When the State Discovers There Is No Money in Ministry
There is something almost comic in the discovery that ministry does not pay well. Not comic in the sense of trivial. The finances of ministry are often painful. Pastors serve small congregations that can barely afford them. Seminarians graduate with debt into jobs that cannot reasonably repay it. Churches lament clergy shortages while offering compensation packages that require either heroic sacrifice, a working spouse, inherited wealth, or a second job. The comedy is darker than laughter. It is the comedy of belated recognition: a society built around earnings suddenly looks at ministry and announces, with bureaucratic seriousness, that the numbers do not work. The surprise is not that there is no money in ministry. The surprise is that anyone is surprised. A recent Christianity Today article by Emily Belz reports on a proposed federal regulation that would judge college and graduate programs by whether their graduates out-earn peers without the same degree. If programs fai...