Assimilation
The One Room You Can Never Leave Unwatched
100 Strong · July 8, 2026
Photo by Haberdoedas on Unsplash
Most of us started our children's ministry the same way: one faithful volunteer, one classroom, and a whole lot of trust because "we all know each other here." It feels warm. It feels like family. And it is exactly the gap that puts children at risk.
I want to say this as gently and as firmly as I can: nothing matters more than child safety. A single incident can destroy a church, and far more importantly, it can wound a child for life. This is not a program you add when you get bigger. It is the floor you stand on before you invite one more family through the door.
Here is the part many small-church pastors do not realize until it is too late. Insurers typically require a written child-protection policy (background checks, the two-adult rule, and the rest) as a condition of abuse-liability coverage. In plain terms: you literally cannot be properly insured to grow your kids' ministry until this baseline exists. Safety is the prerequisite, not the upgrade.
A quick and honest word before we go further: this is not legal advice. Background-check rules, mandatory-reporting duties, and ratio standards vary by state, denomination, and insurer. Everything below must be reviewed by your insurance carrier and a local attorney before you rely on it.
Why small churches are the most exposed
Thin volunteer benches create real temptation. You are short one adult on Sunday, so you put a single person in the nursery. A new helper wants to serve, so you skip the screening "just this once." These are understandable shortcuts, and they are precisely the openings abusers look for. The smaller the church, the more this matters, because you have fewer eyes and less margin.
The good news is that the safety floor is knowable, doable, and mostly inexpensive. Let me walk you through the non-negotiables.
The two-adult rule, no exceptions
Never leave a child alone with a single adult. Every room needs a minimum of two screened adults at all times, regardless of how many children are present. No one-on-one meetings behind closed doors. This protects children, and it also protects your volunteers from false accusations.
And yes, this includes the pastor. No exceptions. If you can only field one adult for a room, keep the door open and have another adult checking in regularly.
Screen everyone before they serve
Everyone who works with children gets screened: regular volunteers, occasional helpers, staff, and the pastor. No exceptions. At a minimum, run a national criminal database search, a sex-offender registry check, and an SSN trace. Collect a signed authorization and references first, and review the results before anyone serves.
Expect to spend roughly $10 to $25 per check, so budget for it. Any conviction or pending charge for child abuse, neglect, or a sexual offense is an automatic disqualifier. Re-check everyone every two to three years.
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Use matching identifiers. The parent and the child each receive a matching numbered tag or code, and the child is released only to someone with the matching identifier. Capture allergies and emergency contacts at check-in. You can start on paper with numbered stickers and move to a digital system (like NetMinistry) as you grow, which typically runs around $20 to $100 a month.
Make every room visible
Visibility is itself an abuse-prevention control. Add windows or half-doors so anyone can see into every room. Keep an open-door or open-window policy. Secure your entry and exit points so children cannot wander out. Line-of-sight is not fussy; it is protective.
Ratios and the never-below-two floor
Staff your rooms to the developmental stage, and never drop below two adults no matter what. For infants (0 to 12 months), aim for about one adult per two or three babies. For toddlers (12 to 24 months), about one adult per three or four. For older ages, set ratios per your state licensing or insurer standard.
Illness and restroom policies
Post clear keep-home criteria: no fever, vomiting, or diarrhea within the last 24 hours. Empower your volunteers to graciously decline a clearly sick child. For restroom trips, either two adults accompany the child, or one adult keeps the door open with another nearby. Never a single adult alone with a child in a restroom.
Mandatory reporting
In most states, anyone working with children is legally obligated to report suspected abuse. Reporting is required, not optional. Do not investigate in-house. Report to CPS or police, document what you observed, and involve leadership. Train every volunteer on the warning signs, who to tell internally, and who to call externally. Verify the exact reporting duty for your state.
Put it in writing and get signatures
All of this belongs in one written child-protection policy: screening, the two-adult rule, check-in and check-out, illness, allergies, emergencies, and reporting. Have each volunteer sign that they have read and understood it, and keep that acknowledgment on file. Then walk your team through fire, medical, missing-child, and lockdown procedures. Do not just hand them a document; drill the emergencies together.
Where to start today
If you are still under 100, this is the moment to build your safety floor, before more families arrive. Draft your written policy, run your screenings, set up matching-tag check-in, and then have it all reviewed by your insurer and a local attorney. If you want help sizing up where you stand, run the /assessment and see which of the 100 Strong milestones this unlocks for your kids' ministry.
Your challenge this week
Walk every room where children are cared for and confirm one thing: are two screened adults present, with line-of-sight into the room? Fix any gap you find this Sunday, before you do anything else.
