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Church Board Armistice

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Create a culture of unity on your church board.

Creating a Lasting Culture of Unity

Board meetings can be more like a Cold War standoff than a cooperative team effort. Dick Hardyโ€™s Church Boardsmanship guide is subtitled โ€œ18 Rules for Engagement.โ€ It sounds like something out of the Geneva Convention! Hardy has a good point though: if meetings are likely to become battlegrounds then there should be some ground rules.

Is it possible to have disagreement without division?

In her book Dare to Lead, author Brene Brown talks about how she and her team have โ€œRumbles.โ€ These heavy debates are based on the premise โ€œrumbling with vulnerability.โ€ Starting with the reality that they are for one another puts them on the same team rather than being on opposing sides. This allows freedom to be vulnerable. The enemy, then, is the problem to be solved or the conflict between vision and reality, not the other person. Then the two teammates, working together to attack the problem, get it in a crossfire until it is resolved.

How can a church board build an atmosphere of trust and unity that allows for strong disagreement while maintaining division? Here are a few principles to keep in mind:

1. Build a list of relational values that will drive how you relate to one another.

Here are a few examples:

2. Regularly rehearse and discuss the relational commands, also known as the โ€œone anothers.โ€

How can these be implemented in your regular boardroom relationships? How can the board intentionally model these to the church?

3. Kill the unity killers.

Gossip, grumbling, complaining, bitterness, criticism, and malice have no place in a church. They are Satanโ€™s weapons to destroy the unity of the body. They have no place in a church board.

Let all bitterness and wrath and anger and clamor and slander be put away from you, along with all malice.

โ€“ Ephesians 4:31

4. Praise people; correct behaviors.

We often get this backwards; we correct people and praise behaviors. This makes the church performance driven, where everyone is wondering where the next judgment or criticism will come from. We will never be good enough in such an environment. However, in a grace-led culture, a personโ€™s value is not based on their performance but in the work of Christ. If we encourage other board members and help them grow, they will know that we are for them.

5. Make room for sins, struggles, and failures.

Leaders are going places no one has ever been. This involves risk and sometimes failure. If thereโ€™s no room for failure then the church will never move forward, because no one will risk change. Also, if thereโ€™s no room for a sinful person to struggle against their sin, then the church board has become a self-righteous gathering of pharisees. Of all the spaces in the church, the boardroom should be the safest for people who are pursuing Christ.

6. Bind up what is broken.

As sinful people, the church board should be a community of people who confess their brokenness and help one another find healing in Christ. The words of Godโ€™s forgiveness spoken over one another are an important part of building up the body. The boardroom must be a room of confession and forgiveness before it can be a place of leadership.

Never trust a leader who doesnโ€™t walk with a limp.

Dr. J. Robert Clinton

7. Learn to discern Godโ€™s will in community.

Ruth Haley Bartonโ€™s book Pursuing Godโ€™s Will Together: A Discernment Practice for Leadership Groups is essential reading for church boards. It describes how to make space to let the Spirit of God lead the group in decision making instead of arguing over opinions. This practice creates a spirit of unity in the Spirit that drives the church forward.

What are some other ways we can create unity within church boards?

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