
Why Churches Need a Conflict of Interest Policy
By Rollie Dimos | Church Governance
A conflict of interest in a church setting is any situation where a person’s personal interests could improperly influence—or appear to influence—their decisions on behalf of the church. Churches rely heavily on trust, stewardship, and integrity, so even the appearance of divided loyalty can undermine confidence.
A healthy church board doesn’t just pray for wisdom—it builds structures that protect it. One of the most essential of these is a clear and consistently applied conflict of interest policy.
What is a conflict of interest?
A conflict of interest happens when someone in leadership (board member, pastor, staff member, volunteer) has two competing interests. One interest is their duty to the church—to act in its best spiritual, financial, and organizational interests. And the other is a personal interest—financial, relational, professional, or otherwise—that could benefit them or someone close to them. When those two interests collide, the person may not be able to make an unbiased decision.
Here are some common examples that often raise red flags:
1. Financial benefit
- A board member owns a construction company and wants the church to hire it for a building project.
- A pastor’s family member is paid for services without competitive bids.
2. Family or relational influence
- A board member votes on a salary increase for their spouse who works at the church.
- A pastor appoints a close friend to a paid ministry role without a transparent process.
3. Personal gain from confidential information
- A leader uses insider knowledge about a land purchase to buy adjacent property for themselves.
Managing Conflicts
In short, managing conflicts of interest is essential to preserving board integrity, legal compliance, and congregational trust.
The typical best practices for handling conflicts include the following:
- A written Conflict of Interest Policy
- Annual disclosure forms for board members and key staff
- Recusal from discussion and voting when a conflict exists
- Documentation in minutes showing how conflicts were handled.
Some nonprofit and church boards have run into serious trouble by failing to disclose or properly manage conflicts of interest. While not every situation becomes a national headline, the impact on the local church can be significant.
In one recent case, the IRS revoked a ministry’s tax exempt status due to excessive and improper benefits for key leaders. These leaders were involved in setting their own compensation and failed to maintain proper documentation. The IRS noted that a lack of conflict of interest policies contributed to this failure. (See Community Worship Fellowship v. United States, 10-23-25.)
Most conflict of interest failures will share these similar characteristics:
- Lack of disclosure (board members didn’t formally state their conflict).
- Failure to recuse (conflicted individuals participated in discussion or voting).
- No independent evaluation (no competitive bids, no outside review).
- Poor documentation (minutes didn’t reflect the conflict or how it was handled).
- Blurred roles (pastors or staff serving on boards that make decisions affecting them).
These are the patterns that leaders in the church should look for when assessing their own governance oversight and integrity.
Summary
In ministry settings, where relationships run deep and roles often overlap, even well intentioned leaders can find themselves navigating decisions that blur personal and organizational interests. A strong policy doesn’t assume bad motives; it creates guardrails to preserve trust, safeguard the church’s reputation, and ensure decisions are made for the good of the congregation rather than the benefit of a few.
If you would like an example of a conflict of interest policy that protects the integrity of the church’s decision making process, ensures public trust, and complies with IRS best practices for tax exempt organizations, follow this link.
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