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What’s Up
Most pastors are stuck in a game I call “Pastor Fetch,” which is sabotaging the mission of the church.
So What
Pastor Fetch happens when a pastor trades their God-ordained role as a called leader for a position as a church employee. When this happens, the biblical mission to make disciples takes a backseat, and the church’s effectiveness nosedives. It’s time to break free from this cycle and reclaim the true calling of pastoral leadership.
The Point Is …
Pastoral Leadership Is a Calling, Not a Job
The pastor’s biblical mandate isn’t to do all the ministry but to equip the saints to do it. Ephesians 4:11-13 makes it crystal clear: pastors are meant to be leaders who empower others, not employees who take on ministry tasks.Delegation Is Biblical
Acts 6:1-3 provides a model where the apostles refuse to get bogged down in administrative duties like running a food pantry. Instead, they delegate and focus on prayer, preaching, and evangelism. This isn’t laziness—it’s alignment with the church’s mission and their primary responsibilities.Your Core Tasks Are Non-Negotiable
Pastors have five non-delegable duties: personal spiritual development, ensuring the church’s mission alignment, discerning and communicating God’s vision, building effective teams, and securing funding for ministry. Anything outside of this is someone else’s job.Pastor Fetch Undermines the Mission
Every moment spent playing “employee” is a moment stolen from the mission of making disciples. The church’s decline isn’t due to a lack of effort but misplaced focus.
And … ?
Let’s get real: the strategy of turning existing members into disciple-makers has been the go-to for generations. And yet, most churches in America are in decline because the members aren’t doing it. Evangelism has become little more than an afterthought. As John Maxwell famously said, “If the horse is dead, dismount.” Stop depending on members to grow the church, pastor.
The truth is, pastors can’t train their way out of this decline by following outdated methods. Instead, it’s time to embrace the biblical model of leadership. The apostles in Acts didn’t let themselves get distracted from their primary roles—prayer, preaching, and evangelizing. They led by empowering the congregation to step up and own the ministry. That’s leadership. That’s effective. That’s biblical.
When pastors reclaim their role as leaders, they create a church where everyone participates in the mission. It’s not about avoiding hard work—it’s about doing the right work. If you’re constantly stuck in the trenches, who’s leading the charge?
Action!
Stop playing Pastor Fetch. Take one concrete step today to delegate a non-core responsibility and focus on equipping your congregation for ministry.