Leadership comes in many shapes and sizes—not just one. And different situations call for different styles of leadership. So what types of leader does the church need right now?
Clichés become clichés for a reason—usually because they are true. So I am going to risk saying that because the church is in crisis, we need a different kind of leader from those we needed fifty years ago. It is a cliché—but it is also true.
I was thinking about this recently when speaking at the induction of a friend, Ross Lockhart, as Director of Ministry Leadership and Education at St. Andrew\’s Hall, the Presbyterian College at the Vancouver School of Ministry. My brief was to “give the charge.” This was not a phrase I was familiar with, so I asked Ross whether it meant I had to tell everyone how wonderful he is, or whether it was a chance for me to tell him what to do. Modest man that he is, he said the latter. I was happy to oblige—though I would happily have done the first too.
Since seminaries like St Andrew’s are in the business of training leaders, and since Ross is teaching leadership, it seemed like a good opportunity to reflect on what kind of leaders the church needs in today’s world.
I suggested there are four kinds of leader we need:
- The traditional pastor
Traditional healthy churches need leaders who can preach and teach, train and give pastoral care, lead inspiring worship, and be competent administrators. It is a tall order, but over the years, even centuries, many have done this wonderfully well. And seminaries continue to turn out good shepherds of this kind.
Frankly, however, there is a limited need for those with this skill-set. This kind of pastoring assumes that the congregations to which they go are in healthy midlife, and simply need building up and encouraging in the way they are already going. But, sadly, there are not many of those around.
It is true, of course, that a good traditional pastor may be able to win back the lapsed and get them energised again. That is a much-needed contribution to the work of the Kingdom, since the “dechurched” are still a significant portion of the Canadian population.
But the dechurched are a limited market. It is those who have never had a church experience—the unchurched—that is the fastest-growing demographic (the “nones,” as they are often called), particularly among the young. So if traditional pastors are the only kind of leader we are producing, soon there will be nobody left for them to pastor.
- The palliative care leader
Many churches will not survive the next ten years—in some cases the next five years. What kind of leadership do they need?
In my Doctor of Ministry cohort some years ago was a woman who, with her husband, was pastoring a small ethnic congregation, originally from central Europe, in a small town in the Niagara Peninsula. The young people were long gone, and the community of those who still spoke their mother tongue was shrinking. Humanly speaking, there was no way that congregation would ever grow. The pastor told me, “My husband and I feel called to minister to this congregation until the last person dies.”
I have the utmost respect for that kind of calling—one I am sure I could never fulfil myself—and the need for “congregational palliative care” is both crucial and growing. Congregations die all the time—just as (please God) new churches are born all the time—but to help them die with dignity and even joy is crucial. God loves these people, after all, and they have often served God faithfully for long decades, through thick and thin. There are too many stories of how such churches have been “closed” with needless clumsiness and lasting hurt.
Where are the palliative care pastors such situations need? And who is training them?
- The turnaround leader
The third is perhaps the most difficult of the four models of leader: the one who can help moribund congregations change from looking after their existing members to understanding that they are called to participate in the mission of God.
Why is this difficult? Well, for one reason, the changes required are pretty fundamental, in all likelihood involving their grasp of the Gospel, their understanding of church, their long-standing ministry habits, and (not least) their theology.
Twenty years ago, I thought in my naivety that most struggling congregations would be willing and even excited to make this kind of change in order to thrive again: all they needed was to know how, and good leadership to help them do it.
Now we know that is not the case. Given the choice between changing and dying, many will weigh the options: change? death? Hmmm . . . and then choose death as the easier choice. Why is it easy? Because all they have to do is keep doing what they have always done.
The other reason this has proved difficult is that most “traditional pastors,” however much they might want to bring about change, simply do not know how. It requires a different skill-set. For a pastor to try to bring about that kind of change without the requisite gifts, and in the face of the inevitable resistance, is a recipe for conflict and sometimes burnout.
Of course, there are some congregations who will choose the painful road of change. They need leaders with clear vision and thick skins and stick-to-it-ivenes—not to mention lots of love—to guide them through the transition. These are the turn-around pastors.
- The pioneer leader
Finally—and maybe in the long run most important—we have a need for leaders who can start new Christian communities (often called fresh expressions of church) in contexts where existing churches can never go: new churches which reflect the culture of their context, and which have mission in their DNA from day one.
What kind of leader can do this? One who is unusually gifted in evangelism, who is as comfortable in secular culture as in church culture, who has experience of pulling innovative teams together, who has a track record of starting things, and has a competent grasp of orthodox theology. (The last is particularly important for church planting teams because, in the new situation, they will be the sole “bearers of the tradition”!)
In many cases, we will need to recruit such people, rather than waiting for them to come to us. Often the young people who come up through our churches’ farm system know little apart from life in the traditional congregations they come from, and which have recognised that they have gifts for . . . traditional ministry.
But the kind of people who are gifted to pioneer new congregations have in many cases never considered ordination because their image of ministry leadership is the traditional one, and they know that is not for them. We need to persuade them that they are exactly what the church needs these days—and train them appropriately.
Why does this matter?
After all this, we need to remember why these things are important. The need for suitable leaders is not in the first place about the church or leadership, or teaching and training. At the heart of all this concern is the Gospel of God—the good news of Jesus. After all, it is the Gospel that brings the church into being (if there were no Gospel, there would be no church), it is the Gospel that gives shape to what we mean by leadership, and it is the Gospel that directs our understanding of mission.
John,
Thank you for your analysis of pastoral leadership styles needed. As a bishop I need clergy of all four types – and finding the right candidate for the right parish can be challenging. We do need to articulate the needs and train appropriately even as we are listening to where God is in our midst.
I hope your article will spur more conversation on this!
Well said John. This is Enoch. Would love to connect. When would you be at Wycliffe in the next few days?
Thank you, John – this is a splendid piece!
blessings,
Rob
The first type you refer to as the “Traditional Paster”, but the remaining types are referred to as “leader”. I wonder why the term Paster was replaced. The context of your presentation would suggest that you are, in general, referring to the minister/pastor as the leader of the church.
Is the problem and possibly a solution to be found in expecting that the minister/paster is the sole person in a congregation in whom we expect to find all or most of the skills, knowledge and personality needed to provide the leadership required to effectively lead a congregation?
Many congregations include members who have significant training and experience being effective leaders in business, corporate and non profit organizations. Effective leadership requires many and varied skills. No one person can excel at all of the skills, but a team of people having strong and varied leadership skills can become very effective in accessing what needs to change and also leading a congregation in becoming more effective as Christ’s disciples.
The minister/pastor does require two specific skills – the ability to preach and teach and secondly the ability to draw together and support an effective leadership team. The minister/pastor brings the message of Christ to the congregation while the leadership team makes things happen.
Good catch, Lew. I hadn’t noticed that, but you are quite right. Maybe it is because we do not always associate the need for “leadership” with “traditional pastors”–though of course they need to lead as much as anyone else. And you are correct about different gifts within the body of Christ. I am a strong believer in an Ephesians 4 model of ministry: that those in leadership need to “equip God’s people for works of service [or ministry]”–whichever kind of church setting they are in.
I like Lew’s comments. Being able to mine the talents of
the parishioners is a gift. The seminaries need to teach
this way of managing a congregation……maybe they do
try but I have seen clergy who feel challenged by the
suggestions and ideas of parishioners…..which is sad.
We’re all in this together with a common goal.
I really enjoy your description of the four types of leaders that the church needs and I am very intregued by the Palative Care Leader. Like you, I think that this s an important leader that the church needs today. Can you give me any idea on where to start looking.