Building the Right Team for Church Renewal
One of the quieter—but very real—challenges in church revitalization involves staff who are no longer able to carry the ministry forward.
Most churches attempting revitalization are already operating on very tight budgets. Resources are limited, giving is often declining, and every dollar must be used wisely. Yet in many situations, leaders find themselves in a difficult position: they are paying staff members who are simply not equipped to do the work the church now requires.
This is rarely a simple problem.
The Legacy Staff Challenge
In many declining churches, staff members have served faithfully for years—sometimes decades. They were hired during a different season of the church’s life when the expectations of their role were much different.
Take a common example.
A church secretary may have faithfully produced the weekly bulletin for twenty years. In that era, the bulletin was the primary communication tool of the church. But today, communication looks very different. Churches need websites, social media engagement, digital newsletters, online registration, and other forms of communication that didn’t even exist when that secretary began the job.
The challenge is not about loyalty or dedication.
The challenge is capacity and training.
If someone has spent twenty years typing a bulletin but has little understanding of websites, media, or digital communication, the church may struggle to move forward in a world where those skills are now essential.
It Isn’t Only Administrative Staff
While administrative roles often highlight this challenge, it must also be said that pastoral staff can sometimes become a hindrance to revitalization as well.
Pastors and ministry leaders may have served faithfully for many years, but they may no longer have the energy, vision, or leadership capacity required for the difficult work of renewal. Revitalization requires courage, adaptability, and a willingness to lead people through significant change. Not every leader is prepared—or willing—to guide a church through that kind of journey.
In some cases, a pastor may be deeply loved by the congregation but resistant to the very changes the church must embrace in order to survive. When that happens, the revitalization effort can stall before it ever gains momentum.
This reality can be particularly painful because pastoral relationships are deeply personal. Yet the same principle still applies: leadership must align with the mission the church is trying to accomplish.
Why Change Is So Difficult
Making changes in these situations can be incredibly complicated.
Church staff members often have deep relational roots in the congregation. They may have family members, lifelong friendships, and strong supporters throughout the church. Their presence is tied not just to a job description but to relationships and shared history.
Because of this, replacing or restructuring staff can feel like pulling a thread in a tightly woven fabric. Leaders worry about upsetting people, damaging relationships, or creating conflict in an already fragile congregation.
In many cases, church leaders delay addressing the issue simply because the emotional cost feels too high.
The Cost of Avoiding the Problem
But ignoring the issue carries its own consequences.
When key positions are filled by individuals who are unable to meet the current demands of ministry, the church’s progress slows—or stops altogether. New initiatives struggle to gain traction. Communication falters. Opportunities are missed.
In a revitalization setting, where momentum is already difficult to build, ineffective staffing can quietly stall the entire process.
Churches trying to move forward often find themselves trapped between two competing realities: they do not want to disrupt the relationships that hold the church together, yet they desperately need new energy, new skills, and new leadership capacity.
Navigating the Tension
Addressing this issue requires both wisdom and compassion.
Revitalization leaders must remember that the people involved are not problems to be solved—they are individuals who have often served faithfully for many years. Their contributions to the life of the church should be honoured and respected.
At the same time, revitalization demands honest evaluation. Churches must ask whether current staff structures actually support the mission they believe God is calling them toward.
Sometimes the solution may involve training and development, helping long-serving staff members learn new skills.
Sometimes it means restructuring roles so that people can serve in areas where their gifts are strongest.
And occasionally, it may require the difficult step of bringing in new leadership capacity to move the church forward.
Honouring the Past While Preparing for the Future
Church revitalization is rarely comfortable. It involves difficult conversations, complex relationships, and leadership decisions that affect real people.
The goal is never to discard those who have served faithfully. Rather, the goal is to honour the past while preparing the church for the future.
Healthy churches understand that staffing must align with mission. When the needs of the mission change, the structure of the staff must sometimes change as well.
For revitalizing churches, the challenge is not simply finding new people.
It is finding the courage to build the right team for the season of ministry ahead.


