Your worship pastor just got back from Guatemala with incredible stories of transformation. Your youth pastor is busy planning an upcoming trip to Kenya. Meanwhile, your executive pastor is coordinating a visit to your sister church in Mexico.
🎧 Listen to this episode:
Three different trips. Three different times. Three completely separate experiences.
And somehow you're still wondering why your staff feels like separate departments instead of one unified team working toward the same mission.
Sound familiar?
If you're nodding your head right now, you're not alone. Many churches approach staff mission experiences like they're checking boxes—everyone gets their turn, everyone gets their experience, but nobody gets the shared story.
And that shared story? It might be the missing piece your staff team has been waiting for.
Don't get me wrong—individual mission experiences are absolutely transformative. I've seen countless staff members return from solo trips with renewed passion, fresh perspectives, and deeper faith. These experiences change people in profound ways.
But here's what we often miss: your staff comes back changed, but they're changed alone.
They return with:
Instead of creating unity, these separate experiences can actually create isolation. Rather than building shared vision, you might even notice some competing priorities emerging—like an unspoken competition about whose mission trip was more impactful or whose calling is more urgent.
Everyone returns inspired by different things they struggle to explain to people who weren't there. The very experiences meant to fuel your ministry can end up fragmenting your team's focus.
What if there was a better way? What if instead of sending five people on five separate trips, you planned one transformative experience for your core team?
Here's what I'm proposing: the together trip.
Take your key staff members on one mission trip together. Let them see each other outside the familiar office walls and discover who their teammates really are when the comfortable structures are stripped away.
"Though one may be overpowered, two can defend themselves. A cord of three strands is not quickly broken." - Ecclesiastes 4:12
Picture this: You watch your children's pastor comfort a crying child in a language they don't speak fluently. You see your facilities manager figure out broken plumbing with makeshift tools and endless creativity. You notice your administrative coordinator naturally become the team's translator and cultural bridge.
Staff unity happens when people discover each other's hearts in real time, in real circumstances that matter.
When your staff shares the same mission experience, something powerful shifts in your church culture:
Staff members stop seeing each other as role-fillers and start recognizing the unique calling and gifting each person brings to the team. They witness firsthand how God uses different personalities and skills in unexpected ways.
Shared challenges create shared loyalty. When your team has navigated difficult situations together, they return with a protective instinct for one another that transcends departmental boundaries.
Instead of each staff member carrying their own version of what's important, the entire team returns carrying the same burden, the same vision, the same heart for what God is doing in the world.
The benefits of shared mission experiences don't end when the plane lands back home. Here's what starts to change in your everyday church operations:
Your Monday staff meetings transform when everyone can reference the same week in Honduras, the same challenges overcome together, the same victories celebrated as a team.
Your budget conversations shift when everyone has felt the same needs firsthand. There's less debate about priorities when the entire leadership team has seen the same needs with their own eyes.
Your church announcements sound different when three staff members can tag-team the same story from the stage, each adding their unique perspective to a shared experience.
Your vision casting becomes more powerful because it's carried by multiple voices telling the same story, each with authentic passion born from shared experience.
"So that there should be no division in the body, but that its parts should have equal concern for each other." - 1 Corinthians 12:25
Ready to create this kind of unity on your team? Here's how to get started:
Take a honest look at your missions budget and staff development budget. How much are you currently spending on separate trips? What would it look like to consolidate some of these resources?
If a full international mission trip isn't feasible right away, consider starting with local service opportunities or weekend retreats where your staff can serve together in your own community.
Focus on your core team—the staff members who most need to be unified in vision and purpose. This might be your department heads or your key decision-makers.
Choose a destination and type of service that will challenge your team without overwhelming them. The goal is growth and bonding, not survival mode.
Staff unity doesn't happen in conference rooms—at least, not the deep kind of unity that weathers storms and builds lasting kingdom impact. Real unity happens when people share life in the trenches together, when they see each other's character revealed under pressure, when they carry the same burdens and celebrate the same victories.
And I can't think of a better "trench" for this kind of transformation than a shared mission experience.
Your staff team is waiting for a shared story that regular meetings simply can't create. They're longing for the kind of unity that comes from discovering who their teammates really are when everything familiar gets stripped away.
So here's your challenge: Instead of sending five people on five separate trips this year, plan one trip for your core team. Pick a destination, set a date, and go together. Give your team the shared experience they've been waiting for.
The investment you make in staff unity through shared mission will pay dividends in every area of your church's health and effectiveness. When your team is truly unified around a shared vision and shared experiences, everything else gets easier.
What's your experience with staff mission trips? Have you seen the difference that shared experiences can make in team unity? I'd love to hear your thoughts and stories. Send me a message at podcast@chemistrystaffing.com and let me know how you're building unity on your staff team.
And if you're looking for more resources on building healthy church staff teams, check out our other content at Chemistry Staffing, where we're passionate about helping churches build thriving, unified teams.