If you have any Millennials on your church staff, you know that they’re different. And while many traditional church leaders are quick to equate a different approach with being a wrong approach, wise leaders know that different just means different. Not necessary wrong. In fact, it could even be better. Millennials can, will and are doing some amazing ministry. Like it or not they are coming into their own in church leadership, and they’re the ones that are going to lead the church forward. So instead of complaining about them we might as well help them. Try these six approaches to motivate the Millennial leaders on your church staff.
1. Help Me Avoid Boredom
Millennials have grown up with the constant interruption of smart phones and sound bites. This has conditioned them to be great at multitasking. So don’t expect them to sit down and work the way you did with tremendous focus on one thing for an extended period of time. Help them avoid that monotony and dabble with multiple things at one time. They’ll have more fun and produce more results.
2. Help Me Join a Cause
Everyone knows that Millennials are cause oriented. But what most churches haven’t come to grips with yet is that one of the key reasons so many Millennials are leaving the church is they don’t view the church as a cause worth giving their life to. Is your church an institution or a movement? Have you turned the Gospel into something to be dissected and intellectually understood or something that is powerful and mysterious? Help them see the church as a cause worth giving their life to.
3. Help Me Manage My Heart
Feelings are more important than facts to Millennials. While it might not make sense to some previous generations, they think more with their heart than their head. That’s not to say they aren’t brilliant, it’s just to say their motivation is more centered around the question, “Does this feel right?” Church leaders can help Millennials by increasing their emotional intelligence and being more thoughtful about how their actions may be perceived and how they may affect the feelings of others rather than just give way to simple facts and plans.
4. Help Me See the Win
Millennials have grown up in a world of instant gratification, access and results. Anybody who has been in ministry for any length of time knows that’s not how it really works. Life just doesn’t work that way. So we’ve got to help celebrate the small wins of life change that happen along the way. Help them celebrate the first downs along the way and help them make the connection between their day-to-day ministry and the vision.
5. Help Me Be True to Myself
Millennials aren’t going to follow someone or be a part of something that feels inauthentic to them. The best gift that church leaders can give Millennials is to exercise real leadership and stop leading through position, title or power and learn to lead with humility and personhood. They won’t simply respect you for your position but instead for who you are and the value you add. In this way Millennials are a gift to challenge many church leaders to lead in a way that they may have forgotten.
6. Help Me Understand “Why”
In recent years Simon Sinek made the phrase “start with why” famous. Millennials don’t just want to know your plan. They don’t want to simply know what you want them to do, they want to know the why behind it. They need to buy into the reason behind the plan of action. Help them buy into the why.
This article originally appeared here.