The Wall Street Journal: Joblessness Hits the Pulpit

I suppose it is no surprise that the economy is affecting church staffing.  It reminds me again to be so thankful for how God has provided for our church.

When Tim Ryan was called to an urgent meeting last year to discuss his duties as children’s minister at West Shore Evangelical Free Church, he knew something was amiss.

"This is really hard. I don’t know how I can do this," said executive pastor John Nesbitt, who helps lead the 2,500 attendee megachurch in Mechanicsburg, Pa.

The church, part of the Evangelical Free Church of America, had been growing rapidly but giving was down and well below projections as the recession weighed on members. So Mr. Ryan was losing his job, as was another pastor.

While the economy appears to be recovering from the worst downturn in generations, more clergy are facing unemployment as churches continue to struggle with drops in donations. In 2009, the government counted about 5,000 clergy looking for jobs, up from 3,000 in 2007 and 2,000 in 2005.

Church staff are feeling the pinch, too. In an October survey, about one in five members of the interdenominational 3,000-member National Association of Church Business Administration said they had laid off staff amid the recession.

The official unemployment rate among clergy sits at 1.2%, far below the national average jobless rate, but layoffs can be particularly painful for ministers. Churches aren’t subject to unemployment taxes, so laid-off employees can’t collect the benefits available to other workers.

The whole thing here.

HT: CT

3 thoughts on “The Wall Street Journal: Joblessness Hits the Pulpit

  1. It had not occurred to me that church staff would not be able to collect unemployment. Because of the economic downturn, our church has had to let 3 pastors (children, worship, missions) and their support staff go over the past 2 years. It’s been painful.

  2. Patricia – – the economy has been so difficult. I cannot imagine how hard that was for your church. I pray that the pastors who were let go will soon find employment.

  3. It doesn’t surprise me at all. It has certainly been impacting the missionaries for the past couple of years.

    Thankful for God’s faithfulness!

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