When we contemplate the traditional approach to church staff evaluations, metrics are typically centered around measurable outcomes such as the number of events organized or attendance on Sundays. However, here on the Healthy Church Staff Podcast, we believe there's a significant opportunity to change the narrative and encourage spiritual transformation.
The question that arises is, what if we could evaluate church staff based on their reflection of Christ's teachings rather than purely logistics? What if the fruit of the Spirit became our ministry metrics?
It's a profound reorientation from performance checklists and towards spiritual maturity, but one that can potentially revolutionize how church staff lead their teams and themselves.
Existing church job descriptions have a distinct focus on results. Elements such as the number of volunteers recruited, events executed, or Sundays preached are standard benchmarks.
However, here's an undercurrent truth: it's entirely possible to be thriving on paper yet be spiritually dissatisfied internally. When we exclusively measure ministry like a conventional business, we risk promoting burnout, hustle, and people-pleasing. As spiritual leaders, we need to recognize that ministry is not purely a production line; it's a mission of soulwork.
The central message from Galatians 5:22-23 provides a divine blueprint for spiritual maturity – love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.
Imagine if our church staff meetings began with introspects such as "How are you growing in peace this season?" instead of only focusing on KPIs. Benchmarks are important, but spiritual growth and health should take precedence.
By considering these aspects and asking the right questions, we can usher a change that prioritizes discipleship and spiritual ideals that reflect Christ-likeness.
Moving towards a structure that combines clear goals with spiritual aspects in staff evaluations can have a profound impact. Measure attributes like love under pressure, leading with joy rather than just going through the motions, fostering a safe and gracious culture, or effectively managing emotions, time, and energy, and you start seeing signs of spiritually healthy leadership.
But how do we implement such a radical shift in church staff culture?
It's essential to remember that change is gradual. Introduce one fruit initially, perhaps 'peace' for the next quarter, and slowly build conversations around it. Over time, this change can create a culture that focuses on spiritual transformation over mere task completion.
Remember that what we measure shapes what we value. Tracking productivity alone will not nourish the soul; but by measuring Christ-likeness, we can cultivate the kind of leaders our churches desperately need.
Has this sparked interest or curiosity? Curious about the implementation of this approach? Listen to more on today's Healthy Church Staff Podcast episode.