Written by Troy A. Blades, President, Safe and Secure Enterprises, Inc.
“A prudent person foresees danger and takes precautions. The simpleton goes blindly on and suffers the consequences.”
— Proverbs 27:12
When most people hear the words church security or safety team they picture one scenario. An armed intruder. An active shooter.
That image is powerful, and preparing for it matters. But if that is the only threat your Safety Ministry is trained to recognize, you are not fully protecting your congregation.
The threats are broader than that. And so is your responsibility.
What a Threat Actually Looks Like
A threat is anything that disrupts the peace, safety, or well-being of the people in your care. That definition is wider than most teams realize.
Here is what your Safety Ministry is really protecting against:
Disruptive Visitors
Not every threat arrives with a weapon. Some walk in angry, intoxicated, or in a mental health crisis. Without a plan, your team does not know whether to approach, redirect, or call for help. Every Sunday is a potential encounter.
Medical Emergencies
Cardiac events, falls, diabetic episodes, and seizures happen in churches every week across this country. Does your team know who has Stop the Bleed training? Is there an AED on site and does anyone know how to use it? Response time is the difference between life and death. What happens if there is just a fall? With large congregations this can be a major incident.
Custody Disputes
Churches are not immune to family conflict. A custody order violation or a non-custodial parent attempting to take a child is a real scenario. Your children’s ministry team needs to know what to do and who to call.
Missing Children
In a crowded Sunday service, a child can wander in minutes. A simple check-in and check-out process, combined with trained greeters and rovers, closes that gap. Most churches do not have one.
Evacuation Threats
Fire, gas leak, severe weather, or a bomb threat. Can your team move 200 people out of the building safely and quickly? Do they know the routes? Do they know where to account for everyone? Most congregations have never practiced it.
Active Assailant
Yes, this too. It is not the only threat, but it is the one that requires the most specific preparation. Your team needs to know the difference between a lockdown, a shelter-in-place, and an evacuation. They need to know it before the moment arrives.
A Simple Framework to Start With
You do not need a complex program to begin. You need a clear framework. Here is a starting point every Safety Ministry can use:
- Identify your threats. Walk your facility and list every scenario your team could face. Do not filter. Write them down.
- Assign responsibility. Every threat category needs an owner. Someone accountable for the plan, the training, and the readiness.
- Build simple responses. One page per scenario. What happens first. Who calls for help. Where people go. Keep it simple enough that a volunteer can execute it under stress.
- Train to it. A plan on paper is not a plan. Tabletop exercises, walkthroughs, and scenario-based drills turn paper into capability.
- Review it. At minimum, annually. When your team changes. When your facility changes. When an incident occurs anywhere that resembles your environment.
This Is Ministry
If you have read our previous articles on building a Safety Ministry team and the role of communication, you already know our position. The Safety Ministry is a ministry first. It is not a security force. It is not a liability shield. It is a calling.
That mission. The Safety Ministry does not exist to project authority. It exists to protect the environment where God’s work happens. That requires being present, aware, and prepared for the full picture.
Not just the headline event. Everything else too.
Where Does Your Team Stand?
We put together a Safety Ministry Readiness Checklist that walks through each of these threat categories with straightforward questions to help you identify where your team is strong and where gaps may exist. There is no cost and no obligation.
Fill out the short form below and we will send it directly to you.
Coming Up Next
Knowing what your team is protecting against is the first step. The next step is building the training to back it up. In our next article, we will walk through how to build a training program from the ground up. Simple, practical, and designed so that any Safety Ministry, regardless of size or budget, can get started. Whether you have ten people or two, the framework works. Stay connected at www.ssei-online.com so you do not miss it.
Train to Protect, Live in Peace. | Safe and Secure Enterprises, Inc. | www.ssei-online.com | training@ssei-online.com | 410-231-3790
