Candidate Evaluation

What to Listen for When Evaluating a Pastor's Preaching

The deeper questions worth asking when reviewing sermons.

Premier Church Staffing  ·  September 2025  ·  7 min read

When a search committee evaluates a pastoral candidate's preaching, most members listen for one thing: do I enjoy this sermon? That is a natural response — but it is not an adequate evaluation. Enjoyment and fitness are not the same thing, and the difference matters enormously for your church's long-term health.

Here is what experienced evaluators listen for when they review a pastor's preaching — and how to build a preaching evaluation process that actually predicts long-term fit.

How Much Preaching Should You Review?

The single most common mistake in preaching evaluation is listening to too few sermons. One or two sermons tell you almost nothing about a preacher's range, depth, or consistency. We recommend listening to a minimum of eight to twelve sermons before drawing any conclusions — and those sermons should span different text types, different seasons of the church year, and different lengths and settings.

One or two sermons tell you almost nothing about a preacher's range, depth, or consistency. Listen to at least eight before drawing conclusions.

Is He Actually Preaching the Text?

The most foundational question in preaching evaluation is whether the sermon is driven by the biblical text or merely illustrated by it. A pastor who uses Scripture as a springboard for his own ideas rather than as the source and authority of his message will eventually drift — and take the congregation with him. Listen for whether the main point of the sermon is genuinely the main point of the passage.

Can He Handle Different Types of Texts?

Preaching from a narrative passage in Genesis requires a different set of skills than preaching from a doctrinal argument in Romans, a Hebrew poem in the Psalms, or a prophetic warning in Amos. A pastor who excels only in one genre and avoids others has a gap that will eventually show in his ministry. Listen across text types deliberately.

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Is the Gospel Present?

For evangelical churches, the question of whether a pastor consistently preaches the gospel — not just moralism or self-improvement wrapped in Christian language — is non-negotiable. The gospel should not appear only in evangelistic sermons. It should be present in some form in every sermon, because the gospel is the center of every Christian's life, not just the entry point.

How Does He Handle Difficult Texts?

Every preacher will eventually face texts that are uncomfortable, controversial, or simply difficult. How a pastor handles these texts reveals his courage, his theological depth, and his confidence in Scripture. Look for sermons on texts dealing with sin, judgment, sexuality, money, suffering, or eschatology — and listen for whether he engages them honestly or softens them for the audience.

Does the Application Land?

Good preaching is not only theologically accurate — it connects that accuracy to real life in ways that help people walk out of the building and live differently. Listen for whether the application is specific and realistic, or generic and vague. A pastor who can preach truth in a way that people can actually act on is a rare and valuable thing.

What Does His Preaching Reveal About His Character?

Preaching is one of the most revealing windows into a pastor's soul. His assumptions about people, his view of himself, his relationship to authority, his tenderness or harshness, his humility or pride — all of these things surface in the pulpit over time. Listen not just for content but for character. What kind of person does this preaching reveal?

Your church does not have to search alone.

Whether you are searching for a Senior Pastor, Worship Pastor, Youth Pastor, or ministry staff, Premier Church Staffing can help you move forward with wisdom and confidence.

Position Profile

How to Write a Position Profile That Attracts the Right Candidates

Your profile is the first thing a serious candidate sees.

Premier Church Staffing  ·  August 2025  ·  7 min read

Your ministry position profile is the first thing a serious pastoral candidate sees when they consider your church. It is the document that will either open a genuine conversation or close it before it begins. Most churches write their position profile too quickly, too generically, or too optimistically — and it costs them good candidates.

Here is how to write a position profile that attracts the right people and sets honest expectations from the start.

What a Position Profile Is Not

A position profile is not a job listing. It is not a wish list of every quality you could possibly want in a pastor. It is not a marketing brochure designed to make your church sound more attractive than it is. A position profile that oversells your church will attract candidates who become disillusioned quickly — and disillusionment in a pastor is a serious problem for everyone.

A position profile that oversells your church will attract candidates who become disillusioned quickly. Honesty is the foundation of a strong search.

Start With an Honest Church Description

Before you describe the pastor you want, describe the church you are. Include your history, your denominational affiliation or theological tradition, your average attendance and trajectory, your staff structure, your budget, your community context, and your current strengths and challenges. Be honest about challenges. A candidate who knows what he is walking into is far more likely to thrive than one who is surprised by it six months after arrival.

Describe the Community

Where your church is located matters enormously to a candidate and his family. Describe your city or town — its size, its demographics, its cost of living, its schools, its culture. For a pastor with a family, the community where he will raise his children is often as important as the church itself.

Navigating a pastor search?

Premier Church Staffing walks with churches through every phase. There is no cost to an initial conversation.

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Define the Role Clearly

What will this pastor actually do? What are his primary responsibilities? Who does he supervise? What decisions does he make alone and which require elder or board approval? What is the expectation around preaching frequency, counseling load, community presence, and staff leadership? Be specific. Vague role descriptions attract candidates who project their own assumptions onto the position — and those assumptions are rarely accurate.

State Your Non-Negotiables Honestly

Every church has theological and ministry convictions that are genuinely non-negotiable. State them clearly. If you hold to full biblical inerrancy, say so. If you practice believer's baptism by immersion, say so. If you expect expository preaching from the pulpit every Sunday, say so. Candidates who do not share these convictions will self-select out — which saves everyone significant time and energy.

Be Honest About Compensation

Few things waste more time in a search than candidates who advance through multiple rounds of evaluation only to discover that the compensation package is far below what they need. Include a realistic salary range, housing allowance or parsonage information, health benefits, retirement contribution, continuing education, and vacation. Honesty here is not a weakness — it is a sign of organizational health.

Close With a Clear Call to Action

Tell candidates exactly how to express interest and what to submit. A resume, a cover letter, a doctrinal statement, preaching samples? Be specific. And tell them who to contact and how. A position profile that ends with vague directions sends the wrong signal about how your church is organized.

Your church does not have to search alone.

Whether you are searching for a Senior Pastor, Worship Pastor, Youth Pastor, or ministry staff, Premier Church Staffing can help you move forward with wisdom and confidence.

Working With a Firm

What Does a Church Staffing Firm Actually Do?

A plain-language guide to ministry search firms.

Premier Church Staffing  ·  August 2025  ·  7 min read

If your church is beginning a pastor search, someone has probably mentioned the idea of working with a church staffing firm. And if you are like many church leaders, your first question is simple: what exactly does a firm like that do?

It is a fair question — and the honest answer is that it depends on the firm. Some do very little beyond collecting resumes. Others offer a comprehensive, guided process from first conversation to final placement.

At its best, a church staffing firm is a guide — not a resume service. The difference matters enormously for your outcome.

What a Church Staffing Firm Is (and Is Not)

A ministry search firm is not a job board. It is not a resume database you pay to access. At its best, it is an experienced partner who has walked dozens of churches through the same process you are about to navigate, who knows the landscape of available candidates, and who can help your committee avoid the most common and costly mistakes.

Phase 1: Church Assessment and Position Profile

Before any candidate work begins, a good firm helps your church understand itself clearly. This means asking honest questions about your history, culture, theological identity, leadership dynamics, community context, and future vision. From that assessment, the firm helps develop a ministry position profile — the foundation for every subsequent decision in the search.

Phase 2: Active Candidate Recruiting

This is one of the most significant differences between a search firm and simply posting a position. A firm actively recruits — reaching out through ministry networks, seminary relationships, denominational contacts, and direct referrals to surface qualified candidates who may not be actively looking.

Navigating a pastor search?

Premier Church Staffing walks with churches through every phase. There is no cost to an initial conversation.

Schedule a free consultation

Phase 3: Candidate Screening and Evaluation

Before a candidate ever reaches your committee, a good firm has already done significant evaluation work — initial screening, theological review, ministry history assessment, preliminary interviews, preaching review, and reference verification. Your committee receives a small group of thoroughly vetted finalists, not a stack of resumes to sort through.

Phase 4: Presentation and Guidance

When finalists are ready to be presented, a firm facilitates that presentation clearly — detailed candidate profiles, a side-by-side comparison, organized access to preaching samples, and a guided meeting where the firm walks the committee through each candidate. From there, the firm continues guiding through interviews, the candidating weekend, compensation negotiation, and final placement.

What a Firm Does Not Do

A good ministry search firm does not choose your pastor for you. It does not replace the committee's role in prayer, discernment, and congregational accountability. It provides the structure, the candidates, and the process — your committee provides the wisdom and the final call.

Is a Search Firm Right for Your Church?

A ministry search firm is likely the right choice if your church does not have an established network of qualified candidates, has limited experience navigating this process, wants to access candidates who are not actively searching, or simply wants the best possible outcome and is willing to invest in getting there.

Your church does not have to search alone.

Whether you are searching for a Senior Pastor, Worship Pastor, Youth Pastor, or ministry staff, Premier Church Staffing can help you move forward with wisdom and confidence.

Search Committees

5 Mistakes Church Search Committees Make

Hard-won lessons from walking alongside dozens of churches.

Premier Church Staffing  ·  July 2025  ·  7 min read

A pastor search is one of the most consequential seasons a church will ever navigate. Done well, it brings God-given leadership, renewed momentum, and years of fruitful ministry. Done poorly, it can divide a congregation, discourage good candidates, and leave a church more fragile than when it began.

Having walked alongside dozens of search committees across the country, we have seen the same avoidable mistakes appear again and again. Here are five of the most common, and what to do instead.

Mistake 1: Starting the Search Before Doing the Internal Work

Most committees start looking for candidates before they have clearly defined what they are looking for. They post a position, receive applications, and begin evaluating resumes — all without a clear, agreed-upon picture of what the church actually needs in its next season. The result is a committee that argues about candidates rather than evaluates them.

What to do instead:

Before you look at a single resume, invest four to six weeks doing honest internal work. Conduct a church assessment. Build a written candidate profile that reflects what you actually need. Then search.

Mistake 2: Relying Only on Unsolicited Applications

Posting a position and waiting for applications feels reasonable. The problem is that the best candidates are rarely the ones who apply first. Excellent pastors are typically faithfully serving somewhere and not browsing ministry job boards.

What to do instead:

Build a proactive outreach strategy alongside your passive posting. Use seminary networks, trusted ministry contacts, denominational relationships, and direct referrals to surface candidates who are not actively looking.

Navigating a pastor search?

Premier Church Staffing walks with churches through every phase. There is no cost to an initial conversation.

Schedule a free consultation

Mistake 3: Moving Too Fast Through Candidate Evaluation

Search committees are almost always under pressure — from the congregation, from the elders, from their own exhaustion. That pressure often produces a tendency to rush evaluation. Skipping thorough reference checks, limiting preaching review, or avoiding hard theological conversations are all symptoms of this mistake.

What to do instead:

Build a thorough evaluation process and commit to it regardless of momentum. Listen to a significant volume of preaching. Do reference checks that go beyond the names a candidate provides. A search that skips these steps is not saving time — it is borrowing trouble.

Mistake 4: Unclear Committee Authority

One of the most common sources of search dysfunction is confusion about who actually makes the decision. When these questions are not answered before the search begins, they get answered in the worst possible moment — when a committee is divided over a finalist.

What to do instead:

Before the search begins, answer these questions explicitly and in writing. Who does the committee answer to? What requires elder board or congregational approval? How will disagreements be resolved?

Mistake 5: Treating the Search as a Solo Project

Many churches attempt to conduct a full pastor search entirely on their own — managing outreach, screening candidates, checking references, and navigating compensation negotiations, all while serving the congregation. The result is usually a search that stretches too long or moves too fast because the committee is exhausted.

What to do instead:

Recognize what you are doing and get the right help. Whether that means engaging a ministry search firm or building a more structured internal team, you will almost always end up with a better outcome when the committee can focus on discernment rather than administration.

Your church does not have to search alone.

Whether you are searching for a Senior Pastor, Worship Pastor, Youth Pastor, or ministry staff, Premier Church Staffing can help you move forward with wisdom and confidence.

Search Timeline

How Long Does a Senior Pastor Search Really Take?

A realistic guide for church search committees.

Premier Church Staffing  ·  July 2025  ·  7 min read

If your church is beginning a senior pastor search, one of the first questions your committee will ask is a simple one: How long is this going to take? It is a reasonable question — and the honest answer is that most churches significantly underestimate the timeline.

We have walked alongside dozens of churches through pastoral transitions. The average senior pastor search — when done with proper care and thoroughness — takes nine to eighteen months. Some move faster. Some take longer. But churches that rush the process almost always regret it.

Churches that rush the process almost always regret it. Those that plan well find the right man with confidence.

Phase 1: Formation and Foundation (4-8 Weeks)

Before you look at a single resume, your committee needs to do serious internal work. This phase is where most churches lose time — or skip steps they will wish they had not.

What happens in this phase:

  • Establishing the search committee — size, composition, and authority
  • Defining decision-making process and relationship to the elder board
  • Conducting a church assessment — culture, theology, demographics, and vision
  • Writing the ministry position profile
  • Clarifying non-negotiables vs. preferred qualifications

Committees that invest time here move much faster later. Committees that rush this phase often find themselves arguing over candidates in month six — because they never agreed on what they were looking for.

Phase 2: Active Search and Sourcing (6-10 Weeks)

This is where actual candidate work begins. Whether you are working with a ministry search firm or conducting the search independently, the sourcing phase involves building a pipeline of potential candidates. The best candidates are rarely the ones who apply first — they are often faithfully serving somewhere and need to be found.

Navigating a pastor search?

Premier Church Staffing walks with churches through every phase. There is no cost to an initial conversation.

Schedule a free consultation

Phase 3: In-Depth Evaluation (6-10 Weeks)

Once you have identified your finalists, the evaluation process deepens significantly. Thorough reference checks, extended preaching review, and in-depth theological conversations belong here. Do not rush this phase. A search that skips thorough evaluation to move quickly is not saving time — it is borrowing trouble.

Phase 4: Candidating and Decision (4-8 Weeks)

When you have identified your top candidate, the candidating process begins — typically a weekend visit, congregational Q&A, compensation negotiation, and a formal vote if your governance requires it. If a candidate declines or the fit is not right, you may return to your finalist pool, which is why maintaining strong secondary candidates throughout the process matters.

What Makes a Search Take Longer?

  • Committee conflict or unclear authority — when no one knows who makes the final call, decisions stall
  • Unrealistic expectations — searching for a 35-year-old with 20 years of experience at a small-church salary
  • Lack of urgency — committees that meet infrequently or treat the search as secondary to other ministry concerns
  • Poor sourcing — relying solely on unsolicited applications
  • Late-stage surprises discovered in reference checks or background screening

What Helps a Search Move Well?

  • A well-defined position profile that accurately represents your church
  • A committee that meets regularly and responds to candidates promptly
  • Clear decision-making authority defined before the search begins
  • Realistic compensation competitive within your church size and market
  • Proactive sourcing — going out to find candidates rather than waiting

Your church does not have to search alone.

Whether you are searching for a Senior Pastor, Worship Pastor, Youth Pastor, or ministry staff, Premier Church Staffing can help you move forward with wisdom and confidence.