
Why No One’s Listening to Your Church (4 Steps to Fix It)
You’re leading. You’re preaching. You’re promoting. But still… it feels like no one’s really listening. That’s not just frustrating; it’s
As churches grow and Pastors (ministry leaders) are hired to look after various ministries, the healthy church-focus becomes threatened by the inevitable: Ministry Silos.
This is when ministry areas become myopic — nearsighted — to the point they rarely look at the entire organization or even at another ministry outside of its narrow walls. It can affect us all.
Ministry silos will eventually destroy the farm (to take the analogy to the next level). Why? Because a ministry must understand the part they play in the overall church mission or it will slowly become its own entity. And those self-centered entities start to compete with each other and dismantle the unity and loyalty of your entire church brand (and create sub-brands).
It also costs more to develop all the separate brands rather than one unified brand. A healthy church must become a branded house, not a house of brands.
Here are 8 ways to tell if you have Ministry Silos (that need to be torn down):
Note: Ministry Silos often pop up even with the Senior Pastor (or senior leader). Be careful when the sermon, the offering, the worship service, or the key leader’s pet projects become more important than everything else in the church. That’ll destroy the farm too.
You’re leading. You’re preaching. You’re promoting. But still… it feels like no one’s really listening. That’s not just frustrating; it’s
Julie Andrews sang it well in The Sound of Music: “Let’s start at the very beginning, a very good place
Excuse me, but who are you? Few questions strike deeper than this one: “Who are you?” It can feel affirming
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