Why Does a Church Need a Security Team?

Reprinted with permission by Mars Hill Church on Thursday, May 5th, 2011 12:00 pm

by Nate Finn

“Why does a church need a security team??” That question is mostly asked incredulously when people visit one of our campuses and see a team of usually large guys wearing polo shirts in the lobby, the children’s ministry, and the sanctuary.

Security within our church can be a misunderstood concept. Many people believe that security does not belong in the church. On the one hand, there are people who say it unnecessarily heightens a perception of threat, and on the other, people say it means we’re not trusting in the sovereignty of God (to protect his church). We also recognize there are people who are simply opposed to our church and the gospel of Jesus. As Pastor Mark said in the 2007 sermon, “Pain and Progress,” from the Nehemiah sermon series, “Not everybody in Seattle has the same agenda as we do. Our goal is to read the Bible and love Jesus. … That’s not the most popular agenda in Seattle.” We get that, and the fact that people might oppose us is not what worries us. But here’s what we’re very committed to: people should be able to come to a Mars Hill Church service and worship in peace.

“If you are saying to yourself, ‘Aren’t they exaggerating this whole thing? I didn’t see or hear of anything,’ it is because our security teams are doing a fantastic job.”

Ultimately, the goal of the security teams is to protect the integrity of the service and how people are receiving the Word that’s being preached. Listening to a sermon can be a big experience—the Holy Spirit can be speaking to someone—and if there’s a disturbance, that moment can be broken.

Like the Israelites in Nehemiah’s day, we not only have the right to worship the God of the Bible but we have the obligation to provide a safe environment to those who want to attend Mars Hill and worship God freely. The First Amendment grants us the right to peaceably assemble, after all. (And, yes, it grants that right to those who’d oppose us to peaceably assemble and voice that opposition as well, and that’s fine, though as a private organization, we have the right to not permit that to happen on our property.)

The same people who opposed the Israelites are the same kind of people we experience today. However, the men and women you see with the security shirts are not there to intimidate but to protect the body from those trying to disrupt or cause harm. And yes, serious crimes do happen on church properties across the nation and they aren’t just petty crimes. Pastors have been killed and churches have been vandalized, robbed, and burnt to the ground. This information is not being used as a scare tactic. We just don’t want to be naïve and not be cognizant of what happens every week.

That said, our campuses experience vandalism, burglary, and theft as often as once a week. On Sundays, we keep watch on the premises, mostly in an effort to deter any potential threats by being proactive not just reactive. If you are saying to yourself, “Aren’t they exaggerating this whole thing? I didn’t see or hear of anything,” it is because our security teams are doing a fantastic job mitigating threats we see regularly throughout the year.

Children’s Ministry

One of our biggest priorities on Sundays is to keep our kids safe while they learn about Jesus each week. Similarly, we want parents to be able to learn about Jesus while they sit in the service, and part of this is that they need to be able to trust in the children’s ministry when they drop their kids off and know the kids will be safe and protected during that time.

There are, on average, five to six threats to the children’s ministries at our Mars Hill campuses per year. Security team members are present throughout the children’s ministry for two reasons. One reason is to mitigate serious threats, and the other is for accountability of our children’s ministry volunteers.

Lobbies and sanctuary

In addition, security team members keep watch in the lobbies and sanctuary. Ever wonder why there are two security team members who sit at the front of the sanctuaries while Pastor Mark preaches? Because several years ago, a man charged the stage with a large knife while Pastor Mark was preaching. In general, there is a higher potential of threats when the sermon topic is on spiritual warfare. There have been subsequent threats, and sometimes the threats vary by campus location and service time.

SPD

And lastly, at the Downtown Seattle and Ballard campuses, you will see uniformed Seattle police officers at the services. These officers are on duty and paid, though the shifts they work at the church are ones for which they’ve volunteered to take overtime hours, so they’re not being taken out of the normal police rotation to be stationed at our campuses. The strategy behind the uniformed police officer is primarily as a deterrent, but it’s also so that we can have more of an immediate response if there were an actual incident.

Guards along the wall

God called Nehemiah to build a wall and now God has called Mars Hill to build cities within the cities. God told Nehemiah to place guards along the wall to protect his people and the work, and we must place guards within our walls to protect God’s people and the work of sharing the Gospel. In order to provide the proper safety and security for our campuses, we need men who are able-bodied, have a heart to protect our children and families, and a desire to step up and volunteer a portion of their time to the Security Ministry. This ministry not only provides a valuable service to the church, but also is an opportunity for spiritual growth and community building for people who share common interests.

“But when Sanballat and Tobiah and the Arabs and the Ammonites and the Ashdodites heard that the repairing of the walls of Jerusalem was going forward and that the breaches were beginning to be closed, they were very angry. And they all plotted together to come and fight against Jerusalem and to cause confusion in it. And we prayed to our God and set a guard as a protection against them day and night.”

Nehemiah 4:7–9

“Opposition only comes to those who are doing something. There are many people out there who live their life without being criticized or attacked because they spend their time lying on the couch with their finger up their nose not doing anything. There is no reason to oppose such people. So if you are doing something, expect opposition and be encouraged because you are doing something.”

Nate Finn is the executive assistant to Pastor Dave Bruskas and a member of the Ballard campus.

If you need assistance in developing and implementing a church security ministry team or need security team enhancements, then contact Gideon Protective Services, Inc. to learn more about our Church Security Seminars or full Secure Church training program.  Call 888.305.6513 Ext. #3 or email info@gideonprotectiveservices.com.

The Church Security Saga Continues

I wish I had wrote the following article reference Church Security and ignorant Pastors.  I must give credit to the righful author.  Jeffrey Hawkins of Christian Security Network.  Please read.

No Apologies-

The saga continues and I need to set a few things straight, but let me make this clear, this is no apology for last week’s article.

If you have not read the last few weeks’ articles (I hate to call them “blogs”), I urge you to catch up (you may go to the “Views & Comments” tab on our website and all past articles are listed on the bottom of the page).

We received a variety of responses to last week’s article I wrote about the Pastor who stated a few things that I thought were 1) un-Christian 2) ignorant.

Here is a sampling from some excerpts from the e-mails:

“…I couldn’t agree with you more…Can I say “short sighted”, without saying what I shouldn’t say….” M.S.

“Amazing newsletter.  That ignorant Pastor had it coming.  You said it all just right.  If that was my Pastor I would stop going to his church.” G.L.

“Vent to someone before releasing your feelings out in the open like this. You were obviously upset. Your tirade was viewed by all of your subscribers. Reply to the pastor personally. This is your organization, but putting stuff like this on here can dissuade others.” K.W.

“RIGHT ON WITH THAT RESPONSE TO THE PASTOR WHO THINK WE (THOSE WHO ARE CALLED TO PROTECT AND SERVE) ARE SELLING SOMETHING.” K.W. [note: not the same person as above]

“The article on Maryville was well done. The letter to the dissenting Pastor was not, especially telling him to “stick to his job” You missed a great opportunity to further educate him. I was disappointed in your response. It was very reactionary.” W.B.

The responses were great, not because they were all positive, but that many folks read and reacted.

I explained to some people personally that the article about the Pastor was intentionally written as “reactionary”. Did I sit down at my computer and write the article and publish it without review because I was so “upset” – no.

I write these articles generally over the course of a week; I write a little, go back, re-write and “tweak”. Much depends on my schedule and the topic, but I don’t write these “off the cuff” and I am very aware of the thousands of people that read this through the website or when it is reprinted or referenced through other websites.

Also, for the record, I did contact the Pastor before this article was written, made my points (in a non-confrontational manner) and gave him the opportunity to respond and even write his own article, which occasionally we have people do; he never answered me.

So I wrote the article trying to display the feelings that I get from many of you and that I feel sometimes – frustration.

It turns my stomach every time I read an about an incident that harms the Christian church and one of its staff, volunteers, congregation, or worst, our children. It is terrible when I see simple things that could have been done to prevent the incident and they were just not done.

It is a shame and the consequences are heartbreaking.

But my personal bigger frustration is from the Christian community as a whole, and this includes many of you reading this, why are you so passive about this topic?

I wrote the article last week to get a reaction, but only a few responded.

I try this in other areas too.

For example, I asked this question “Should we care about crime in our churches?” in several Christian groups in the LinkedIn website. If you are not familiar with LinkedIn, it is like Facebook, except more business oriented. There are many Christian groups I belong to, as well as security and law enforcement, but I spend a lot of time on the Christian groups.

I received very few responses. Most of the ones that did respond were philosophical and theological in nature, a few did ask why we weren’t doing more, and some were not even aware there was a problem.

They were all nice responses, but not overwhelming by any means. I have seen “posts” to these groups that ask a simple question about the Christian church (like “What are you doing for VBS” or “What AV projector do you use?”) and get over a hundred responses, but not this topic of crime.

I really wish we had people with “passion” for this issue we are facing. Our loved ones are dying, our churches are being burned down and the gifts that God has been so gracious to give us are being taken right from under our noses.

Where is the outrage?

I always think back to when I was very young, during the Civil Rights movement. Later, when I was older, I would watch news clips and read about people like Martin Luther King.

When I see what they were up against and how they were treated – beat, burned, lynched, and jailed – but they never gave up, the passion was there because they were fighting a societal wrong.

Dr. King knew he faced death, but he had a dream of a better society for black people and he peacefully pursued that, with passion that you can’t help but feel today when you watch or listen to his speeches.

I admire, not only Dr. King, but also all the people, black and white, that had that passion to persevere until the wrong was righted. Has it all been achieved, no. Have we come a long way in the past 50 years, absolutely.

I think of the Bible passage “Let justice run down like water, And righteousness like a might stream” Amos 5:24 (NKJV)

Somewhere along the line someone said that Christians should be passive, boring, and weak and everyone fell into line.

I am not sure where we got that idea; Christ sure didn’t show this. He was very passionate about what is right and what is wrong and how to deal with it. I always think of Jesus going into the temple market place, knocking over tables, chasing the merchants away, because they desecrated the holy place of worship.

I wonder if anyone asked him to apologize and maybe not “vent” in public like that again because so many people were watching him?

I don’t believe in this instance Jesus was “out of control” or “venting”; I believe He was trying to make a point – sometimes you just have to show that “passion” about what you believe and cannot sit idly by while people commit these wrongs against the church.

When I gave up my full-time job almost two years ago to start the Christian Security Network, I really thought there would be an overwhelming response from Christian churches and ministries. We developed low cost services and products to help make Christian organizations safer and more secure.

Don’t get me wrong, CSN has been blessed with a very successful website, newsletter, seminars, and risk assessments…but the few thousand we have reached is only a small part of the 300,000 plus Christian organizations in the United States – we are not making a difference and only scratched the surface.

When I was a young police officer I went in like most; I wanted to save the world.

Then reality sets in and you realize, the world really doesn’t want to be saved – they want you to come in, usually after an incident, and solve their problem of the day and then go away until the next problem. People generally don’t take responsibility for themselves and their actions (or lack of).

I am beginning to think the Christian community is no different…and this isn’t venting, it is just being honest.

In Christ,
Jeff Hawkins
Executive Director

If you have any questions about how to implement a church security team ministry, need refresher training for an existing church security team, or you want to learn more about church security training, feel free to call or email Gideon Protective Services or Mind Sight Training for a free, confidential consultation. See what Gideon and Mindsight can do for you. You can find us on the web.  Find out the many benefits to having a church security ministry team that benefit the church, church administrators, staff, and the congregation.