I think the idea that you should never quit a church until you have another is like the general rule that it is best not to quit a job until you have another. It definitely seems to hold true in the CoG, that to be considered for a church, you kind of need to have a church, or at the very least, have a strong past history of successful pastoring, numbers wise. I also think this dynamic is a vestige of the old CoG, where most pastors moved every year or two. From my experience and observations, it is usually very difficult to get appointed to anything bigger than a small struggling church when starting out as a lead pastor. Being on staff at a large church can help you get appointed to a decent sized church, if your lead pastor is willing to help you. Once you get appointed to a church, if you do well, you may or may not be considered for a move to a larger church. My observation has been that the squeaky wheel gets dipped in the grease, as they say. I know of guys who have moved up often, like every year or so. In talking to them, they told me they basically called the AB or ED every week. Others have tried to become the AB’s golfing buddy, and in some cases, that seems to help them. As far as a golden ticket, I guess I got in the wrong line for that. Still waiting on mine. 🤓I will say that one’s ‘career track’ in ministry very much depends on the individual pastor and his perceived calling, and on his personality and relational type. There are plenty of CoG pastors who work outside the ministry in order to keep their churches financially afloat, and do so for many years, without ever getting a chance to move to a more financially stable church. Even after one ‘gets in the system’, so to speak, by getting appointed to their first church, unless they do something to really get the overseer’s attention (like, grow your church like crazy, call him every week, take him golfing a lot, etc.), a pastor is not likely to get a move anywhere. If his church grows substantially, the church is not too problematic, and he likes the area, there would be no reason to move, anyway.