Winston-Salem Journal: Allowing the pastor to be an entrepreneur may renew both minister and ministry A NEW SPIRIT
A Lutheran pastor was fuming.
"I can't believe the number of clergy who think they are entitled to jobs," she said. Whether they are newly ordained or veterans, they think the church owes them employment, she said. They ask denominational executives, "Where is my next job?"
The term "entitlement" has become pejorative, of course, and using it in this context is negative. She was seeing some of her fellow clergy as passive, risk-averse and lazy. A fair assessment for some, no doubt, but not fair or helpful for others.
What if we used a different term, from the academic world: Tenure. I think this word more accurately reflects some current systems.
In effect, many clergy have made a deal. In exchange for being underpaid (earning less than half the pay of a regular job with comparable skills and expectations), overworked (six-day weeks, 12-hour days, on call 24/7, minimal staff), and subject to occupational stress that lands many in divorce court and in treatment for depression and addiction, clergy have been granted tenure.
They couldn't be fired on the whim of a few strong-willed laity. They couldn't be held accountable for the work of others over whom they have no control. Their reliance on employment couldn't be used as a weapon to make them soften the gospel, favor certain viewpoints or reward certain constituents.
In the way that tenure undergirds academic freedom at colleges, tenure would undergird the freedom of clergy to proclaim the gospel and to lead congregations in a process of change and growth.
In theory it works. But in practice the positive intentions seem to have been lost. The demands of the job still pertain. But protection from bullies is gone, protection from one-sided accountability is gone, and clergy who dare to proclaim the full gospel and its transformative implications and who manage institutions to meet changing conditions feel under constant threat.
I doubt that we can make the tenure system work any longer. It has been too widely abused and compromised.
The way forward seems to lie in a term from the marketplace, not the academy: Entrepreneur. When clergy see themselves as entrepreneurs, they seem to function more effectively and with increased job satisfaction. …
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