Consistent — applied the same way to every person, every bag, every time.
Removes judgment calls at the door — team members do not have to decide who “looks suspicious.”
Strong deterrent signal for high-attendance or elevated-threat events.
Reduces liability exposure — you can demonstrate an active, documented security posture.
Cons
Requires trained, consistently staffed door teams — an undertrained screener creates more risk than no screener.
Slows entry and creates queues — the line itself is a vulnerability at peak arrival times.
Cultural friction is high — many congregants will feel they are being treated as suspects.
Requires advance communication so regulars are not blindsided at a service or event.
Also Consider
How will you handle unavoidable bags? Write it down before services: school backpacks, baptism clothes bags, diaper bags, Bible bags, volunteer supply bags. Your team needs answers before someone is standing at the door.
Communicate the policy in advance — bulletin, app notification, signage at the parking lot entrance.
A screener who surprises a faithful member of 20 years is not doing security; they are doing damage.
What tool will you use? Visual inspection only? Hand wand? Walk-through metal detector? The tool choice is secondary to having the policy — but it must be decided before you start.
Selective / Event-Based Screening
Pros
Practical — concentrates screening effort where threat level is highest (concerts, holiday services, high-attendance Sundays, youth events).
Lower friction on routine events and services, where screening is less warranted.
Allows the church to build screening capability before committing to a full-time posture.
Easier to staff and sustain than a seven-days-a-week program.
Cons
Only as good as the decision of who activates it — requires clear written criteria for when screening is in effect.
Inconsistency between events can cause confusion and unequal application.
A bad actor can observe your pattern and choose a non-screening event.
Harder to staff correctly if the call to screen is made day-of without advance notice to volunteers.
Also Consider
Youth services deserve special attention. Students arrive from school with backpacks they did not pack for church. Define in advance: are school backpacks searched, held at the door, or excluded? Document the answer.
Special events — Vacation Bible School, youth nights, concerts, guest speakers — are the highest-risk scenarios for most churches. If you only screen once, screen then.
After-baptism events create a specific scenario worth naming: people arrive with a bag of clothing. Your screening team needs to know how to handle that with grace and without confusion.
No Bag Screening Policy
Pros
No cost, no staffing burden, no equipment to maintain.
Maximum hospitality — no barriers at the door.
Appropriate for small, tight-knit congregations with high mutual familiarity and low threat environments.
If documented intentionally, represents a legitimate risk-acceptance decision.
Cons
No ability to detect prohibited items before they enter the building.
If an incident occurs, “we had no screening policy” is a difficult position for the church and its insurers.
Documenting the decision not to screen is critical — undocumented inaction is not a posture, it is an oversight.
Also Consider
If this is your decision, document it. Write: “As of [date], [Church Name] has assessed our threat environment and determined that bag screening is not currently warranted. This decision will be reviewed [annually / after any incident].” Keep it in your security program file.
Revisit the decision for every high-attendance event, regardless of your baseline posture.
Compensate with strong interior awareness — trained team members positioned throughout the sanctuary and hallways, watching behavior rather than bags.