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Stop Hiring People to Work at Your Church

Stop Hiring People to Work at Your Church
Authors
  • Name
    Paul Alexander
Churches love to hire people. I mean they really love to hire people. Oftentimes when churches are just starting off, staff members will raise their own salary until the church has the capacity to pay them. Then as they grow I’ve seen churches long for the day where the budget grows just a little bit more so they can make that next hire. They put so much hope into staffing. Many think that if they could just add one more special staff position to the team, the church would grow. Now before we get too far into this conversation, let me just say that I’m not against churches hiring staff members. I’m just against churches hiring as many staff members as they do. You see the average church in America has somewhere around a 1:75 staffing ratio. That means for every 75 people they have attending the church there is  one full-time equivalent staff member being paid to work at the church. A full-time equivalent may be made up of two 20-hour-a-week employees, four 10-hour-a-week employees, or any combination you can think of. At the Unstuck Group when we help churches build a Staffing and Structure plan for the future, we encourage churches to staff at 1:100. By the way, do you know where your church measures up on that ratio?

Why Staff Lean?

One of the many reasons why we encourage churches to staff with this approach is because the churches across America that are reaching the most amount of people with the Gospel and are seeing the most amount of life change are leaner with their approach to staffing. They’re putting resources into reaching people, ministry and developing people instead of into salaries. They pay fewer people more so they can attract and keep great people.

The More Staff the Less Life-Change

When churches staff at a lower ratio they unintentionally keep people from following Jesus. When people are hired that means what was previously being done by volunteers is now being professionalized. This takes the ministry out of the hands of volunteers and actually often times discourages volunteerism. Volunteering is discipleship. You can’t follow Jesus and not serve others.

More Staff Is an Indicator of Over Programming

A low attender to staff ratio is also an indicator that a church is probably over-programmed. The staff are busy running a lot of programs to minister to people who are already a part of the church and already know Jesus. 

It’s Easier to Hire Than Develop

It’s faster and requires less effort to hire people to do ministry than to recruit, train and develop volunteers to do ministry.

It’s More Convenient to be Served Than to Serve

It’s easier for church members to pay to hire people to serve them than to invest the time into stepping up and serving others. I could go on and on, but I bet you get the point. Hiring isn’t always the wrong move to make at a church. But if you do hire, hire for two big results:
  1. Hire people who can build teams and develop people.
  2. Hire specialists because of a needed skill.
This article originally appeared here.