Our mission is to help people find and follow Jesus. Our passion and vision is to serve our community, meeting people where they are and encouraging…
Christian ministries that develop pastors, missionaries, ministry executives, marketplace leaders, and emerging young leaders — combining character formation with practical leadership skill so the church and its institutions are led by people shaped in Christ before they are shaped for influence.
Christian nonprofits in this focus area that have been verified against The Most Trusted Standard.
Our mission is to help people find and follow Jesus. Our passion and vision is to serve our community, meeting people where they are and encouraging…
Via Nations works to engage, equip, and connect believers worldwide to their most strategic role in completing the Great Commission. Our mission is…
Why do we exist?Vineyard USA exist so that people would know Jesus and experience the power and presence of his KingdomHow do we behave?• We engage…
Each of the activities of WEC listed below, in some way, contributes to their purpose of worldwide evangelization and church planting among unreached…
The Western Pennsylvania District is designed to help churches fulfill Jesus' command to make disciples of all peoples and to provide for the…
With Inc. creates opportunities for soul care. We lead retreats, teach seminars and write resources for pastors, missionaries, lay leaders, and…
We are back office support for front line women. Our mission is to keep world-changing women on mission. We accomplish more together by providing…
It is the vision of World Compassion to transform the world with the loving touch of Jesus Christ. Our mission is taking the message of Jesus Christ…
We are a non-profit Humanitarian Aid Organization. Founded in 1989, WorldHarvest impacts the world through Community, Education, and Media Services…
World Impact empowers urban leaders and partners with local churches to reach their cities with the Gospel. We build healthy urban churches through…
WorldVenture is a global Christian organization with over 400 workers serving in transformational ministries. We are a family of followers of Jesus…
Youth for Christ International is a movement entrusted with a global vision and committed to a mission of youth evangelism, discipleship, social…
565 nonprofits
Christian leadership development takes many forms — from intensive pastoral cohorts to executive ministry training, from emerging-leader programs to sabbatical retreats for those bearing weight. The best work combines character formation with practical skill.
Cohort programs, conferences, retreats, and coaching that develop pastors beyond seminary — addressing the realities of preaching, shepherding, leading staff, and sustaining ministry across decades without burning out or shipwrecking faith.
Intensive programs for emerging Christian leaders in their 20s and 30s — combining theological depth, vocational discernment, peer cohort relationships, and the formation that turns ambitious young Christians into faithful, sustainable leaders.
Training for CEOs, executive directors, and senior leaders of Christian ministries — board governance, strategic planning, fundraising, financial stewardship, succession planning, and the operational competence that healthy ministries require.
Equipping Christians leading in business, government, education, healthcare, and other vocations — helping integrate faith with leadership in spheres beyond church work, where the great majority of Christian leaders actually serve.
One-on-one coaching, peer cohort programs, and extended sabbatical retreats for Christian leaders — the longer-term, relational, and restorative work that complements training events and addresses burnout, isolation, and the inner life of those in leadership.
Developing leaders in the Global South — theological education, pastoral training, and ministry leadership programs that equip indigenous Christians to lead the rapidly growing church in their own contexts, rather than depending on imported Western leadership.
The church's leaders shape what the church becomes. Pastors, missionaries, ministry executives, Christian educators, marketplace leaders — the character and competence of those bearing leadership weight set the trajectory of congregations, organizations, and movements for decades. When Christian leaders flourish, the work flourishes. When they fail, the damage can take a generation to address.
And yet the past two decades have made painfully clear that Christian leadership training has not always produced Christian leaders. High-profile failures — sexual misconduct, financial impropriety, abuse of power, narcissistic leadership cultures that hurt the very people they claimed to serve — have raised hard questions about what the field has been forming. The mature movement has had to reckon with the fact that competence without character can do as much damage as ignorance, and that producing dynamic leaders without forming Christ-shaped souls has been a failure, not a success.
The best Christian leadership training today operates from a different conviction: that character must precede competence, that biblical leadership is fundamentally servant leadership (Mark 10:42-45), that the inner life of a leader is the foundation of everything else, and that producing leaders who can multiply themselves into other faithful leaders matters more than producing celebrities. The field is wrestling — slowly, imperfectly — toward better practices: accountability structures, character assessments, cohort relationships that prevent isolation, sabbaticals that protect inner life, and theological formation that holds power in check.
This work also extends well beyond pastors. Most Christian leaders serve in business, government, education, healthcare, and the arts — leading in spheres where their work is just as much vocational ministry as anything happening from a pulpit. Excellent Christian leadership training serves the full breadth of Christian vocation, equipping believers in every domain to lead with integrity, faith, and the kind of long faithfulness that makes Christian leadership credible to a watching world.
Beyond our standard verification framework, here are factors specific to Christian leadership training ministries that thoughtful donors often weigh.
The most consequential question in Christian leadership training is whether the program forms character or only develops competence. Excellent ministries explicitly integrate spiritual formation, self-awareness, accountability, and the inner-life work that sustains long leadership. Beware of programs that import corporate leadership models with Bible verses attached but no serious engagement with the leader's soul.
Christian leadership has had high-profile failures around sexual misconduct, financial impropriety, and abuse of power. Excellent training ministries build accountability into their programs — peer cohort relationships, mentor structures, character assessments, and clear safeguarding protocols. Look for ministries that take these issues seriously rather than assuming the spiritual nature of the work protects against ordinary human failings.
Leadership training programs operate within particular theological traditions — Reformed, Wesleyan, charismatic, broadly evangelical, denominational, and others. None of these is necessarily wrong, but they shape what is taught about leadership, calling, and church. Excellent ministries publish their doctrinal commitments openly so donors can support work aligned with their convictions.
Much Christian leadership training has imported secular leadership models without sufficient theological evaluation. Excellent ministries ground their work in Scripture — particularly the servant-leadership pattern of Jesus, Paul's letters to Timothy and Titus, and the biblical witness on character. Beware of programs heavily reliant on corporate leadership frameworks without serious biblical engagement.
Christian leadership training has historically been more accessible to white, male, North American leaders. The mature movement is working to broaden access — developing women, leaders of color, leaders from the Global South, and bivocational leaders without seminary access. Excellent ministries invest in expanding leadership development across the full body of Christ, not just the demographics that have historically benefited.
Real leadership formation requires sustained engagement — cohort programs, ongoing coaching, mentor relationships across years, alumni networks that continue supporting leaders after the program ends. Excellent ministries invest in long-term relational infrastructure rather than relying on one-time conferences or short events. Look for ministries whose program models reflect the patient nature of genuine formation.
Explore verified Christian leadership training ministries above — or browse Christian ministries by other causes, locations, and award levels.