Pastor Lia & Pastor How
In 2023, we promoted 3 new senior pastors. Now we have 5 SPs
concurrently. This is unique to Heart of God Church and I am not
suggesting that other churches follow this leadership model. For us,
it just makes complete sense. Having championed GenerationS and
raised youths for the last 25 years, we found ourselves in a sweet
spot where we have 3 capable homegrown senior pastors.
So now the final step – a Deep Bench of senior pastors! True to the
heartbeat of my teaching on GenerationS, they are homegrown
Reinforcements (not replacements!) for How and myself.
Reinforced – HOGC’s 5 Senior Pastors!
(L-R: Charleston Lim,
Lynette Goh, Cecilia Chan, Tan Seow How, Garrett Lee)
Takes 25 years to raise homegrown SPs
Let's recap the definition.
3 GenerationS of senior pastors at the same time in shared leadership – a model where different generations are represented, ensuring there are senior pastors who can reach, connect with and champion youths.
📄 Pastor How unpacks it in this 3-minute article
These days, “having representation” is a constant catchphrase. In
most government structures, “representation” is defined by
constituents, ethnic groups, interest groups or political leanings.
In our church however, we want our representation to be by
generations!
The 3-Gen SP Model means that we have Gen X and Y senior pastors, as
well as future Gen Z senior pastors. At the highest level of
decision-making in this model, every generation is represented.
Every generation has a voice and a seat at the table, especially the
younger generations. Gen Y and Z are not just invited to the party,
they are organising the party!
I have heard so many stories of generational friction in churches.
This is sad because it is not God’s intent. His heart is that every
future generation should go from glory to glory.
Here is the conundrum: When you have an older senior pastor in their
50s or 60s, the young feel they cannot relate. When you have a
younger senior pastor in their 30s, the older people find it
challenging to trust or even allow themselves to be led by a younger
person. With this 3-Gen SP model, you can mitigate these tensions
and concerns.
With younger and older senior pastors in shared leadership, you can
have both relevance and experience, both strength and wisdom
(Proverbs 20:29). You not only have the best of both worlds – you
have the best of both generations!
A senior pastor in their 20s or 30s? Why not? This is not a foreign
concept in the business world. Look at Silicon Valley. It is
bustling with startup CEOs in their innovative 20s. This startup
culture is exactly what we need to welcome into older, established
organisations. This is how we renew and reinvent ourselves. This is
how we future-proof our church.
Churches are losing their youths because they feel that leadership
is outdated and out of touch. Having a younger senior pastor bridges
this relevance divide, and ensures that the younger generations are
heard and spoken for. This is how the 3-Gen leadership model can
continually reach, connect with and champion youths.
If anyone still has trouble accepting a senior pastor in their early 30s, do remember – Jesus was also in His early 30s when He changed the world!
To install an SP in their 20s/30s to HOGC’s senior team in shared
leadership, this person must have the same vision, values and DNA.
In other words, he or she must be homegrown. We cannot just
parachute in a pastor from outside.
It takes years to raise and disciple an SP. And if we want them to
be ready in their 20s or 30s, naturally they must have been serving
in church since their youth. They must also have skin in the game.
When we think like that, the 3-Gen SP Model triggers a timeline and
deadline, ensuring the intentional raising of future Gen Z SPs. By
God’s grace, in another 10+ years, we will have a few more SPs from
Gen Z. It compels us to work and act. Not just pray or dream.
In 2022, just 16% of protestant senior pastors were 40 years old or younger. The average age of a pastor is 52.
Source: Christianity Today
I have witnessed many transitions and seen so much “good” built up
over the years wasted. When you have 3 GenerationS of SPs
concurrently, there will be no transitional waste.
All the relationships built will not be lost when the older
SP exits. All the trust equity built is preserved. Older
members will feel a sense of familiarity and stability because the
older SPs are still on board. The younger SPs can focus on
connecting and building relationships with the new generations.
At the same time,
experiences and wisdom are not wasted because the older SPs
don’t have to exit abruptly. The younger SPs don’t have to start
from scratch.
This transition period is effectively 10-20 years long.
The best part is that the church will not have to adjust to the
“new” SP or miss the “former” SP.
The staff don’t need to acclimatize to their “new” boss either.
It is going to be business as usual… a turbulence-free transition.
Or to put it bluntly, one senior pastor cannot “survive” pastoring the modern megachurch. There is so much to say about this that I wrote an entirely separate article about it.
By Pastor How
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