Picture this: You hand your worship pastor the same performance review form your friend uses at his accounting firm. You ask him to rate himself on "achieving quarterly targets" and "exceeding expectations."
🎧 Listen to this episode:
He stares at it like you just handed him a math test in Mandarin.
Because how do you quantify leading people into God's presence? How do you measure "exceeded expectations" when you're dealing with souls, not sales numbers?
If this scenario sounds familiar, you're not alone. Most churches either skip staff reviews entirely or grab some corporate template off the internet that completely misses the heart of ministry work.
Here's what's happening in churches everywhere: We're using performance review systems designed for profit margins and productivity metrics. We're asking ministry staff to fit into boxes that were never meant for kingdom work.
Your children's pastor can't measure "ROI on crayon investment." Your student pastor can't quantify the "souls per pizza party ratio." Yet we keep trying to make ministry fit corporate molds, and when we do this, something fundamental breaks.
The reality is that ministry work operates in a completely different paradigm than corporate America. While businesses focus on measurable outputs and quarterly gains, ministry is fundamentally about transformation—both of the staff member and the people they serve.
When churches use corporate-style performance reviews, several damaging things happen:
Staff members start feeling like their sacred calling has been reduced to a series of checkboxes. The deep, relational work of ministry—the late-night crisis calls, the patient discipleship, the faithful preparation that no one sees—gets overshadowed by metrics that can be easily measured.
The pastor who walked with a family through tragedy all year gets dinged for "low event attendance." The worship leader who invested deeply in discipling three volunteers gets criticized for "insufficient innovation." When this happens, people start gaming the system instead of serving people's hearts.
Staff members begin measuring themselves by metrics that have nothing to do with faithfulness. Ministry becomes about looking good on paper instead of being faithful in the calling. The focus shifts from transformation to transaction.
"Therefore encourage one another and build each other up, just as in fact you are doing." - 1 Thessalonians 5:11
Now, I'm not saying we shouldn't evaluate ministry staff. That would be irresponsible leadership. But we do need to fundamentally change what ministry evaluation looks like and what it should accomplish.
Instead of beginning with productivity measurements, start with questions like: "How are you growing in faithfulness to what God called you here to do?" This shifts the conversation from performance to development, from measuring output to nurturing growth.
Focus on character development alongside skill development. Look at how staff members are growing other people, not just growing numbers. The invisible work of ministry—the counseling sessions, the mentoring relationships, the prayer life—these matter more than event attendance or program participation.
Corporate reviews miss the behind-the-scenes discipleship, the faithful preparation that nobody sees, the crisis interventions that happen at 2 AM. A ministry-focused evaluation process celebrates these invisible victories that would never show up on a corporate review form.
The key to effective ministry evaluation lies in asking questions that don't show up on corporate review forms:
Your staff need to know that you see their ministry, not just their metrics. They need evaluation that acknowledges the weight of what they carry and reviews that help them grow in grace, not just efficiency.
"As iron sharpens iron, so one person sharpens another." - Proverbs 27:17
A effective church staff evaluation process should reflect the sacred reality of ministry work. Here are the key elements:
Instead of annual performance reviews, implement quarterly growth conversations that focus on spiritual development, ministry challenges, and calling clarification.
Gather input from people who observe the staff member's ministry from different angles—volunteers they lead, families they serve, and peers they collaborate with.
Help staff members set goals that align with their calling and the church's mission, rather than arbitrary productivity targets.
Ministry staff need evaluation that honors their calling, not just their calendar. They need processes that acknowledge the eternal weight of their work and support their growth in both character and competence.
Your people are doing kingdom work, so make sure your review process remembers that. Metrics are important, but they're not the only thing. The soul work—the transformation happening in both your staff and the people they serve—is incredibly vital.
This week, I challenge you to throw out that corporate performance review template you've been using. Instead, sit down with each staff member and ask them one simple question: "How can I better support you in the calling God's given you here?"
Then listen to their answer. Really listen. And build your evaluation process from there.
Ministry is fundamentally about transformation, and your review process should reflect that sacred reality. When we get this right, we don't just improve performance—we nurture calling, develop character, and strengthen the very heart of ministry itself.
What's your experience with staff performance reviews in ministry? Have you found approaches that honor the unique nature of ministry work? I'd love to hear your thoughts and questions—send them to podcast@chemistrystaffing.com.
If your church needs help developing a comprehensive staff evaluation process designed specifically for ministry, reach out to me at the same email address. I've developed a detailed system that can help you start from scratch or revamp what you currently have.