Leadership
The One Thing You Can Never Get Wrong in Kids' Ministry
100 Strong · June 30, 2026
Photo by AMONWAT DUMKRUT on Unsplash
I want to start with a sentence that may feel heavy, but it is the truth: nothing in your church matters more than the safety of a child. A single incident can unravel everything you have built, and far worse, it can wound a child for the rest of their life.
Here is the tension small churches feel. Your volunteer bench is thin. It is Sunday morning, you are short a helper, and you think, "It is just for an hour, and we all know each other." That feeling, that quiet shortcut born of trust and scarcity, is exactly the gap that abusers look for. The smallest churches are often the most exposed, not because they care less, but because they are stretched the thinnest.
So let me say this plainly and kindly: child protection is not a program you add once you grow. It is the foundation you stand up before you grow. Think of it as the floor under the room, not the decoration on the wall.
One important note before we go further: this is not legal advice. Background-check rules, mandatory-reporting duties, and ratio standards vary by state, denomination, and insurer. Every written policy must be reviewed by your insurance carrier and a local attorney, and it must follow your denomination's standards and state law. Where I mention a specific number below, verify it locally before you rely on it.
Why this is a gate, not an upgrade
Beyond the moral weight, there is a hard financial reality. Insurers typically require child-protection policies (background checks, the two-adult rule, and so on) as a condition of abuse-liability coverage. In plain terms, your church cannot be properly insured to run a kids' ministry until this baseline exists. You do not get to skip it and circle back. It is the prerequisite.
The two-adult rule, no exceptions
Never leave a child alone with a single adult. Two screened adults should be in every room at all times. 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 means no exceptions, all the way up. If you genuinely only have one adult available, keep the door open and have another adult checking in regularly until you can fix the staffing.
Screen everyone, before they serve
Everyone who works with children gets screened. Regular volunteers, occasional helpers, staff, and the pastor. There are no special people who get waved through.
- Collect a signed application and background-check authorization, plus references.
- Run, at minimum, a national criminal database check, a sex-offender registry check, and an SSN trace.
- Budget roughly $10 to $25 per check.
- Review results before anyone serves, and re-check every two to three years.
Auto-disqualifiers include any conviction or pending charge for child abuse, neglect, or sexual offenses. That line does not move.
Secure check-in and check-out
Use matching identifiers. The parent and the child each receive a matching numbered tag, and the child is released only to the person holding the matching identifier. Capture allergy and emergency-contact details at check-in. You can absolutely start on paper with numbered stickers and move to a digital system as you grow (those typically run about $20 to $100 per month). Start simple, but start.
Create your free 100 Strong account to turn ideas like these into a clear plan. Track your weekly numbers, get a personalized next step, and walk the proven path to 100+ members. No cost, ever.
Create my free accountMake every room visible
Visibility is itself a prevention control. Windows or half-doors that allow a clear line of sight into every room. Open-door, open-window practices. Secure entry and exit points so a child cannot wander out and a stranger cannot wander in.
Ratios, illness, and restrooms
Staff to the developmental stage, and never drop below two adults regardless of how few children show up. As a guide from the source: infants (0 to 12 months) roughly one adult per two to three babies, and toddlers (12 to 24 months) roughly one adult per three to four. For older ages, set ratios to your state and insurer standard.
Post clear illness rules and empower volunteers to graciously decline a clearly sick child: no fever, vomiting, or diarrhea within the last 24 hours. For restrooms, 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.
Train every volunteer as a mandatory reporter
In most states, anyone working with children is legally obligated to report suspected abuse. This is required, not optional. Do not investigate in-house. Report to CPS or police, document what you observed, and involve leadership. Train your team on the warning signs and on exactly who to tell, both internally and externally. Verify the precise reporting duty for your state.
Write it down and get signatures
Put it all in one written child-protection policy: screening, 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 those signatures on file. Then have the policy reviewed by your insurer and a local attorney, and aligned to your denomination's standards.
Finally, drill the emergencies. Walk your team through fire, evacuation, medical, missing-child, and lockdown procedures. Do not just hand them a document and hope.
What to do next
This can feel overwhelming, so do not try to perfect it all at once. Stand up the floor: two adults per room, screening for everyone, secure check-in, visible rooms, and a written policy that a professional has reviewed. Get those right, and you have built the protective minimum every growing church needs. If you want a structured place to start, our tools and the assessment can help you see where your baseline stands.
Your challenge this week
Walk into your children's space this Sunday and count adults per room. If any room has a single adult with children, fix it on the spot: prop the door open and station a second screened adult nearby. That one change closes the most exploited gap in a small church, today.
