How To Start a Children's Ministry

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9 Steps to Launching a Kids Program at Your Church

How do I organize my children’s ministry?

Starting a children’s ministry from scratch can be a big challenge. You have to navigate parental expectations, curriculum options, and hundreds of little questions about how things should work. For this discussion, I’m assuming you are at a smaller church with no paid children’s ministry staff.

There is no one ‘right way’ to do children’s church. In fact, what works for your ministry this year will need adjustment next year. Like most ministry programs, kids church is always a working experiment.

This article is a road map to help you get started. I’ve broken down the process into 9 manageable steps to bring clarity. In reality, several of these steps overlap and require tweaking over time. At the end of this post I’ve also linked a few more articles about starting a kids church. If you need more help, feel free to ask your specific questions in our forums about children’s church.

1. Gather a Leadership Team

Having the right people in place from the beginning is essential. I would include key people who would lead the program, interested parents, and your pastor. This leadership team is the group that will direct the program and make the major decisions to get the program started.

2. Determine the Age Group

You need to ask, “What aged-groups of children will participate in this program?” Churches vary widely in this respect. Many kids church programs cap the age around 3rd grade. Others extend through the end of elementary school. This largely depends on your pastor’s opinion about who can benefit from the preaching in his adult worship service. You also need to determine where the preschoolers will go. Some churches have a class just for them during church, while others include then in children’s chuch.

3. Determine the Format

There are several important issues to be decided about the format. Will the kids attend a portion of the adult service and then be dismissed? Some churches have individual classes more like a second Sunday School period. Others have a single gathering where children sing worship songs and learn in something like a VBS worship rally. Often this comes down to preference and space available. I personally like where kids worship with their families, then come back for age-appropriate Bible teaching in a large group. When possible, we finish our time in smaller age-graded groups for prayer & discussion.

4. Choose Curriculum for Children’s Church

Once the format and age-range is settled, you can begin to choose curriculum. Most major Christian Education publishers have a curriculum for Children’s Church. Many will include worship music on CD or DVD. If you budget is tight you can use our free Bible lessons or learn how to build your own Bible teaching plan.

5. Establish Discipline & Safety Guidelines

To begin, you will need to adopt some basic policies for safety and behavior management. If you are just starting out, begin with a simple one-page document. Brainstorm with your leadership team and create a working draft. Post it in your room and make sure all the weekly children’s church follow these guides. You might find my article on Children’s Ministry Safety & Security helpful.

6. Plan the Order of Service

Decide the basic elements and general order you will follow. You can put this on a poster board in your children’s church area so the children will know what to expect. This can add consistency if you have multiple volunteer leaders. Some elements to include: Call to Worship (short bible reading), Prayer, Worship music, Bible lesson, discussion, flexible closing activities (craft, games, snacks, bible trivia). You can see some good examples on the Sojourn Kids blog.

7. Recruit and Train Volunteers

Now you’re ready to identify church members to become leaders in your program. Many churches work out a four-week volunteer rotation schedule for kids church. To begin, ask people who have served in other children’s ministry programs. If possible, mix in new recruits with your long-time workers for in-ministry training. You might also read this post about finding kids ministry volunteers.

8. Communicate the Program to the Church

It’s important to let the church and parents know about the program several weeks in advance. This is especially true if your congregation has never had a kids church. If you are in a small church, talk to all the affected parents one-on-one. Be aware of any concerns that parents raise and ensure then the program is optional for each family. You can read my post about communication in kids ministry.

9. Evaluate with the Leadership Team

Once you are a few weeks into the program, meet with the leadership team to re-evaluate. Walk through all elements of your plan and talk about what is working and not. Brainstorm ways to improve the program.

I hope this article has given you a solid place to start. You can leave a message below if you want to share your suggestions for starting a children’s church. For more help, be sure to read our advice and guide for new children’s ministers.

15 thoughts on “How To Start a Children's Ministry”

  1. Your website is just what I needed to get off high-center and know where to start! Very helpful and a great ongoing resource!

  2. Thank you. I attend a small church and we have started planning. This article gives me some things to think about.

  3. This is a huge help!!! My current children ministry has kind of fizzle out. So I’m in the process of starting the whole ministry over from scratch. I’m a list person and this timeline/checklist is perfect. Thanks!!

  4. Thank you for your insightfulness regarding this topic. It will give me a good starting point and I like that it’s in a checklist format. I am looking in the near future to start a children’s program here at the church I pastor in and this has been extremely helpful in getting my vision organized.

  5. All the write up here is a pack of solutions to lift the my burden on children ministry. I read a few and we had started working out for a solid children department in our church. The Lord will keep blessing you

  6. i started a small children ministry i go to villages and teach children pls can u send me some books n bible for children

  7. This is very helpful. I am still a a college student but I am planning to organize children’s ministry in our nonprofit organization in the near future.I love children, and I had years of experience with them. And be a blessings. Hope it will be a success.Thank you so much and God bless

  8. This article is helps me with confidence relaunch our children’s church that was stopped because of covid. You’re a blessing and may God continue to bless your ministry as you bless others

  9. When we as African follow the idea of other good leaders and learn to build on the good examples of the steps by steps procedure , we will soon be stronger Nations.
    This is wonderful, and with time I am going to overcome with the SCM

  10. Thank you so much this article is so nice to my plan and am about to start the children ministry following your steps

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