Mutual Ministry Teams
Healthy ministry is built on healthy relationships.
A Mutual Ministry Team (sometimes called a Ministry Support Team or Staff Support Committee) exists to strengthen communication, encourage healthy leadership, and support the shared ministry between a congregation and its pastor, deacon, or ministry staff.
Mutual Ministry Teams are not simply problem-solving groups. At their best, they help cultivate trust, reflection, accountability, encouragement, and collaboration within the life of a congregation.
What Does a Mutual Ministry Team Do?
A Mutual Ministry Team may:
- Provide encouragement and support for pastors, deacons, and staff
- Foster healthy communication between leaders and congregation members
- Create space for honest conversation, reflection, and feedback
- Help clarify expectations and boundaries
- Support healthy rhythms of ministry, rest, and self-care
- Encourage continuing education and vocational growth
- Assist during seasons of transition, conflict, or change
- Pray regularly for the ministry of the congregation and its leaders
The team serves as a trusted group for conversation and discernment — helping both congregational leaders and rostered ministers flourish in ministry together.
Ministry can be joyful, meaningful, exhausting, complicated, and deeply relational work.
Mutual Ministry Teams create intentional space for:
- listening
- encouragement
- accountability
- care
- shared reflection
Strong Mutual Ministry Teams often help prevent conflict before it escalates and strengthen relationships within the congregation over time.
Why Are Mutual Ministry Teams Important?
Who Serves on a Mutual Ministry Team?
Teams are typically made up of 3–5 trusted members appointed by the congregation council in conversation with the pastor or ministry leader.
Members should be:
- thoughtful listeners
- trustworthy and confidential
- emotionally mature
- supportive of the congregation’s mission
- able to engage healthy conversation and feedback
Healthy teams often:
- meet regularly (monthly or quarterly)
- maintain confidentiality
- focus on encouragement and communication, not gossip
- ask reflective questions rather than making assumptions
- pray together
- support the overall mission and ministry of the congregation
Best Practices for Mutual Ministry Teams
Resources
If your congregation is interested in forming or strengthening a Mutual Ministry Team, the synod staff would be happy to support you in the process.
Please contact the NWMN Synod office or additional support or resources.