📖 Reading 5.2: Volunteer, Part-Time, Bivocational, and Interim Ministry Pathways
📖 Reading 5.2: Volunteer, Part-Time, Bivocational, and Interim Ministry Pathways
Introduction
Many rural, country, pastorless, and legacy churches face a painful question:
How can our church continue faithful ministry when we cannot afford a full-time pastor?
For some churches, this question feels like defeat. Members remember years when the church had a full-time minister, a full Sunday school, regular visitation, children’s programs, and community influence. Now the budget is smaller, attendance is lower, and the pulpit may be filled only occasionally.
But a limited budget does not mean a limited God.
A church that cannot afford a full-time pastor may still become renewed through trained volunteer leaders, part-time ministers, bivocational servants, interim support, and team-based ministry.
Topic 5 focuses on Rural, Country, and Pastorless Churches: Volunteer and Part-Time Ministry Solutions, with special attention to trained local leaders who can serve faithfully through CLI/CLA pathways.
This reading explores four ministry pathways:
Volunteer ministry
Part-time ministry
Bivocational ministry
Interim ministry
These pathways are not second-class ministry.
They are practical, biblical, and often deeply effective when built on calling, character, training, role clarity, accountability, and prayer.
A small church does not need to wait passively for one perfect full-time leader. It can begin asking:
Who is God raising up among us?
Key Scripture References
Exodus 18:13–27
Numbers 11:16–17
Matthew 9:35–38
Luke 10:1–9
John 21:15–17
Acts 6:1–7
Acts 14:21–23
Acts 18:1–4
Acts 20:28
Romans 12:4–8
1 Corinthians 12:4–27
Ephesians 4:11–16
Colossians 3:23–24
1 Timothy 3:1–13
2 Timothy 2:2
Titus 1:5–9
1 Peter 4:10–11
1 Peter 5:1–4
Biblical Foundation
The Bible gives us strong patterns for shared ministry, local leadership, and practical service.
In Exodus 18, Moses is overwhelmed by the needs of the people. He is trying to carry too much alone. Jethro tells him, “The thing that you do is not good” and urges him to appoint capable, God-fearing, trustworthy leaders to help carry the burden.
That moment matters for small churches.
A church can become unhealthy when everyone assumes one pastor must carry every need: preaching, visitation, administration, weddings, funerals, counseling, youth ministry, building care, financial oversight, and conflict management.
God’s people were never meant to be served by one exhausted leader doing everything.
In Numbers 11, God gives Moses seventy elders to help bear the burden of the people. This reminds us that shared ministry is not merely practical. It is spiritual wisdom.
In Matthew 9:37–38, Jesus says, “The harvest indeed is plentiful, but the laborers are few. Pray therefore that the Lord of the harvest will send out laborers into his harvest.”
Jesus does not tell His disciples only to pray for funding. He tells them to pray for laborers.
Rural churches need laborers.
Pastorless churches need laborers.
Legacy churches need laborers.
These laborers may be volunteers, part-time ministers, bivocational leaders, elders, deacons, officiants, chaplains, Bible study leaders, or care ministers.
In Acts 6, the early church faces a practical ministry problem involving neglected widows. The apostles do not ignore the concern. They also do not try to do everything themselves. Trusted servants are appointed for a specific ministry role. The result is powerful: the Word of God spreads, and disciples multiply.
This teaches an important principle: role clarity can strengthen gospel growth.
In Acts 18, Paul works as a tentmaker alongside Aquila and Priscilla. His work life does not cancel his ministry calling. This passage gives an important biblical picture for bivocational ministry. A person may serve Christ in the workplace and in the church.
In Ephesians 4:11–16, Christ gives leaders to equip the saints for works of service. Ministry leaders are not meant to create passive spectators. They are called to equip the whole body.
In 2 Timothy 2:2, Paul tells Timothy to entrust the teaching to faithful people who will be able to teach others also. This is a multiplication pathway.
A small church can be renewed when faithful people become trained people, and trained people become servants who train others.
Pathway One: Volunteer Ministry
A volunteer minister serves without regular pay. This person may have another job, be retired, or serve from a deep sense of local calling.
Volunteer ministers may help with:
Leading prayer
Teaching Bible studies
Reading Scripture in worship
Visiting shut-ins
Helping with funerals
Supporting weddings
Coordinating hospitality
Leading small groups
Assisting with chaplaincy care
Helping with community outreach
Supporting micro church gatherings
Volunteer ministry can be very powerful because it is often local, relational, and rooted.
A volunteer minister may know the families in the community. He may know who is sick, who is grieving, who has drifted away, and who needs encouragement. She may know the history of the church, the culture of the town, and the people who no longer attend but still feel connected.
However, volunteer ministry must not be careless ministry.
A volunteer minister still needs:
Biblical training
Character formation
Role clarity
Oversight
Boundaries
Prayer support
Referral awareness
Protection from burnout
A common mistake is to say, “He is willing, so let him do everything.”
That is not wise.
Volunteer ministry should be defined, trained, and supported.
A volunteer minister is not a replacement for the whole church. A volunteer minister is one trained servant within the body of Christ.
Pathway Two: Part-Time Ministry
A part-time minister serves in a defined role for limited hours. The church may provide a modest salary, stipend, honorarium, or support package.
Part-time ministry can help a small church stabilize worship, pastoral care, discipleship, administration, or outreach without requiring a full-time budget.
A part-time minister may focus on:
Preaching twice a month
Coordinating worship
Leading communion or the Lord’s Supper where appropriate
Visiting members
Training volunteers
Leading a Bible study
Organizing community outreach
Helping the church rebuild systems
Supporting weddings and funerals
Coaching local leaders
Part-time ministry requires honesty.
A church should not pay for ten hours and expect forty hours.
Unclear expectations create resentment. A part-time minister may feel used. The church may feel neglected. Conflict may grow because no one clarified the role.
A healthy part-time ministry agreement should include:
Written role description
Expected weekly or monthly hours
Primary responsibilities
Boundaries for emergencies
Preaching schedule
Visitation expectations
Meeting expectations
Study and preparation time
Evaluation process
Oversight structure
Compensation agreement
Time-off expectations
A part-time minister can serve faithfully when the church respects the limits of the role.
The goal is not to squeeze full-time ministry out of a part-time servant.
The goal is to build a realistic ministry pattern that fits the church’s current capacity.
Pathway Three: Bivocational Ministry
A bivocational minister serves in ministry while also working another job or vocation.
This may include farmers, teachers, business owners, nurses, tradespeople, drivers, retirees with part-time work, chaplains, office workers, or ministry leaders who support themselves in another way.
Bivocational ministry can be a tremendous gift.
A bivocational minister often understands the daily pressures of work, family, finances, fatigue, and community life. This leader is not distant from ordinary people. He or she lives in the same world as the congregation.
The apostle Paul’s tentmaking in Acts 18 reminds us that work and ministry can belong together.
Bivocational ministry may bring advantages:
Strong local presence
Community trust
Financial sustainability
Workplace witness
Practical wisdom
Relatability
Flexibility
Less financial pressure on the church
Opportunity to model all-of-life ministry
But bivocational ministry also requires protection.
A bivocational minister cannot carry a full-time job, full-time church ministry, family life, crisis care, preaching preparation, administration, and constant availability without eventually becoming exhausted.
A church should protect the bivocational minister by asking:
What hours are realistic?
What ministry tasks must be shared?
What emergencies require response?
Who handles visitation?
Who supports administration?
Who helps with funerals?
Who covers when the minister is unavailable?
What Sabbath or rest rhythm is needed?
How will the minister’s family be protected?
What training and mentoring are needed?
Bivocational ministry is not a shortcut.
It is a calling that requires wisdom, support, and shared responsibility.
Pathway Four: Interim Ministry
An interim minister serves during a transition season.
This may happen when a church has lost a pastor through retirement, resignation, death, conflict, scandal, or financial hardship. It may also happen when a church is discerning whether to renew, restart, merge, replant, call a pastor, or develop local leaders.
Interim ministry is not merely “filling the pulpit.”
A wise interim minister helps the church:
Pray through transition
Grieve honestly
Stabilize worship
Clarify leadership roles
Address conflict
Review policies
Encourage elders and deacons
Listen to members
Evaluate ministry needs
Prepare for future leadership
Avoid rushing into a bad decision
Rebuild trust after wounds
Develop a ministry plan
Some churches need an interim season before they are ready for the next long-term leader.
A pastorless church may be tempted to panic and hire too quickly. But a rushed hire can deepen the problem. If the church has unresolved conflict, unclear finances, poor policies, or untrained leaders, the next pastor may inherit a hidden crisis.
An interim season can be a gift when it is used for truth, prayer, training, and preparation.
A strong interim leader does not build dependency. A strong interim leader helps the church become more ready for faithful future ministry.
Organic Humans Integration
Volunteer, part-time, bivocational, and interim ministry pathways remind us that ministry leaders are embodied souls.
They have bodies.
They need sleep.
They have families.
They carry emotions.
They have limits.
They need prayer.
They need encouragement.
They need time to study.
They need friendship.
They need spiritual renewal.
A church that treats a minister like a machine will eventually wound the minister, the minister’s family, and the congregation.
Organic Humans ministry sees leadership as whole-person formation. A volunteer minister may love the church deeply, but still need boundaries. A bivocational minister may be called, but still need rest. A part-time minister may serve faithfully, but cannot be everywhere. An interim minister may help carry grief, but cannot become the savior of the church.
Jesus is the Savior.
The church is His body.
That body has many members.
A healthy small church does not ask one person to become the whole body. It trains many members to serve faithfully according to their gifts.
Ministry Sciences Integration
Ministry Sciences helps churches move from vague need to clear ministry design.
A church may say, “We need a pastor.”
But what does that mean?
Does the church need preaching?
Visitation?
Funeral care?
Administrative leadership?
Conflict mediation?
Youth ministry?
Bible teaching?
Financial oversight?
Community outreach?
Worship planning?
Discipleship?
Prayer leadership?
A careful ministry diagnosis helps the church identify what kind of leadership is actually needed.
For example, a small church may discover:
One person can preach twice a month.
Another can lead Bible study.
A retired member can visit shut-ins.
A trained officiant can help with funerals.
A deacon can coordinate benevolence.
A part-time administrator can handle communication.
A partner pastor can provide monthly mentoring.
A CLI learning cohort can train future leaders.
This turns ministry from a one-person burden into a shared pathway.
Ministry Sciences also helps churches recognize role confusion.
When roles are unclear:
Volunteers burn out.
Leaders overstep.
Members become frustrated.
Expectations become unfair.
Conflict increases.
People assume someone else is responsible.
Important care gets missed.
When roles are clear:
Ministry becomes more peaceful.
Leaders know what they are responsible for.
Members know whom to contact.
Volunteers can serve within limits.
Accountability becomes easier.
Training becomes more focused.
The church becomes healthier.
Legacy Church Application
Legacy churches often have hidden servants who have never been formally trained or recognized.
They may include:
A retired farmer who visits the sick
A widow who prays faithfully
A teacher who can lead Bible study
A deacon who understands the community
A mechanic who is trusted by local families
A grandmother who practices hospitality
A young adult sensing a call to ministry
A business owner with administrative gifts
A nurse who understands care needs
A couple willing to host a home gathering
A former elder who could mentor younger leaders
The church may think, “We have no leaders.”
But perhaps the better statement is:
“We have not yet trained the leaders God has already placed among us.”
A legacy church can create a leadership discovery process:
Who is faithful?
Who is humble?
Who listens well?
Who is teachable?
Who is respected?
Who already serves without needing attention?
Who has a burden for people?
Who is willing to study?
Who can work with oversight?
Who could become part of a ministry team?
From there, the church can build pathways:
Volunteer minister pathway
Part-time minister pathway
Bivocational minister pathway
Interim support pathway
Wedding officiant pathway
Funeral officiant pathway
Chaplaincy pathway
Bible study leader pathway
Elder and deacon renewal pathway
Micro church leader pathway
This helps a legacy church become a training center again.
CLI/CLA and Soul Center Application
Christian Leaders Institute can help small churches train leaders without requiring them to leave their local community.
This is especially important for rural and pastorless churches.
A potential leader may not be able to move away for traditional ministry training. A part-time worker may not be able to afford expensive programs. A retired person may need flexible study. A church board may need a practical way to learn together.
CLI can become the training engine.
A church could form a local CLI learning cohort where participants:
Enroll in CLI courses
Study individually
Meet weekly or monthly
Discuss lessons
Pray for the church
Apply learning to local ministry
Identify gifts and callings
Develop a ministry team
Christian Leaders Alliance may provide appropriate pathways for:
Commissioning
Credentialing
Ordination
Public ministry recognition
Local endorsement
Role-based ministry identity
Accountability
This can help clarify ministry roles.
A volunteer minister may pursue further study and ordination.
A wedding officiant may become trained and recognized.
A funeral officiant may serve grieving families with greater confidence.
A chaplaincy leader may develop a community care ministry.
A Life Coach Minister may serve with clear boundaries.
A Bible study leader may grow in doctrine and teaching skill.
A Soul Center possibility may also be explored where a credentialed leader develops a local ministry presence connected to discipleship, care, micro church gatherings, chaplaincy, or community service.
But CLI/CLA pathways should not be treated as status symbols.
Training and recognition exist to serve the church, strengthen trust, clarify roles, and multiply faithful ministry.
Building a Team-Based Ministry Model
The healthiest solution for a small church is often not one person.
It is a team.
A possible team-based model may include:
Worship and Word Team
This team helps with:
Worship planning
Scripture reading
Music coordination
Preaching schedule
Communion or Lord’s Supper preparation where practiced
Guest speaker coordination
Care and Visitation Team
This team helps with:
Shut-in visits
Hospital visits where permitted
Nursing home care
Phone calls
Prayer support
Meal coordination
Grief care
Referral awareness
Officiant and Ceremony Team
This team helps with:
Weddings
Funerals
Baptism preparation where appropriate
Communion support where appropriate
Marriage encouragement
Funeral follow-up care
Discipleship and Bible Study Team
This team helps with:
Home Bible studies
Small groups
New believer follow-up
Youth or children’s discipleship with safety practices
CLI learning cohort support
Chaplaincy and Community Presence Team
This team helps with:
Visiting community members
Serving seniors
Supporting first responders where appropriate
Caring for grieving families
Participating in community events
Offering prayer with permission
Administration and Stewardship Team
This team helps with:
Scheduling
Communication
Building use
Financial clarity
Benevolence procedures
Volunteer records
Safety documentation
This model protects volunteer, part-time, bivocational, and interim leaders from overload.
It also helps the whole church rediscover ministry.
Revival, Evangelism, and Disciple-Making Connection
Volunteer, part-time, bivocational, and interim ministry pathways are not merely staffing solutions.
They are discipleship opportunities.
When a church trains local leaders, it is saying:
God still calls people here.
The harvest still matters here.
The body still has gifts here.
This church can still serve here.
A small church can restart evangelism through ordinary but faithful ministries:
A funeral officiant serves grieving families.
A wedding officiant helps couples begin marriage with biblical care.
A Bible study leader gathers people around Scripture.
A chaplaincy volunteer visits nursing homes.
A bivocational minister builds trust through workplace relationships.
A part-time minister strengthens worship and preaching.
A volunteer minister provides steady prayer and care.
An interim minister helps the church heal and prepare.
Revival often begins quietly.
It may begin when two leaders pray together.
It may begin when a retired member starts training.
It may begin when a church board repents of passivity.
It may begin when a small church stops saying, “We have no one,” and starts asking, “Lord, whom are You calling?”
A legacy church is renewed when ministry moves from survival to sending.
What Helps
1. Name the actual ministry need.
Do not simply say, “We need a pastor.” Identify preaching, visitation, care, administration, discipleship, officiant ministry, chaplaincy, and outreach needs.
2. Build around calling and character.
Availability matters, but character matters more.
3. Create written role descriptions.
Volunteer, part-time, bivocational, and interim leaders all need clarity.
4. Respect time limits.
A part-time minister is not a full-time pastor. A volunteer minister is not endlessly available.
5. Train before assigning heavy responsibility.
Use CLI courses, mentoring, local study groups, and supervised ministry.
6. Build teams.
Do not let one person carry the whole church.
7. Use interim seasons wisely.
Transition can become a time of prayer, healing, and preparation.
8. Seek recognition where appropriate.
Commissioning, credentialing, and ordination can help clarify public ministry roles when connected to study, character, and local endorsement.
9. Develop referral awareness.
Ministers must know when to refer to licensed counselors, legal professionals, medical providers, financial advisors, or emergency services.
10. Keep mission central.
The goal is not merely to fill a vacancy. The goal is renewed worship, care, discipleship, witness, and multiplication.
What Harms
1. Treating volunteer ministry as casual ministry.
Volunteer leaders still need training and accountability.
2. Expecting part-time leaders to function like full-time staff.
Unrealistic expectations create burnout and resentment.
3. Letting one person carry everything.
Small churches need shared ministry.
4. Confusing willingness with readiness.
A willing person may still need formation, mentoring, and testing.
5. Ignoring boundaries.
Pastoral care, coaching, chaplaincy, finances, children’s ministry, and crisis response all require wisdom and limits.
6. Rushing through interim seasons.
A transition season can be a gift when used well.
7. Copying large church staffing models.
Small churches need contextual ministry design.
8. Failing to communicate expectations.
Unclear roles lead to conflict.
9. Using ordination as a shortcut.
Ordination should be rooted in calling, study, character, endorsement, and accountability.
10. Forgetting discipleship.
Leadership pathways should form Christlike servants, not merely fill positions.
Reflection + Application Questions
What is the difference between a volunteer minister, part-time minister, bivocational minister, and interim minister?
Which pathway might best fit a rural or pastorless church you know?
How does Exodus 18 help small churches rethink ministry responsibility?
Why is it dangerous to expect one person to carry every ministry role?
What ministry tasks could be separated into a team model?
What kind of training should a volunteer minister receive before taking on public ministry responsibility?
How can a church protect a bivocational minister from burnout?
Why can an interim season be a gift rather than merely a waiting period?
How can CLI/CLA pathways help a legacy church become a training center?
What would it look like for a small church to move from survival thinking to leader multiplication?
References
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Banks, Robert. Paul’s Idea of Community: The Early House Churches in Their Historical Setting. Baker Academic, 1994.
Bonhoeffer, Dietrich. Life Together. HarperOne, 1954.
Carroll, Jackson W. God’s Potters: Pastoral Leadership and the Shaping of Congregations. Eerdmans, 2006.
Dever, Mark. Nine Marks of a Healthy Church. Crossway, 2013.
Guder, Darrell L., ed. Missional Church: A Vision for the Sending of the Church in North America. Eerdmans, 1998.
Herrington, Jim, Mike Bonem, and James H. Furr. Leading Congregational Change: A Practical Guide for the Transformational Journey. Jossey-Bass, 2000.
McIntosh, Gary L. There’s Hope for Your Church: First Steps to Restoring Health and Growth. Baker Books, 2012.
Osmer, Richard R. Practical Theology: An Introduction. Eerdmans, 2008.
Peterson, Eugene H. Working the Angles: The Shape of Pastoral Integrity. Eerdmans, 1987.
Stetzer, Ed, and Mike Dodson. Comeback Churches: How 300 Churches Turned Around and Yours Can Too. B&H Publishing, 2007.
Wuthnow, Robert. Small-Town America: Finding Community, Shaping the Future. Princeton University Press, 2013.