What First Steps Would You Suggest for a Church Just Starting a Women’s Ministry? (Newsletter 5-6)

What First Steps Would You Suggest for a Church Just Starting a Women’s Ministry?
By Jen Oshman

What first steps would you suggest for a church just starting a women’s ministry?

Answer: This question is timely for us, as our church plant has been meeting publicly now for just over a year. We’re living this! Here are the steps I would suggest and some things to consider (not necessarily in this order, but roughly).

1. Make sure your pastor is on board. I would not advise starting any ministry without the strong support of your pastor. Hopefully he and other elders are enthusiastically in favor of you ministering to women. Ideally, the elders would be involved to a certain degree in the women’s ministry (providing encouragement, oversight, funding, awareness of materials, endorsing of teachers, etc). Make sure those who are heading up the women’s ministry have the full support of your elders.

2. Don’t attempt to compete with other churches in your community. Be confident in the calling that God has placed on your church to reach the specific women in your sphere of influence. Don’t try to provide the buffet of programs and activities that are often available at established churches.

3. I’m not sure who said it first, but what you win them with, you win them to. In other words, the ways that you hope the women will grow must be present from the beginning. If you want them to grow in the Word, make sure you lead with the Word. Attractional methods such as well-known and gifted public speakers (amazing coffee bar, Pinterest crafts), while possibly a boost at first, cannot be maintained, and ladies who are won with that are not likely to return if it doesn’t remain.

4. Don’t over program. Ladies are already so very busy. Plan one (Weekly? Monthly?) quality Word-saturated event that will feed them and bless them and don’t ask them to come to more. By providing something based on the Bible that is truly nourishing, and by not asking them to give more time away from their already over-taxed calendars, they’ll be eager to return next time. Also, try not to compete with Gospel Communities (or small groups, life groups, etc.) that are already in place, as it’s better for a gal to attend a group with her husband than leave him behind. (Or she can do both! Just be mindful of not taxing family units too much by planning competing events.)

5. In the very beginning—before you have a Bible study planned or ministry plan laid out—endeavor to get to know the ladies that God has brought to your church. Spend time with them. Have them all over for brunch or a park play date. What are their burdens and needs and fears and joys? Study them like you would if you were a foreign missionary. Get to know what they need and seek to serve them and bless them.

6. Women are almost always highly relational. Make sure your women’s ministry allows for time for ladies to get to know one another. As they build relationships they will be eager to come back because their new friends will have been used of God to meet some very deep needs. These relationships will often do the work of professional counseling as ladies share and meet deep needs and rehearse the gospel to one another.

7. Bathe it all in prayer. As you seek to create this ministry, I hope you don’t have to do it alone! Find a couple of friends to partner with you and pray, pray, pray together. Beg the Lord to lead you and ask for sensitivity to his leading. Pray that he alone moves in the hearts of the women at your church. You want his will to be done above all!

8. Women need childcare. They just do, and there’s really no way around it. Look within your community and see if there might be some childcare workers available: teens, grandmas, homeschooled high school students. Or perhaps hire it out. Or have the ladies take turns (not my favorite solution). Ask your friends at other churches what they do. Without childcare, women’s ministry is really hard.

Jen Oshman is a wife and mom to four daughters and has served as a missionary for almost two decades on three continents. She currently resides in Colorado, where she and her husband serve with Pioneers International.

The above article, “What First Steps Would You Suggest for a Church Just Starting a Women’s Ministry” was written by Jen Oshman.

The material is copyrighted and should not be reprinted under any other name or author. However, this material may be freely used for personal study or research purposes.

This article may not be written by an Apostolic author, but it contains many excellent principles and concepts that can be adapted to most churches. As the old saying goes, “Eat the meat. Throw away the bones.”