What’s Wrong with Small Churches

Perhaps nothing. God uses small churches to do His work. Most of my readers are currently attending or have attended a small church. Some of those churches are effective, and some aren’t. Although there can be a correlation between ineffectiveness and small attendance, many times size is circumstantial. Therefore, a church’s effectiveness isn’t (and shouldn’t be) defined by their attendance.

Many small churches are comfortable in their own skin. But problems can occur when a small church or its leadership begins to believe the grass is greener at a larger church.

This thinking can debilitate church effectiveness – and leaders who suffer from church leader jealously syndrome often chase cool, leading their churches to fruitless pursuits that hinder the Gospel and hurt those who attend.

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Dealing with church members who don’t like you

 ©luismolinero / Dollar Photo Club

As a leader in the church, there will be times people don’t like you. Hopefully it’s that they don’t like decisions you made, rather than just not liking you – but I’ve experienced both. Have you?

If so, you might have dealt with some of these questions: What should my response be? How should a church leader react? Is it my responsibility to remedy this dislike? How’d it happen? It could be you didn’t provide enough benevolence, or you removed someone from leadership they cared for. Maybe you didn’t allow an exception to the wedding policies the church has – or perhaps your sermon was a little too convicting for them. Or possibly – the worst of all – you changed the bulletin format.

I once heard a pastor  say, “If you don’t like the decision I’ve made or me, feel free to remove my picture from your wallet.” He might say now, “Remove me from your ‘favorites’ on your phone.”

You can’t fully control church members dislike of you or your decisions. Sometimes, being disliked is a part of leadership. But when you’re aware a church member you serve doesn’t like you or your leadership, I believe we have some responsibility to address it.

5 tips for dealing with dis-likers:

  1. Provide them an opportunity to hear an explanation of your decision or yourself.

They may not want to talk to you, but extend the offer. It’s a simple email saying you’d like to provide further clarification/context on why a decision was made. People and decisions are much easier to dislike from a distance. Often a face-to-face conversation can make issues dissipate.

  1. Don’t enable their anger or separation from you.

Don’t avoid them. When you see them in the church hallways, speak to them. Go above and beyond to be generously kind. This shows them you’ve moved on, and many times, they’ll move on too.

  1. Apologize for any part you had in contributing to the (disliked) issue.

Don’t make up an apology, or qualify the one you give. But if you did anything which contributed to the negative impact on them, go ahead and apologize for that part of it. Don’t overstate it, but simply acknowledge fault. If there’s nothing you need to apologize for, you can still take the opportunity to empathize, and tell them you’re sorry they were hurt by the matter.

  1. Minister to them, no matter what.

Someone in a former church who figuratively had “taken my picture from their wallet” had a death in their family. As a minister, I did what is required, which was to go to the family and extend care. Knowing they weren’t happy with me, I thought it might be awkward when I arrived at their house. To their credit though, whatever negative feelings they might have had for me before, dissipated. The only thing that mattered was our church grieving with them. While we never fully resolved their issue with me, our relationship was restored.

  1. Avoid the martyr syndrome.

Sometimes it makes you feel better to let friends or co-workers know how hard it is to be you—how your leadership role makes people not like you. It may feel good to express this, but it’s not healthy. Keep the information about the situations to yourself, or disclose it only to those with legitimate reasons for knowing it.

 

Some of us are more prone to people-pleasing than others, but I don’t think anyone enjoys being disliked – especially by fellow Christians you serve. In my role, some days I feel I’m just trying to disappoint people at a rate they can handle… and disappointing others can often lead to being disliked. (I often joke that my rough-patch with girls in junior high prepared me for this part of my job.)

You’re going to be disliked for things, even those you’ve done correctly. As a leader, you’ll need to embrace the idea that you can’t please everyone. But I’d suggest you should also embrace a method of engaging and addressing the dislike, rather than allowing it to fester.

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A Better Question In a Performance Review

 

Do you want to know how your team really feels about their job? Your church? Or perhaps even how they feel about you as a supervisor?

Knowing how your team “really” feels is critical to for your supervision, their development, and the success of your team (church).

If you want to know the right answers, you have to ask the right questions. Even in a good performance management system, the important questions can get lost among all the other small ones.  How your team members really feel is what I’ll refer to as the last 2% (that term is not unique to me and I’ve blogged previously on the “last 2%” concept). The last 2% is what you want to make sure you communicate (or have communicated to you) in your staff reviews.

I’ve found one question gets me the most helpful and transparent information from those I lead. It’s simple, has two-parts, and has begun some very informative conversations in review meetings I’ve had with staff (sometimes in writing, other times verbally):

  • What is it I’m doing as your supervisor that’s helping you complete the goals we’ve set for you and in your day-to-day job activities?
  • What is it I’m doing as your supervisor that’s hindering you from reaching all your goals and can get in the way of you doing day-to-day job activities?

3 Rules of Engagement when asking this question:

  1. Listen to their feedback. Don’t defend.
  2. Ask clarifying questions.

In any scenario where you’re trying to elicit a response, frame your questions in such way that assumes the person has feedback. It’s the difference between:

“What feedback do you have for me?” and, “Do you have any feedback for me?”

If you assume there‘s feedback, you’re more likely to get feedback.

  1. Be trustworthy.

Even if you ask the right question and they provide you honest (last 2%) feedback, it’s only good for one try – unless you listen to their feedback and affect change based on it (or at least explain why you may not). You can’t hold their input over them (especially if it’s negative).

If you listen and don’t punish people for their feedback, they’ll be more likely to give it to you in the future.

I encourage you to try this out at your next review meeting. I believe you’ll be a better supervisor because of it.

P.S. I believe the two-part question fits nicely into a performance management system with formal reviews, but it can still work in informal settings with those you lead.

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