Only 49 USA/Canada Nazarene Pastors Are Under 30— A Few Suggestions to Address the Problem

On January 1, 1990 Karla and I packed everything we owned into a U-Haul and drove from Alanson, Michigan (where I had been the youth pastor) to Bad Axe, Michigan. It would be my first church as a solo pastor. I was 26 years old. By today’s standards, I would have been a rarity.

There are 4,331 lead pastors in the Church of the Nazarene in USA/Canada, only 49 lead/solo pastors are under 30 years old. Moreover, just 10.1% of the pastors are under 40; where as 40.1% are over 60.* These statistics lead one to ask several questions:

  • Is God not calling young people into ministry these days?  
  • Are young people not heeding the call?
  • Do would-be, young Nazarene pastors disagree Nazarene theology and polity**
  • What is happening and what will happen when these old pastors start retiring if there is no one to replace them? 

Clearly, the dwindling of young pastors is a problem. What can be done to increase the total of ministers under 40? It begins in middle school, maybe earlier. Here are a few suggestions:

Pastors modeling Christlike behavior. Seeing more young people called into ministry begins with healthy pastors modeling before the congregation a life in the Spirit and a joy in the calling of God. 

Preacher’s talking about the joys of pastoring. Not every assignment is a joy, but faithful pastoring is rewarding. Being able to share the joys new babies in baptism or dedication; experiencing the new birth of a young teenager in Christ; having the best “seat” in the house for weddings; helping families through the rough patches of life; and saying the closing words at the funeral of a saint are the joys of pastoring that cannot be overstated. Good, godly pastors are the best antidote for more pastors.

Parents/grandparents speaking kindly and appreciative of those in the ministry. Much of a young person’s knowledge of the ministry comes from what is spoken about the clergy in their home. Gossip, backbiting and hateful words are heard and remembered by children. Likewise, kind, appreciative words go a long way in establishing a respect for the ministry.

Professors speaking favorably of pastoral ministry. In particular, speaking positively and expressing the need for small town pastor in the college classroom. Many ministry majors have been steered away from pastoral ministry from the horror stories heard in the university. “Small town or small churches are small for a reason,” they’ve been told; “people are stuck in their ways; they won’t listen to a young pastor;” and “a small church will eat you up and spit you out.” Such lessons, while may be true is some cases, but do not help encourage those 30 and under to become small town/small church pastors.

The denomination could offer the elimination student debt for ministers of small churches. Making pastoring a small church more affordable should be a priority for the denomination. Getting creative with funding of small churches is essential. Many churches have unloaded their parsonages in the last twenty years and now cannot afford to pay a young pastor (often saddled with debt) a living full time salary.

Districts setting up small town/small church grants could also assist with making small church pastoral assignments affordable. Districts could set up funds to assist pastors salaries or health insurance costs. This is not a totally new concept. When I was pastoring Bad Axe, the district paid half our health insurance, since the church could not afford it. Similar incentive plans to assist small churches which would help in the recruitment and retention of pastors in smaller settings. Most districts have enough excess funds to afford an incentive program. 

Church members recognizing they have two choices: get younger or die. Choose the former, then do whatever it takes to convince a young pastor to come to the church and then do whatever it takes to support that pastor. Choose the latter, do nothing and watch the church die a slow agonizing death.

Sadly too often young people have been given a negative picture of small churches from bad pastors, gossip in their homes, negativity from some college professors, the lack of affordability and have decided, “Thanks but no thanks.”  Churches must be willing to turn over the keys (and purse strings) to a new generation of pastors; district superintendents must be willing to endorse and support young pastors; and young men and women must heed the ministerial calling or there won’t be a church to turn over to the coming generations. 

*The numbers only reflect lead/solo pastors. There are plenty of pastors who serve as associate pastors in some capacity who are under the ager of 30. Some of them will become lead/solo pastors. Still 49 pastors under the age of 30 seems like an absurdly low number. 

**The argument that 30 and under people have disagreements with our theology and/or politics of many people in the churches seems more antidotal than factual. For example, many young people agree with the church’s traditional Biblical position regarding human sexuality. They don’t support with the all-too-often posture toward those who disagree. They don’t like the anger and hatred spewed. Many love Jesus and the church. 

6 thoughts on “Only 49 USA/Canada Nazarene Pastors Are Under 30— A Few Suggestions to Address the Problem

  1. Daniel R. Henderson's avatar Daniel R. Henderson

    You left out THE Key Question: Are District Superintendents recommending clergy under 30 to open positions?

  2. Dave Becker's avatar Dave Becker

    Rob, I couldn’t agree more with this article! I too started out as a young 27 year old “wet behind the ears” lead pastor. That first church was rough but we lived and learned so much. We had two or three other young pastoral couples who shared life with us and encouraged us to hang in there.

    I would add one important component to your thoughts: We need a comprehensive mentoring atmosphere in our denomination and on our districts for young first time pastors. Our new DS has approached me and another retired pastor to develop such a program/culture on CCD. I’m excited to see how it unfolds. Thoughts!

    Dave Becker

  3. Mark Fuller's avatar Mark Fuller

    I would add another reason…most pastors are either too insecure, unwilling, or unable to empower young leaders.

  4. Emily Taylor's avatar Emily Taylor

    I’m not entirely sure it’s a good idea to start pushing for a lot of twenty somethings coming into lead pastor positions, but I’m willing to be wrong about that. I do think there’s something to be said for allowing a person’s frontal lobe to finish forming before being a senior pastor. I’m quite a bit more concerned about only 10% of senior pastors being between the ages of 30 and 40, and I’m guessing the number between 40 and 50 isn’t a lot higher. However, the reality is that young clergy will continue to decline in number as long as we keep hearing from our leaders how terrible we are (while refusing to give us any opportunity to improve or guide us in any meaningful way), how lazy we are (while refusing to give us any responsibilities), how expensive we are (while continuing to allow costs of education to increase and refusing to acknowledge our need to sustain ourselves and our families), and how much we don’t care about the church (while dismissing our very real concerns about the spiritual and theological formation of the church).

    I once had a pastor tell me point blank, “We’re terrified of passing the church to your generation.” Had I not been rendered entirely speechless by that statement, I would have said, “First of all, you don’t have much of a choice. Refusing to leave the church to the next generation means it will die with you. Second, it’s not your church.” The same pastor made the comment that young clergy are leaving because of “the gay thing.”

    We have been BEGGING for collaboration, leadership, mentorship, and the opportunity to grow into the pastors we hope to be for as long as I have held a minister’s license. So far, our cries have fallen on the deaf ears of those who hold us to impossible and ungodly standards.

    1. Tim Eyring's avatar Tim Eyring

      Many districts have done away with the family camp experience. It was there under the anointed ministry of evangelists and in a Spirit bathed supportive atmosphere where I and many of my friends felt the call to ministry.

      Revivals in home churches were often atmospheres conducive to the calling of young people to ministry preparation in our colleges, Bible college or and/or seminary.

      I can remember as a teen begging my family to let me go to family camp early or to stay late just to have a opportunity to labor with pastors setting up or tearing down camp, men who were my heroes.

  5. Gracias por compartir tan interesante reflexión.

    En lo personal agradezco a Dios que me llamó desde mi temprana edad a su santo ministerio, ya que desde la edad de 18 años asumí mi primer pastorado. Han transcurrido ya muchos años desde ese memorable momento y no puedo hacer más que agradecer al Señor por su fidelidad y por los líderes que confiaron en mi y que fungieron como mis mentores.

    Creo que hoy también Dios puede seguir llamando a los jóvenes al ministerio pastoral, pero se necesita que los que tenemos un largo recorrido en esta camino nos convirtamos en buenos modelos y mentores para ellos y que con nuestro testimonio les demos a conocer que vale la pena servir al Señor.

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