Small Church Ministry
Delegating Tasks In the Small Church: Two Options and Six Lessons
When there's little help available, we can either do fewer activities or train more disciples. Here are six ways I learned to do both.

“Delegate, pastor. Delegate.”

I’ve heard that wise advice hundreds of times. Literally hundreds.

During the first few years pastoring my current church, one of my deacons, named Ron Cook, said it to me constantly. Whenever he caught me doing something like stacking chairs by myself he’d walk by me, usually while lending a helping hand himself, and drop that little gem into my ear.

“Delegate, pastor. Delegate.”

Why Delegating Is So Hard – And Necessary

When I came to my current church I was a hurting pastor at a hurting church. The combination of those hurts led to two realities:

  • There were very few people to delegate anything to
  • Most of my motivation came from my own feelings of guilt

When those combined, it led me to do too much of the ministry work myself – and see myself as martyr while I did it.

But slowly, Ron’s words started taking hold. I stopped offering excuses and started following his advice.

Eventually, I discovered that there are two options when it comes to reaching a balanced delegation of tasks in a small church:

Option 1) Do fewer activities
Option 2) Do better discipleship training

I highly recommend doing both.

Here are six delegation lessons I learned the hard way. The first three are about doing fewer activities, the last three are about doing better discipleship.

1. Leave Guilt at the Door

Too many small church pastors operate out of guilt. We swim in a sea of self-imposed fault-finding, then we dump the overflow on others. Since guilt motivates us to work hard, we assume it will work on others.

Guilt doesn’t motivate volunteers. It paralyzes and discourages them.

Guilt never works. Not for pastors or their congregations. I know. I’ve tried.

Guilt doesn’t motivate volunteers. It paralyzes and discourages them.

Motivation by guilt leads to burnt-out pastors and unhealthy churches.

2. Adapt Your Methods To Suit Your Size

Too many churches of 50 are trying to do all the activities of a church of 500. This causes a lot of extra and unnecessary work. It’s not healthy to operate a small church under a template more suited to a larger church.

When we adapt our methods to suit our size, we discover that a lot of things we thought were essential aren’t so essential any more. For instance, when 20 or fewer people show up for a meeting, there's no need to line them up in rows, speak through a microphone, have a band lead in worship or offer multiple levels of age-appropriate child care. Maybe the best way to do church at that size is to form the chairs in a circle. Talk, pray and sing together. Do some Q & A. Make it more about dialog than monolog.

Adapting our methods to suit our size means that a church of 50 of fewer may not need:

  • A worship team or choir
  • A Sunday School
  • A nursery
  • An audio system
  • A building
  • A full-time pastor (Ouch! Sorry.)
Acting like a big church is one of the worst strategies a small church can have.

And if we don’t need all those activities, we don’t need as many volunteers to delegate to.

Acting like a big church is one of the worst strategies a small church can have. Unless your goal is a frustrated pastor, burnt-out volunteers and an ineffective church.

3. Stop Doing Activities that Have No One to Lead Them

If there’s no one willing to lead something, it’s probably not as vital as everyone thinks it is.

“But we need it!” is never enough of a reason to start something new. It might be okay for meeting a temporary, immediate need, but a sustained ministry takes more than that.

There are needs everywhere. They’re endless. A wise pastor does spiritual triage to determine which ministries the church can do well over the long term.

When I finally started taking delegation seriously, this is one of the first steps I took. We stripped the church calendar to the bare essentials.

Then we didn’t start any new ministries again until we satisfied the requirement in the next point.

4. Don’t Start Or Restart a Ministry Without at Least Two People On the Leadership Team

I’ve started ministries because one reliable, passionate person said they could handle it themselves. And it’s never ended well. We’re better off not launching a ministry at all than starting one without back-up leadership in place. It’s like a weak swimmer (the leader) trying to save a drowning friend (the ministry). They’ll both go down.

And no, one of two team members can’t be the pastor or spouse.

If you don’t believe me on this one, here’s the same principle from a higher authority than me.

Two are better than one, because they have a good return for their work: If one falls down, his friend can help him up. But pity the man who falls and has no one to help him up! Also, if two lie down together, they will keep warm. But how can one keep warm alone? Though one may be overpowered, two can defend themselves. A cord of three strands is not quickly broken. – Ecclesiastes 4:10-12

5. Assess and Hone Your Delegation Skills

So, according to Ecclesiastes – not to mention the examples of Jesus, Paul, Moses and others – delegation and teamwork aren’t just helpful, they’re a biblical imperative. According to the Apostle Paul, one of the pastor’s primary responsibilities is to prepare God’s people for works of service, so that the body of Christ may be built up. (Eph 4:11-12)

There’s no excuse. Small church pastors need to learn how to delegate better.

Yes, I understand that there are a lot of mundane tasks that small church pastors just have to do. There’s no getting around that. And the last thing I want to do to an already overwhelmed, guilt-ridden pastor is to add another brick to your load. But we have to face the reality that a lack of volunteers is not always the congregation’s fault.

Small church pastors need to become better delegators.

Small church pastors need to become better delegators.

How?

As I described in Mentoring Is Better than Curriculum: Seven Steps to Better Discipleship, training better leaders starts with better mentoring.

No matter how small our church is, how burdened we are, or how impossible the task of training volunteers to do the work of ministry seems, not delegating is not an option.

I’ll close by passing on some of the wisest counsel I’ve ever received in pastoral ministry.

6. Delegate, Pastor. Delegate.

My deacon was right.

It may be hard to delegate. Especially when it seems like there’s no one to delegate to. But it’s easier – and more biblical – than not delegating at all.

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The views of the blogger do not necessarily reflect those of Christianity Today.

August 31, 2015 at 2:46 AM

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