Several years ago when a pastor needed to change or the church needed a change in pastor, the process was rather simple and straight forward. A church had a confidence vote every two years and the pastor would know how he stood with the church and the church could voice their opinion.Next, the confidence vote was scrapped and the church was given a few names to vote on by the AB. This made the process smooth, but there was much political pandering going on. Large and small churches many times felt stuck. Some of these churches never got the opportunity to get pastors they wanted. Some pastors were never given church opportunities they felt they deserved.Today we have a system that has stagnated many churches (especially smaller ones). Pastors who need to be moved are not moved. Churches that need pastors stay without pastors far too long. Why? A hybrid congregational model has developed where churches wait until Sunday morning to try out a new pastor. While this model has many good qualities, because it is a Sunday morning only interview process(in most cases) it is very slow. It is good because it gives the church an opportunity to view a potential pastor and pastor to interview a church. It is terribly slow because it is for the most part a Sunday morning only interview. That means a month(at least) for the FIRST set of potential pastors. Then voting and if the pastor that interviewed changes his mind...well it is back to square one. Many times there is a month or more before the first interview or the church may reject all interviewees....and we start over again. So many things can happen during this process to slow it down and they always do. Pastors can't always make it, so a Sunday gets skipped. When many people are involved many things can go wrong. When it is all said and done, many times the church and pastor are still not a good fit. If you have ever hired someone for a job, you know that happens and there is the problem: it seems we have turned this process in to something very much flesh. Any person can be good for a couple of hours on a Sunday. Problem Church folks will dial it back for a couple of hours. But then the honeymoon ends Those that are hiring try to make things as rosy as possible. The potential hire puts on his best suit and says all the right things. Two months later you both find out things were not near as great as was pretended. An employer can fire and employee can find new employment. Can you see the big difference using this type of system when we are talking about pastors and churches?Administrative Bishops: have you talked to your pastors? Do they like this process? Are churches doing better with this kind of system of placing pastors? Are you getting bogged down with too many churches without pastors? I have not lived under the old way of confidence vote every two years with AB placing pastors. It seems to me a better alternative would be reading 2 or 3 resumes and some type of evaluation after 2 years from pastor and congregation.