Your children's pastor calls in sick again. But Sarah, your volunteer coordinator, has already rearranged the schedule, texted parents, prepped materials, and recruited backup helpers. Meanwhile, your paid youth pastor forgot about the lock-in planning meeting—again.
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And you're sitting there thinking: "Sarah would absolutely crush this job."
But she's not getting paid, and he is.
Sound familiar? If this scenario made you squirm a little in your chair, you're not alone. This uncomfortable dynamic is happening in churches everywhere—large and small, urban and rural—and nobody really wants to say it out loud.
But here's what we need to acknowledge: sometimes volunteers have higher capacity than paid staff. And ignoring this reality could be costing your church its absolutely best leaders.
Let's be honest about what's happening here. Some volunteers are simply more organized, more proactive, and more passionate than your paid team members. They anticipate problems before they happen. They communicate better with teams. They execute with excellence. And if we're being completely transparent, they're making your paid staff look bad.
This isn't about volunteers being perfect or paid staff being incompetent. It's about recognizing a structural dynamic that many church leaders face but few know how to navigate.
"There are different kinds of gifts, but the same Spirit distributes them. There are different kinds of service, but the same Lord. There are different kinds of working, but in all of them and in everyone it is the same God at work." - 1 Corinthians 12:4-6
Before we jump to solutions, let's understand the root causes. Most of the time, this isn't actually a people problem—it's a structure problem.
Be honest: how many times has the person who said "yes" fastest gotten the job? When you're desperate to fill a position, availability often trumps capability. Your volunteers, on the other hand, chose to be there. They weren't looking for a paycheck—they were drawn by passion and calling.
Many of your volunteers bring sophisticated skills from their professional careers. That marketing executive volunteering in your communications ministry? She's been managing million-dollar campaigns all week. Your paid staff member might have a ministry degree but lack the practical experience your volunteer has in spades.
Here's a hard truth: your volunteers aren't burned out from ministry pressure yet. They're bringing fresh energy and perspective, while your paid staff might be running on fumes from trying to prove themselves or manage unrealistic expectations.
And here's the kicker—volunteers often aren't trying to prove themselves the same way paid staff are. They're free to lead from their strengths without the weight of job security concerns.
When faced with this dynamic, most churches make predictable mistakes that end up hurting everyone involved:
Great volunteers shouldn't be held back by mediocre staff. Your church deserves leaders who can actually lead, regardless of whether they're paid or unpaid.
So what does a healthy response look like? It starts with shifting your perspective from protecting the status quo to optimizing for mission effectiveness.
Stop treating volunteer and staff roles as completely separate universes. Some of your best staff members started as volunteers, and some of your current volunteers should become staff. Create intentional pathways that allow high-capacity volunteers to grow into paid roles when it makes sense.
Consider compensation structures that reflect actual contribution rather than just job titles. This might mean offering part-time paid positions, consulting fees, or other creative arrangements that honor the value high-capacity volunteers bring.
Maybe your underperforming staff member isn't actually underperforming—maybe they're just in the wrong seat on the bus. Before you write someone off, consider whether their gifts might be better suited to a different role on your team.
Your organizational structure should serve your mission, not the other way around. When your org chart prevents you from empowering your most effective leaders, it's time to redraw the chart.
"So Christ himself gave the apostles, the prophets, the evangelists, the pastors and teachers, to equip his people for works of service, so that the body of Christ may be built up." - Ephesians 4:11-12
Here's what this all comes down to: your first responsibility is to the mission, not to the payroll.
This doesn't mean you should be callous about people's livelihoods or feelings. But when the mission is being compromised by protecting underperformance, you can't keep kicking that can down the road indefinitely.
The goal isn't harmony—it's effectiveness. And sometimes the most loving thing you can do for an underperforming staff member is help them find a role where they can truly thrive, even if that means they need to leave your team.
Think about your highest-capacity volunteer—the one whose name came to mind as you read this post. Schedule a conversation about whether there's a role that actually fits their abilities. Stop wasting talent just because of titles.
Remember, this isn't about volunteers versus staff. It's about putting the right people in the right seats to advance God's kingdom most effectively. Some of your volunteers should become staff. Some of your current staff might be better suited elsewhere. And that's okay.
Your church's mission is too important to let organizational charts or payroll considerations get in the way of great leadership. When volunteers consistently outperform staff, that's not a volunteer problem—that's a staffing opportunity.
The question isn't whether this dynamic exists in your church. The question is: what are you going to do about it?
This topic hits close to home for many church leaders. If you're wrestling with these dynamics on your team, I'd love to hear about it.
Send me your thoughts and questions at podcast@chemistrystaffing.com
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