Ministry leader, may I ask a tender but urgent question?

When was the last time you looked at the people in your congregation and thought, We are stewarding their gifts well?

If you hesitated, you’re not alone. But perhaps more importantly, if we don’t know how to answer that question, we may be missing the means God gave us to build His church.

In a time when attendance feels fragile and volunteers feel few, it’s easy to believe the lie that people aren’t interested in serving. But what if the problem isn’t a lack of willingness, but a lack of clarity?

The Church Isn’t a Stage—It’s a Body

The Apostle Paul reminds us: “Now there are varieties of gifts, but the same Spirit… to each is given the manifestation of the Spirit for the common good.” (1 Corinthians 12:4,7)

Note Paul’s words: to each is given.

There is no Christian on the sidelines of God’s mission—unless we put them there. The Holy Spirit has assigned gifts to every believer, not just for their fulfillment, but for the strengthening of the whole church. When we fail to help people identify and activate those gifts, we cut off the supply chain of the Spirit’s power meant to flow through His people.

This is not just bad leadership—it’s poor stewardship.

We Don’t Have a Volunteer Shortage—We Have a Vision Shortfall

Consider this:

85% of born-again adults have heard of spiritual gifts.

Yet nearly half, 46%, say they don’t know what their gift is, or believe they don’t have one at all.

And even among those who claim to know, only 30% can identify a biblically rooted gift. The rest either misidentify personality traits as gifts or can’t describe how their gifts are being used in the church today.

These aren’t stats to shrug at. They are a flashing warning that we’ve taught church membership without discipleship, and celebrated involvement without discernment.

Gift Awareness Fuels Spiritual Growth

Let me encourage you with this: helping people understand and deploy their spiritual gifts is not a leadership tactic—it’s a discipleship practice.

When believers are given language for how God has wired them, they begin to walk with fresh confidence in their identity in Christ. In fact, 82% of self-identifying Christians say that developing their gifts draws them closer to God. Among practicing Christians, that number rises to 97%.

Can you see the beauty? Teaching gifts don’t just get people into service—they get them deeper into Christ.

Gift Clarity Builds the Church (and Prevents Burnout)

Here’s what pastors often miss: when we fail to identify gifts, we default to filling holes. The most eager volunteers tend to receive the most tasks. Those who aren’t upfront or outspoken get overlooked. And we silently assume that “availability” is the same as “anointing.”

But what if, instead, we took time to discover who God has already placed in the room?

What if we said: No one does everything, but everyone does something. And we will help you find that something.

Churches that teach and deploy spiritual gifts experience up to a 35% greater retention of volunteers. They grow more sustainably. And more importantly, they bear fruit that lasts.

Pastor, Start With Yourself

Before you go searching your congregation for gifts, ask yourself: Do I know my own?

Your ability to lead with clarity depends on knowing how the Spirit has equipped you, not just as a shepherd, but as a part of the body. Knowing your gift mix humbles you, keeps you from over-functioning, and frees you to make space for others to lead.

Let the work begin with you. Then create a culture where others can follow.

Next Steps, Not Guilt Trips

This isn’t a call to do more—it’s a call to see differently. The Spirit has already done the heavy lifting. You’re simply called to steward the gifts He’s entrusted to your flock.

So ask the questions:

  • Do we teach about spiritual gifts with biblical clarity?
  • Do we help people discover and discuss their gifting?
  • Do our ministries align with the gifts God has actually given?
  • Do our people feel celebrated and developed, or just used?

Because if every member has been gifted for the common good, then the church has already been equipped to flourish.

We just need to unearth what’s been buried.

And then—by God’s grace—fan it into flame.