souls. Only He can renew what the pressures of life deplete. But as we seek Him, there are practices that help us slow down, listen, and receive the restoration He offers. 

Consider these three essential ingredients for cultivating a healthy soul.  

  1. Pace: Refuse the Temptation to Rush

Rushing is the enemy of a healthy soul. In a culture that prizes speed, constant activity, and visible results, ministry leaders can easily mistake motion for fruitfulness. But a frantic pace is unsustainable and eventually, it catches up to us. 

Years ago, I volunteered at an Ironman event as a “catcher.” My role was simple: stand at the finish line and catch athletes when they began to wobble and collapse. After swimming 2.4 miles, cycling 112 miles, and running 26.2 miles, many of these elite athletes would cross the finish line and immediately crumble. The exhaustion they’d held off during the race hit them all at once. 

That picture mirrors what happens to many in ministry. We keep pushing forward, managing the next sermon, next meeting, and next crisis until the moment we finally stop. That’s when the accumulated toll hits us, and we realize just how empty we’ve become. 

A healthy pace begins with relentlessly refusing the temptation to rush. Slowing down doesn’t mean laziness; it means being attentive to God’s rhythm. Jesus lived a full life but never a hurried one. He walked intentionally, paused often to pray, and withdrew regularly to quiet places. 

To find a sustainable rhythm, leaders must also know themselves well. Just as an athlete monitors hydration, nutrition, and pace, we must understand our own limits and needs. What drains you? What replenishes you? How much margin do you have before fatigue turns to burnout? 

Finding a healthy rhythm of work, prayer, and rest allows ministry to flow from overflow rather than exhaustion. When you pace yourself wisely, you create space for God’s restoration to do its work. 

  1. Diet: Feed Your Soul the Right Way

A healthy soul also depends on what you feed it. Just as our bodies require proper nutrition, our spirits need consistent nourishment from God. Three key components form a strong spiritual diet: prayer, Bible study, and serving. 

Prayer is the starting point. Talk honestly with God. Pray out loud when possible. It helps focus your mind and reminds you that you’re speaking to the living God of creation and salvation. Pour out your heart, not just your needs. Let prayer become your first instinct, not your last resort. 

Next, feed on the Word. Spend time listening to God through Scripture. Let His truth shape your thinking and bring clarity to your heart. Ministry leaders can easily fall into studying the Bible only to prepare sermons or lessons, but your own soul needs to be nourished first. Before you teach others, let the Word teach you. 

Finally, serve God from the overflow of prayer and Scripture. When Jesus met the Samaritan woman at the well in John 4, the disciples urged Him to eat. But He responded, “I have food to eat that you do not know about.” His nourishment came from doing the will of the Father. 

When you serve from a place of intimacy with God, your work becomes fuel for your soul instead of exhaustion. Ministry done without prayer and Scripture depletes; ministry done from communion with God sustains. Serving is no longer a drain. It’s an act of worship that fills you. 

  1. Rest: Stop Before You Have To

The third ingredient for a healthy soul is rest. God designed our bodies and souls to require regular rhythms of rest and renewal. Ignoring that need is an act of pride. We pretend we can do what even our Creator chose not to do after creation. 

Rest begins with working hard. Scripture never separates diligence from rest. In fact, the deeper your labor for the Lord, the more important intentional rest becomes. The goal isn’t inactivity—it’s restoration. 

Practice rest daily, weekly, monthly, and yearly. Take small pauses throughout your day to breathe, pray, and recalibrate. Protect a weekly Sabbath to step away from ministry demands and remember that God is God—you’re not. Plan longer breaks each season to reflect and recharge. 

Rest also includes getting outside and moving. Physical activity helps clear the mind and resets your emotions. It includes disconnecting from social media, which constantly pulls at our attention and often feeds comparison or anxiety. Step away long enough to remember who you are without the noise. 

And always, chase away anxiety with prayer. Philippians 4:6 reminds us to bring every worry before God with thanksgiving. Rest is not the absence of activity. It’s the presence of trust in God. 

Why is rest so vital? Because it’s always better to stop before you have to. Too many leaders wait until a crisis, a moral failure, or a physical collapse forces them to stop. Soul rest prevents burnout before it begins. 

Ministry is an endurance race, not a sprint. We all want to go the distance and finish well. But finishing well requires more than perseverance. It requires a healthy soul. God alone restores the soul, yet we position ourselves for His restoring work when we guard our pace, feed our diet, and honor our need for rest. 

Pastor or leader, your church doesn’t just need your leadership. They need your health. Slow down enough to let God restore what only He can. The Lord is your Shepherd. He restores your soul. 

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This article was adapted from a session of the “Creating a Culture of Evangelism” online training course. To learn more or take the course, click here. Also available in Spanish.


Published October 15, 2025

Tim Dowdy

Tim Dowdy was saved at 11 years old at a Southern Baptist camp in Panama City, Florida, and was called to gospel ministry at age 18. He graduated from New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary with a Master of Divinity (1985) and a Doctor of Ministry (1991). Tim served as the lead pastor of Eagle’s Landing First Baptist Church and as the president of Eagle’s Landing Christian Academy in McDonough, Georgia, for 31 years. During that time, the church consistently led the Southside Baptist Network in baptisms (totaling 3,792 baptisms), helped plant 31 churches, and sent out 25 church pastors, 17 missionaries and church planters, and over 40 staff members. Tim also served as chairman for the North American Mission Board Trustees and on the Georgia Baptist Mission Board for several years as lead strategist for pastor wellness. He is the vice president of Evangelism for the North American Mission Board.