10 Reasons to consider a team preaching model

By Mark Hallock

One of the things I love about our church is that we are blessed to have multiple individuals who are gifted to preach and teach God’s Word.

It was not always that way. In fact, in each of my first two years as the lead pastor of Calvary, if memory serves me right, I preached 49 out of 52 weeks!

Of course, when you are a very small congregation with one pastor, this often is the only option. I am truly grateful for our sweet congregation for so graciously sitting through my preaching week after week those first few years! However, we became convinced that this model of having one pastor who preaches week in and week out, year in and year out, was not the wisest, healthiest or most sustainable model for our congregation over the long haul.

So, though I love to preach (This is an understatement. I love very few things in this world more than preaching God’s Word!), I knew I had to work hard to raise up other preachers to share the load. To help feed the flock, for the good of our people, the good of my family, the good of my soul and – ultimately – for the glory of God.

As lead pastor, I continue to preach the majority of the time, but it is not uncommon to regularly see other pastor-elders in the pulpit. This is by design. This is a conviction. If you are new to Calvary Church, or have never been part of a congregation that shares the pulpit regularly between different preachers, let me briefly share 10 reasons why I believe this is so important for our church, and let me commend these reasons to you as worthy of consideration for your church.

 1. Jesus is the only hero

This is huge. Any church built on one preacher is vulnerable to making the hero that individual, rather than Jesus. As Jared Wilson writes, “Your church needs to know that it is the Bible properly taught that is their source of strength, not a particular man and only that man teaching it.” That is why it is wise to raise up other preachers, and it communicates that Calvary Church always has been and always will be Jesus’ church. The spotlight is His, not some pastor.

2. Wisdom principles from Scripture

As we understand Scripture, it seems wise to us that Calvary Church Englewood (along with all our church plants and replants) is led by a plurality of pastor-elders. Not one. Multiple pastor-elders. The Bible teaches that all pastor-elders must be able to teach (see 1 Tim. 3, Titus 1). So we see preaching and teaching as a shared calling and responsibility. Sharing the pulpit in this way for us is about putting into practice the wise principle of plurality that we find in God’s Word.

3. Setting the church up well for the future

A shared pulpit helps assure that when the main preacher leaves or dies, the church remains steady and in a healthy spot to continue making disciples and planting churches. As leaders, we must be looking to the future. Our philosophy and practice of preaching now will radically affect how our churches look and function five, 10 and 20 years from now.

4. Allows pastor-elders to eat – spiritually speaking!

One of the great joys and blessings in my own spiritual life is sitting in the pew and feasting on the preached Word as it is delivered by one of our other pastor-elders. I love seeing and hearing them preach to our congregation, but I also love, for my own soul, being able to eat the Word they are preaching. This is critical for the spiritual health of all of our pastor-elders. 

5. Family leadership and discipleship

It’s a joy to sit with my wife and kids – together as a family – and hear the Word of God preached. As I feast myself, I also love the opportunity to help my family feast. Helping my kids learn how to listen to a sermon effectively is part of my calling as their father and spiritual leader. Along with our other pastor-elders, I am only able to do this in a shared preaching model. 

6. Needed time for other pastoral duties

Weeks when I am not preaching allow me to spend more focused attention on other vital aspects of my ministry and leadership, including pastoral care, vision and strategy, mentoring, preaching and teaching prep, denominational responsibilities, etc. As our church has grown, these important areas of ministry need more of my time and attention as the lead pastor. 

7. Pacing for long-term leadership health

Any preacher will tell you: Sermon prep is a joyful yet agonizing process. It takes incredible mental, emotional, spiritual and physical energy every week. I typically spend 15-20 hours a week preparing my sermons. Moreover, I preach hard for 35-45 minutes at two different weekend services. Over time, this will take a toll on a preacher, unless the church has a shared preaching model in place. I hope, by God’s grace, to pastor and lead at Calvary for many years to come. If this is to happen, I cannot crush myself by not sharing the pulpit with other pastor-elders. No one can do this alone for the long-term in a healthy way.

8. The blessing of hearing a variety of unified voices in the pulpit

A shared pulpit allows our congregation to be fed by different pastor-elders, each with unique personalities and giftings. There is not one preacher who will connect with everyone in the congregation in the same way. A shared preaching model helps our congregation to value and experience a variety of preachers, all committed to loving and shepherding God’s people through the faithful, expositional preaching of God’s Word.

9. Helping pastor-elders grow as preachers

As with all members of our church body, we must intentionally seek to equip and develop pastor-elders in using their gifts, specifically in the area of preaching and teaching. The last thing I (or our congregation for that matter) want to be complicit in is wasting the God-given preaching and teaching gifts of our pastor-elders.

10. Stirs up fresh passion and joy to preach

I have found that sharing the pulpit allows the Holy Spirit to refresh my heart and mind on weeks I am not preaching. When I have a week or two off from preaching, I have time to remember why this calling to preach is so important and what a joy and privilege it is to feed God’s people from His Word! This always spurs me on toward renewed zeal, joy and excitement to get back in the pulpit and “swing for the fences” for God’s glory and the good of His people!

In conclusion, we highly value the preaching of God’s Word at Calvary Church. We take it seriously. We desire to feed our people really well from the pulpit each and every weekend, by God’s grace and the power of His Holy Spirit. For us to do this in a long-haul, sustainable manner, a shared team preaching model seems the wisest for us, in both conviction and practice. This is not my pulpit. This is not the pulpit of any one pastor. This is the pulpit of one Savior. This is Jesus’ pulpit. May His name alone be made famous from it.

This post is adapted from Mark’s blog, Preach Lead Love.


Published February 23, 2024

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Mark Hallock

Mark Hallock serves as the lead pastor of Calvary Church in Englewood, Colorado. He also serves as president of the Calvary Family of Churches, a group committed to planting and replanting churches for the glory of God (thecalvary.org). His great desire is to see the gospel transform lives and neighborhoods through the planting of new congregations, along with the revitalization of declining congregations, throughout the city of Denver and beyond. Mark’s favorite hobby is hanging out with his wife, Jenna, and their two kids, Zoe and Eli.