By Brent Lacy
Nobody enters ministry to write legal documents.
But churches without clear bylaws eventually face a crisis they’re not equipped to handle. A pastor leaves under difficult circumstances. A financial dispute erupts. A member challenges a board decision. Without bylaws, you’re navigating those moments without a map.
This guide walks you through what bylaws are, what they need to include, and how to get them adopted.
Why Bylaws Matter
Bylaws are your church’s governing document. They define how decisions get made, who has authority, how disputes get resolved, and what happens when a pastor leaves.
Without them, you’re operating on assumptions. Assumptions fail at the worst possible moments.
Bylaws also protect your pastor. They define the terms of employment, the process for removal, and the expectations of both parties. A pastor who serves without clear bylaws is serving without protection.
What Bylaws Must Include
Every set of church bylaws needs to cover these areas:
- Church name and purpose. Your legal name and a brief statement of mission.
- Membership. How people become members, what membership requires, and how it ends.
- Leadership structure. Who leads the church and what authority each role carries.
- Decision-making. What requires a congregational vote versus board approval.
- Financial oversight. Who controls the finances and how funds are approved.
- Pastoral employment. How a pastor is called, compensated, and removed.
- Amendment process. How the bylaws can be changed.
- Dissolution clause. What happens to church assets if the church closes.
What to Leave Out
Some churches put detailed policies in their bylaws. That’s usually a mistake. Bylaws should be broad enough to govern without being so specific that every policy change requires a congregational vote.
Keep these in a separate policy manual instead: specific salary amounts, detailed job descriptions, specific ministry programs, worship style preferences.
How to Write and Adopt Bylaws
Step 1: Form a small drafting committee.
Two to four people is ideal. Include your pastor, one deacon or board member, and one long-tenured member who knows the church’s history. You don’t need a lawyer on the committee, but you’ll want one to review the final draft.
Step 2: Start with a template.
Don’t start from scratch. MinistryPlace offers a free Church Bylaws Guide for Small Churches that includes a template you can adapt. Your denomination may also have a model document.
Step 3: Draft and circulate.
The committee drafts the bylaws, then circulates them to the full board for review. Allow two to three weeks for feedback. Revise based on substantive concerns, not every preference.
Step 4: Get a legal review.
Before adoption, have an attorney look at it.
Step 5: Present to the congregation.
Give members at least two weeks’ notice and provide a copy of the proposed bylaws in advance. Hold a Q&A session before the vote.
Step 6: Vote and record.
Record the vote in your meeting minutes. File a copy with your church records and your denomination if applicable.
Common Mistakes Small Churches Make
- Copying another church’s bylaws verbatim. Every church is different. Adapt, don’t copy.
- Making bylaws too detailed. Specificity creates rigidity. Keep them broad.
- Never updating them. Review your bylaws every five years at minimum.
- Skipping the legal review. One hour with an attorney can prevent years of conflict.
- Not distributing them to members. Bylaws only work if people know they exist.
Free Resource: Church Bylaws Guide for Small Churches
MinistryPlace offers a complete bylaws guide including a template, amendment checklist, and congregational vote guide. Free, no email required.
MinistryPlace has a full library of free resources for small and rural churches. No email required, no subscription, no catch.