Article

Currents Shaping My Church: Candid-dating on Video

Before making a date with a prospective ministry staffer, swap videos.

It works for video dating services. And it worked for our church. Before inviting a potential minister to come meet the church, we asked for a video and got a much clearer picture of the person we were considering.

The usual hiring process involves gathering resumes and calling references. After a phone interview or two, the candidate is brought to the church for a meet-and-greet prior to a vote.

Hold it! Let’s put the conventional process on pause for a few days.

Before launching into an “everyone smile” whirlwind weekend, try a creative intermediate step: swap videos. Our search committee recently used this approach in filling two ministry positions.

Ask the candidate to shoot short clips of his or her present ministry and interview a few core leaders. Then, with the camera running, the candidate takes a walking tour of his house and chats with the family or roommates. Finally, the candidate answers to the camera a short list of questions provided by the committee. We asked: “Tell us how your passion in ministry has been realized in your present setting.” “How could it be realized at our church?” “Show and tell us about an object in your home that is important to you.”

We sent our candidates a similar video—a tour of our facilities, scenes from our ministries, and unrehearsed comments from people the staff member would be working with. We kept our video homemade, and asked the candidates to do the same.

Swapping tapes gave the committee and the candidates crisp images of each other, before the candidate was introduced to the whole church.

If you’re candidating and a search committee hasn’t asked for a video, offer them one. It can be a powerful tool to communicate your vision and style.

David RiemenschneiderBloomingdale, Illinois

Why the Quick Resignation?

  1. He already put in his eight months on the job.
  2. They’re paying minimum wage at the car wash.
  3. The board wanted him to wear socks in worship.
  4. Only so many things you can do with shaving cream and bananas.
  5. His sermon warranty expired.
  6. The handwriting on the wall was spray-painted on the parsonage.
  7. She hadn’t planned to work weekends.
  8. His sermon barrel had exactly 42 sermons.

—Jim Schmotzer and the Leadership editors.

Yes, Education Pays

Pastors are far more educated than the average American adult. A survey by our sister publication Your Church shows 92% of pastors have a bachelor’s degree, compared to 25% of all adults. And 55% of pastors earned a master’s degree, while 14% have completed a doctorate. The higher degrees equal higher salaries and larger churches:

Copyright © 2003 by the author or Christianity Today/Leadership Journal.Click here for reprint information onLeadership Journal.

Posted April 1, 2003

Also in this issue

Making a lasting difference in the place where your church lives

Currents Shaping My Church: Up and Comers

What characteristics do you look for in future leaders?

Going Native

Settling for my way tempts pomos, boomers, in fact, every age group. And it’s deadly.

Let's Go to the Tape

As churches experiment with preaching on video. What are we learning?

How to Get a Grant

Sources of funding that your ministry just might qualify for.

Wizard of Odds

The Leadership Interview

Growing Edge Book Review: Not What I Do

The pastor of a postmodern ministry makes the case against cloning his church.

Currents Counter-Culture: Tony Soprano Sings

How this pastor uses pop culture to talk about faith.

The Multi-Site Church

Some of the strengths of this new life form.

Sometimes You Just Need to Disappear

The best pastoring doesn’t happen in the office.

From the Editor

Currents Shaping Our World: How Others See Us

Clergy ratings drop to lowest level ever; moral decline expected.

Secret Services

Churches freely provide social services, but neither church nor community realizes to what extent. A new study calculates its value.

Growing Edge In Brief:

Like a Good Neighbor

Six keys to improve your church’s reputation within the community.

When Your Neighborhood Changes You

How three Twin Cities churches have adjusted to reach their rapidly changing community.

Great to Good Churches

She's No Betty Crocker

When the pastor’s spouse doesn’t meet the church’s expectations.

Holy Multi-tasking

Lots of transactions take place during the sermon, many of them sacred. On ocassion I get to watch.

When the Grief-Stricken get Grief-Stuck

Two techniques to help the grieving complete the journey.

A Whole New Attitude

To change a city, we first had to change our church.

Churches in Action

Throughout the country, churches find creative ways to serve their communities.

Ministry at the Makeshift Memorial

After a kidnapped child was found dead, how could I help at the impromptu wailing wall?

View issue


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