I have been a believer for 66 years and I think I have seen everything in that time. I started out in a little country Baptist Church and loved it as they became a second family to me (I was fatherless). My next two churches were Baptist, the first was mediocre but the second was great. From there I went to a Brethren Bible College for two years. When I got back from my studies everything had changed and a new pastor who was not interested in what I had to offer. After being fully involved before I went and doing nothing when I came back became boring, I took the advice of one of my mentors who suggested I checked out a Charismatic Brethren Church about 100 miles away.
I investigated them and it was quite revolutionary. There was no them and us mentality. Everyone was welcome to share anything that the Lord had given them for the meeting in true Brethren fashion with the addition of the supernatural. I stayed there for a year and then moved to the HQ of the movement because I met my wife through the church and we stayed there for 10 years with me running the men's ministry, being chosen to organize and direct their annual conference, heading up one of the midweek home fellowships and because I had a job that took me all over the country for a while, I visited satellite churches if there was one in the town I was staying.
After 10 years, my wife who was Australian wanted to return home so we set sail for the Great Southland of the Holy Spirit along with our two kids. We spent six weeks in America on the way over where we found the American people so welcoming and friendly. We got invited to everything and were not asked to pay for anything.
After 10 years at Chard, the Australian church was an eye-opener. Whatever church we went to and we tried several the general consensus was the pastor was king and nothing was done unless it had his approval. And you could not do anything unless you did it the way he wanted it done. There was no freedom to hear from the Lord at all.
On a few occasions, I did hear from the Lord and acted accordingly but was told that was the Pastor's job. However, in one church where I taught how to produce media for the church, and where they did believe in the supernatural, I was given four prophesies by four different men in four different meetings in four different places that God was gifting me with the gift of teaching. This was interesting because I had been to university for six years and amongst three degrees I gained a teaching degree and ended up teaching senior students to fill my days before retirement.
This took me to country schools where I was offered a job before I left university. Despite this, I was not allowed to do any teaching in the church because I was not ordained by the denomination and had not been to their bible college. Obviously a Dip. Theology and three university degrees and the anointing from God were insufficient to qualify me in the church.
However, it was good for me because I became an avid student of the Word and any books I could lay my hands on. That is why I have over 1,000 books in my personal library. In time I got fed up with having to listen to little homilies that were full of discrepancies and devoid of anything serious and challenging from so-called Pastors who had no ability to exegete the Word. I ended up writing a thesis for a Ph.D.
On a couple of occasions, I raised issues to point out the discrepancies, and on the first one, everything I said would go wrong did and on the second I was kicked out of the church because I dared challenge the so-called leadership, a woman who was younger than my daughter.
In another church which I was one of the founding members of, I was sidelined after 12 months because when the time came around to sign the pledge, I said I could not because there was one doctrine I was not sure of as I was still working through it. That was sacrilege so I was deprived of all ministry despite what I was doing was well received. The pastor at this church told us that God had said he was going to double the congregation every year. So that meant it should be welcoming 50,000 people each Sunday now. Its average congregation is 50.
After that, I gave up the church as a waste of time as all they wanted to do was flog a dead horse. It was as the saying goes that only an idiot does the same thing every week and expects a different outcome. The first situation above when we joined the church there were about 130 people coming to meetings. After a few changes of leadership, they are now down to about 30 and are content to let the church die slowly.
These days my church is a group of men who meet on a Friday for fellowship, food and fun and we get on like a house on fire because we don't consider anyone better than anyone else. We are all one in Christ.
So what is the moral of my story? It is just this. Unless you find a church that allows the Holy Spirit to run things, you will be stuck in a rut having to do as you told by the "bosses" and do things their way. To be led by the Spirit is an unknown experience as the Spirit only talks to the Pastor so all you need do is to sit on the premises and forget about standing on the promises.
So I can sympathize with the OP because it is obvious that the church, in general, is beset with power plays and authority figures that are more interested in their ministry than the ministry of others.