Ministry works better when we approach it from a team
aspect. One person cannot hope to accomplish ministry at the same level of
excellence as a team of people working in concert with one another. In
ministry, I have served on some good teams and not so good teams. Here are a
few lessons that I’ve learned:
People Who Are Informed Are Less Likely to Gossip-Often
times ignorance can create a breeding ground for gossip. Also, it is a team’s
worst enemy. When you keep people in the dark, sometimes their mind plays
tricks on them. They read into a situation or conversation, and the lack of
communication creates gaps they gladly fill with their own speculation or a
pain. If you want to create a unified team, keep people in the loop! When you
communicate well, you crush the early growth of gossip.
People Who Have Great History Have Unity-If you have a few
key volunteers who have been with you since the beginning, you know how sweet
it is to be with them, serve alongside them, and do the hard work of ministry
together. You literally and figuratively have each other’s backs, and unity is
your middle name. On the other hand, when you have high a turnover or a
collection of young, immature, or inexperienced youth workers serving with you
the total opposite can happen. Work hard to keep them around for the long term.
People Who Laugh Rarely Turn on Each Other - I’ve noticed
again and again in my years of ministry that when people laugh together, they
love each other more. When you are in a relationship with your people-great stories,
memories and inside jokes-the stronger you are together. When was the last time
you spent some time just playing with your team? When was the last time you had
an award ceremony and gave out awards for everyone? Laughing together creates
unity quickly.