By Linley McCord
Pastor Richard Rogers sees young members as vital to the church’s health and survival. So, University Heights Baptist Church in Huntsville, Texas, launched a program to employ young members in leadership roles.
Located near Sam Houston State University, the church has the opportunity to start building leaders at a young age, he said.
“We have an internship program, and we are trying to help them discern where they go from there,” Rogers said of the college students in his church.
The program arose in a time when Baptist and other congregations across the denominational spectrum have sought creative ways to tap the enthusiasm of young people for ministry while providing them with experience that will help further their careers in ministry.
In addition to the internship approach, other churches have launched pastoral residency programs that feature hosting one or more young ministers who rotate through each facet of ministry at a given congregation.
Among congregations that have planned or taken those steps are Wilshire Baptist in Dallas, First Baptist in Richmond, Va., Calvary Baptist Church in Washington and First Baptist in Kingsport, Tenn.
University Heights, however, uses interns in various ministries to help them find their niche. The students receive a small stipend while they earn their undergraduate degrees.
But neither formal education nor hands-on ministry training at University Heights stops when a student graduates.
The church also employs two to three young members as associate pastors while they pursue seminary education. These individuals serve as salaried employees who take on independent ministry responsibility in the church through a two-year contract.
Eager to serve
The associates do not necessarily have ties to UHBC, but all share a desire to serve in a healthy church with room to grow in their callings to ministry.
They also take classes online through a seminary of their choosing.
The students benefit from hands-on experience, and the church benefits from their fresh ideas and enthusiasm, Rogers said.
“The passion that young followers of Christ, who are pursuing their education and learning new things, bring is invaluable,” he said.
The church needs to develop leaders within its body for its own survival and for the benefit of God’s kingdom, Rogers said. The best way to create these leaders is to mentor them, to give them the tools they need, and give them real responsibility, he added.
Rogers has noticed young staff members using what they learn in seminary, intellectually challenging their older coworkers.
Learning ‘soul-care’
On the other side, older ministers can teach the younger staff members how to do what Rogers calls “soul-care” — a skill students don’t learn in seminary but gain from experience in hands-on ministry.
Both interns and associate ministers learn to develop an important attribute — flexibility, he said. The church structures the programs so that if an individual initially serves in one area of ministry but seems more suited to another, neither the congregation nor the student minister resists a job change.
Associate Pastor Chris Millar served as an intern with UHBC while earning his undergraduate degree at Sam Houston State University. After graduation, he decided to move forward with UHBC and served two years in ministry to small groups, but he recently transitioned to college ministry.
“Getting to experience the ins and outs of a church has been great,” Millar said about not being locked into small-group ministry and having the flexibility to be moved around.
Taking classes and being a fulltime minister is a challenge, but the young ministers benefit from the atmosphere the church has created, Millar said.
Well-rounded experience
“I’m counseling families,” he said. “I’m doing pastoral ministry, leadership, teaching, equipping — getting to actually see how a church works.”
University Heights encourages the academic discipline seminary education provides, but Rogers believes young ministers learn soul-care — for others and themselves — through hands-on ministry experience.
“It’s our hope that we’re able to establish leaders and get a taste of a healthy church and train them in their spiritual transformation,” he said.