Friday, June 09, 2006

Pastoral burnout

A bit old, but I just ran across this today.

This is the scary stuff:

The following statistics were presented by Pastor Darrin Patrick from research he has gathered from such organizations as Barna and Focus on the Family.

Pastors

* Fifteen hundred pastors leave the ministry each month due to moral failure, spiritual burnout, or contention in their churches.
* Fifty percent of pastors' marriages will end in divorce.
* Eighty percent of pastors and eighty-four percent of their spouses feel unqualified and discouraged in their role as pastors.
* Fifty percent of pastors are so discouraged that they would leave the ministry if they could, but have no other way of making a living.
* Eighty percent of seminary and Bible school graduates who enter the ministry will leave the ministry within the first five years.
* Seventy percent of pastors constantly fight depression.
* Almost forty percent polled said they have had an extra-marital affair since beginning their ministry.
* Seventy percent said the only time they spend studying the Word is when they are preparing their sermons.

Pastors' Wives

* Eighty percent of pastors' spouses feel their spouse is overworked.
* Eighty percent of pastors' spouses wish their spouse would choose another profession.
* The majority of pastor's wives surveyed said that the most destructive event that has occurred in their marriage and family was the day they entered the ministry.

He goes on a gives some advice to avoid it. Worth a read, even if you aren't a pastor.

3 comments:

Jim said...

From my own experience- out of the group of 15 of us who studied and fellowshipped together in Seminary I alone am left in the ministry. Each and every one of the others got out within 6 years. I'm sure lots of folks wish I would get out too.... ;-)

Still, what you have here is completely accurate. 100% on mark.

Anonymous said...

Makes sense to me. It's the people at the front lines that get attacked the hardest...

Anonymous said...

Wow. None of this really surprises me, but the honesty of it strikes me. I mean, I'm sure there's a lot of it that my dad would agree with and identify with, but it makes me sad to be reminded of it in black and white. It's a heavy thought that God actually calls people to such a life. But he never said life was about happiness. As Bob Dylan (& Switchfoot!) would say, "happy is a yuppie word."
[I would sign this, but I think it's pretty obvious who wrote it.]