Conducting a pastor search in the middle of a church split or significant congregational conflict is one of the most difficult situations a church can face. The temptation is to use the search as an escape — to find a new leader who will fix the problems, resolve the conflict, and return the church to health. But a pastor search cannot do those things. And a church that begins a search before it has done the hard work of addressing its underlying conflict will likely see that conflict damage the search and eventually the new pastor as well.
Stabilize Before You Search
If your church is in the middle of active conflict — factions, public disputes, significant departures — seriously consider whether a pastor search is premature. Strong candidates will often decline to pursue a position at a church in visible turmoil. And if you do place a pastor in that context, you are placing him into a situation that may overwhelm his ministry before it has a chance to take root.
Navigating a pastor search?
Premier Church Staffing walks with churches through every phase. There is no cost to an initial conversation.
Schedule a free consultationBe Honest With Candidates
If conflict exists in your church and you are proceeding with a search, you have an ethical obligation to be honest with candidates about the situation. A candidate who accepts a call without full knowledge of the congregational dynamics will feel deceived when he discovers them — and that discovery, in a difficult environment, can be devastating. Honest disclosure is not only ethically required — it also ensures that the candidate who accepts the call does so with full information and genuine willingness to enter that context.
Look for a Specific Kind of Leader
A church navigating significant conflict needs a pastor with specific gifts — emotional stability, high relational intelligence, conflict resolution skills, a non-anxious presence, and the courage to address dysfunction directly without escalating it. This is a different profile than a church in a season of health and growth. Adjust your candidate profile and evaluation criteria accordingly.
Secure Interim Support
Consider whether a qualified interim pastor — someone with experience leading churches through conflict — might serve your congregation before the permanent search. A skilled interim can do significant work to stabilize the congregation, address the root causes of conflict, and create conditions in which a permanent pastor can succeed. This step adds time to the process, but for churches in genuine conflict, it can be the difference between a search that succeeds and one that perpetuates the problem.