What to do About Deadbeat Pastors

Article Index

Deadbeat pastor
Has your lead pastor become ineffective? What can you do about it? (Lightstock)

1. Define "deadbeat." That could mean one thing to one person and something else to another.

One person described their pastor as one who does not make pastoral calls, is not available for counseling, preaches unprepared sermons, and gives no hands-on leadership to anything. That is precisely what I would call deadbeat.

2. There are several ways of dealing with such a preacher. Here are some considerations and suggestions:

a. Ideally, you personally should schedule a visit with the preacher. He hears you and repents and changes his way. But if he truly is a parasite on the body of the redeemed, he will slough you off. When that happens, you try something else.

b. Does your church have in place elected lay leaders such as deacons (with their officers), a personnel committee (with officers), or an administrative committee (ditto)? If so, after trying unsuccessfully to deal with the pastor personally, go to Plan B. Make a visit to the leading layperson(s) and share your concern.

c. What provisions are in your church's constitution and bylaws? Study it and look for orderly and acceptable ways to bring issues to the attention of the pastor or the congregation in a regular business session. This means, of course, that churches should keep these documents up to date and in working order, and that leaders should know them backward and forward. Some of my pastor friends say with poorly concealed delight that their church does not have a constitution and it frees them to do things their way. This is unbelievably short-sighted. I ask them what about the next preacher? What if he is a dictator or tries to take the church from your denomination or to make it into something unbiblical? Without proper safeguards, the membership may be helpless.

d. If the pastoral situation is in serious need of immediate action, a small group of elected leaders would be the ideal ones to visit the pastor and bring this to his attention. That could be the three chairpersons above (deacons, personnel, administrative) or something resembling that group. Please note, while I do think such a small group should call on the pastor from time to time to pray with/for him and encourage him, and while I believe they are the proper ones to deal with him when he is lazy or out of control, they are not his boss and exercise no authority over him. The worst people to deal with a wayward pastor are those known to be against him. He will not listen to such members, and will discount anything they say. The best ones to speak are people who have loved him and supported him.


Dr. Mark Rutland's

National Institute of Christian Leadership (NICL)

The NICL is one of the top leadership training programs in the U.S. taught by Dr. Mark Rutland. If you're the type of leader that likes to have total control over every aspect of your ministry and your future success, the NICL is right for you!

FREE NICL MINI-COURSE - Enroll for 3-hours of training from Dr. Rutland's full leadership course. Experience the NICL and decide if this training is right for you and your team.

Do you feel stuck? Do you feel like you’re not growing? Do you need help from an expert in leadership? There is no other leadership training like the NICL. Gain the leadership skills and confidence you need to lead your church, business or ministry. Get ready to accomplish all of your God-given dreams. CLICK HERE for NICL training dates and details.

The NICL Online is an option for any leader with time or schedule constraints. It's also for leaders who want to expedite their training to receive advanced standing for Master Level credit hours. Work through Dr. Rutland's full training from the comfort of your home or ministry at your pace. Learn more about NICL Online. Learn more about NICL Online.

Charisma Leader — Serving and empowering church leaders