In most evangelical churches, the elder board or deacon board plays a significant role in the life and governance of the congregation. But what is the appropriate role of that board in a pastor search? The answer varies by church polity — but there are principles that apply across governance structures and that help searches run more smoothly when they are followed.
Define Authority Before the Search Begins
The single most important thing an elder board can do at the beginning of a pastor search is define its own role clearly and in writing. This means answering: What decisions does the search committee have authority to make independently? What decisions require elder board approval? Does the elder board have veto power over the committee's recommendation? How will disagreements between the board and the committee be resolved? These questions seem bureaucratic — but unanswered, they become sources of significant conflict later.
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Even when the day-to-day search work is delegated to a search committee, the elder board retains responsibility for the health of the congregation during the transition. This means monitoring the committee's work at a high level, providing pastoral care to the congregation during the search, ensuring that communication to the congregation is adequate and appropriate, and stepping in when the committee encounters decisions that exceed their delegated authority.
Theological Evaluation
In many churches, the elder board plays a specific role in theological evaluation — either conducting doctrinal interviews with finalists or reviewing the committee's theological assessment before a candidate is presented to the congregation. This is appropriate and wise. The elders, as the theological guardians of the congregation, have both the responsibility and the standing to ensure that a pastoral candidate's convictions are genuinely compatible with the church's doctrinal commitments.
The Final Vote
In churches with elder-led governance, the elder board often makes the final decision to call a pastor, either independently or in conjunction with a congregational vote. In congregationally governed churches, the elder board typically recommends and the congregation votes. Whatever the polity, the process should be defined clearly in advance, communicated to the congregation, and followed consistently. A process that changes mid-search because it becomes inconvenient erodes trust significantly.
After the Search: Welcoming the New Pastor
The elder board's work does not end when a pastor accepts a call. The board is responsible for the new pastor's onboarding, for establishing healthy communication patterns with him from the beginning, and for creating the conditions in which he can lead effectively. An elder board that releases authority appropriately to a new pastor — rather than continuing to govern as if the position were vacant — gives the new ministry its best possible start.