Kids pastors are some of the most faithful and generous leaders in the local church. They carry the spiritual formation of children, care deeply for families, and give themselves fully to the work God has entrusted to them. Yet many do this work quietly overwhelmed, overextended, and under-supported. As a result, kids ministry burnout is more common than many churches realize. Burnout in kids ministry is rarely about a lack of calling. More often, it is about a lack of...Read More
Easter is one of the few times each year when people who rarely attend church feel open to attending. Churches invest significant time and energy into Easter weekend, yet many leaders wonder why the impact does not extend beyond Sunday. Effective Easter outreach is not about bigger events or better production. It depends on clarity, connection, and intentional leadership, especially for families. 1. Family Experience Matters Most For many guests, Easter is a family decision. Parents ask whether their children...Read More
Over time, I have developed a quiet custom: sitting in rooms with senior pastors after board meetings end. The doors close, the adrenaline fades, and the posture changes. What emerges in those moments is not complaint or defensiveness. It’s a deep, tired honesty. At Shepherd Staff, we often sit in those same quiet spaces; helping churches strengthen senior pastor support before exhaustion turns into isolation. Most senior pastors rarely reveal the deepest of the deep to their elders. Not because...Read More
Most failed pastoral placements don’t fail because the church chose a “bad” pastor. They fail because the pastoral search process broke down long before the offer was ever made. At Shepherd Staff, we’ve walked with hundreds of churches through both successful and unsuccessful searches. Certain patterns emerge quickly. When a search goes sideways, it is almost always because one or more of the following warning signs were ignored. Here are five red flags churches should watch for if they want...Read More
When kids ministry leadership begins to struggle, churches rarely notice all at once. The warning signs tend to appear quietly over time, until leaders realize they’re reacting to problems instead of leading with clarity. Here are five signs it may be time to invest in intentional leadership development before burnout or decline sets in. 1. Your Volunteers are Faithful But Tired Your volunteers keep showing up, but the same people serve every week, and those people feel stretched thin. Energy...Read More
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