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How Do You Pay Your Volunteers?

If no one is following you, you aren’t a leader.

Sure, anyone can receive an official title or be given decision-making power. But real leaders are people that others follow, not only because they must, but because they choose to, and even better, because they want to. Sometimes titles are attached to good leaders, but a good leader leads with or without a formal title.

When I was an associate minister at the Old Hickory Church of Christ, I was wearing multiple hats, and therefore had to keep many plates spinning. It was clear to me immediately that I alone could not make everything work without a lot of help. I wanted to share some reflections on what has helped me in leading volunteers well. Some of these lessons are from failures rather than successes, but I believe all of this is worthy of consideration.

Church volunteers are different.

One of the biggest differences between leading in a church context versus any other context is that you generally don’t have financial incentives as a way to motivate people. In most workplaces, people will tolerate mediocre leadership practices as long as a paycheck helps to justify the nuisance. This also works to a degree with church staff, but church volunteers are something entirely different. Not only do we not give them financial compensation, but we rely on them to contribute monetarily to the very ministries in which they are now serving. They give and give in every sense.

Think about it. If someone is involved in church in any way, it is something they chose to do. No one has ever really had to help with anything at church. Good attitudes or bad attitudes, when you are leading a ministry effort and someone else gives up any time or talent, no matter how meager we perceive it to be, they did it for God and they didn’t have to do it at all.

We should never consider any volunteer work insignificant because Jesus himself said that even someone who gives you a cup of cold water–free at most restaurants!–because of him, that they’ll be rewarded for it. When it comes to giving credit, people tend to minimize the good efforts and to maximize the mistakes. Jesus does the opposite. He takes our shortcomings onto himself, and instead he seeks to give us credit for all the good that he can. This is a great paradigm for us in how we should treat volunteers. Sometimes we have to deal with the bad, but we should look for the good.

You need to “pay” your volunteers

In my own experience, I knew that I needed people who volunteered now, but it was critical that I could also call on them in the future. Of course, most Christian people are volunteering to serve God rather than us, but we can’t forget that there are plenty of other places they can go to serve God. Why serve alongside me? Why here in this place? Why both this time and again next time?

How can we treat our volunteers in such a way that we (1) avoid burning them out and (2) make them feel so good about helping out that they’ll be anxious to say “yes” again next time?

The solution is to “pay” your volunteers. Because a financial approach to this is mostly off the table, we have to think about other ways to give something back to those who give to God by the way they serve with and help us. Here are some ways to think about “paying” your volunteers.

Paying Your Volunteers

People are willing to do amazing things to help with a cause that touches their hearts and their consciences.

How do you “pay” your volunteers? When you’ve volunteered, what has motivated you to volunteer again?

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