Tuesday Talk with Brannon Marshall

We’re excited today to hear from Brannon Marshall. Brannon serves at Awana, focusing his attention on creating opportunities for emerging adults to impact the kingdom of God. He has served as a missionary church planter, youth pastor, and street musician. He lives in Elgin, IL with his wife, Mandie and 3 kids Joseph, Carston, and Hannah.

We asked Brannon for some insight into ministering in small churches – seeing as the smaller church is where so many people find themselves serving. Here’s what he shared:

I felt like a sanctified version of Mick Jagger. Sans midriff.  

I had just preached my first sermon in Bible college. And I rocked.

After my first few months of “real ministry,” I felt less like Mick Jagger and more like John Tesh’s third-string roadie (does John Tesh even have a roadie?).

Serving a small church – living in a small town – setting up a modest number of folding chairs in a rented school cafeteria with a sticky linoleum floor that was permanently stained “Kool-Aid red.”

The contrast between my dreams of ministry and the reality I now found myself in couldn’t have been much greater. The reality is that 75 percent of Bible college graduates will serve in a small church (www.rhma.org, TACT Program, 2012). It’s estimated that nearly half will leave within two years.  

If you ever find yourself serving in a smaller church (and if the stats are right, you probably already are), here are a few thoughts to keep your ego in line and your ministry on track:

Be Agile
From VBS to Sunday School, church demands programming. But the most defining moments in your ministry are the ones you can’t plan.  

Example: You just got word that the Jones family can’t make it to your Wednesday night programming. The entire family has the flu – thereby reducing your total attendance by half. See that as your cue to switch gears and use that time to write them a card, or simply pray for the family. Big churches can’t do that. You can.  

Enough small wins like that and your ministry will be characterized by a unique agility – an agility that has the curious side effect of undermining your sense of personal pride.

Be Relational
School plays. High school football games. Chance encounters with church families at local restaurants or community events. Learn to see these passing meetings as opportunities for you to deepen your influence in your community life by engaging parents.  

Your ministry effectiveness will be evaluated on how transparently, steadily, and consistently you love those you serve. But, unlike the large church leader, your ministry is constantly seen by a greater percentage of the community. This is God’s gift to small-town church leaders: familiarity brings ministry strength.

Hunker Down
Church life in any context is wrought with discontentment. But before you plan your exit strategy, consider the implications of long-term commitment in a small-town context:

Small town congregations typically have less turn-over than suburban or urban churches. That means leaders have the opportunity to influence families – even generations of families – not just individuals.

Secondly, research shows that substance abuse, pre-martial sex, and gang involvement are higher among rural youth than their urban or sub-urban counterparts. It’s true that in the small-town church, longevity doesn’t result in position much as it does influence. But it’s also true that those who lead by influence frequently outlast those who lead by mere position.   

You probably lost your Jagger-strut a few years ago. That’s a good thing. Here’s to Kool-Aid stained floors and folding chairs.

Comment | 11 Replies |

11 Comments on “Tuesday Talk with Brannon Marshall”

  1. 1 Jared M said at 2:12 pm on September 25th, 2012:

    Oh the Jagger strut days, how I remember them fondly. These are some excellent points about serving in a small church. Thanks for the insight.

  2. 2 Kara said at 5:46 pm on September 25th, 2012:

    I grew up in a small church (around 300) and now serve in a small church (around 50). I like the familiarity of the small church-it’s like a family. Even now when I visit the church I grew up in it’s like going back home. I know almost everyone and they know me. The church I’m at now feels like home. Of course we want to grow, but I love the family feeling that small churches have. You can be more flexible in your services and pray for people more intimately.

  3. 3 Kara said at 5:46 pm on September 25th, 2012:

    I grew up in a small church (around 300) and now serve in a small church (around 50). I like the familiarity of the small church-it’s like a family. Even now when I visit the church I grew up in it’s like going back home. I know almost everyone and they know me. The church I’m at now feels like home. Of course we want to grow, but I love the family feeling that small churches have. You can be more flexible in your services and pray for people more intimately.

  4. 4 Brannon Marshall said at 1:25 am on September 26th, 2012:

    Thanks for the kind words, Jared. Up for starting a strut recovery group?

  5. 5 Brannon Marshall said at 1:25 am on September 26th, 2012:

    Thanks for the kind words, Jared. Up for starting a strut recovery group?

  6. 6 Brannon Marshall said at 1:29 am on September 26th, 2012:

    Totally agree on all points, Kara. When we were church planting, it seemed more like starting an extended family. That’s a feeling that is pretty irreplaceable.

    Just curious, where do you currently serve?

  7. 7 Brannon Marshall said at 1:29 am on September 26th, 2012:

    Totally agree on all points, Kara. When we were church planting, it seemed more like starting an extended family. That’s a feeling that is pretty irreplaceable.

    Just curious, where do you currently serve?

  8. 8 Jill Waltz said at 1:21 pm on November 27th, 2012:

    Wow!! Super insightful (especially the rock star part :) The reality of small church is pretty much summed up in this article. Well done. Thanks for sharing.

  9. 9 Jill Waltz said at 1:21 pm on November 27th, 2012:

    Wow!! Super insightful (especially the rock star part :) The reality of small church is pretty much summed up in this article. Well done. Thanks for sharing.

  10. 10 Brannon said at 3:26 pm on November 27th, 2012:

    Thanks Jill! Do you served in a small church? I’d love to hear about your experiences.

  11. 11 Brannon said at 3:26 pm on November 27th, 2012:

    Thanks Jill! Do you served in a small church? I’d love to hear about your experiences.

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