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.

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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.