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Well-being of pastors has dropped in several key areas since 2015, study finds

church pastors lonely

Jared Wilson, above with his family, elevated the issue of suicide among pastors after he took his own life.

The well-being of pastors in several key areas has significantly declined since 2015, a new report from Barna Research found.

A previous report from Barna found that more pastors had considered quitting their jobs in 2022 compared to a year earlier, citing stress and loneliness. More than half of pastors, 56 percent, who considered quitting full-time ministry said, “the immense stress of the job” was a huge factor behind their thinking. Beyond these general stressors, two in five pastors reported that “I feel lonely and isolated,” while another 38 percent said current political divisions made them think about calling it quits at the pulpit.

READ: Stresses pastors face

Glenn Packiam, lead pastor of Rockharbor Church in Costa Mesa, Calif., urged churches to prioritize sabbaticals for their leaders as preventive health care.

“I think one of the best things you can do if you’re introducing sabbaticals to your church is to make it really clear who gets a sabbatical, how frequently and for how long,” he said. “In the past at my church, a sabbatical was either a prelude to someone’s exit or a punishment for something that a person had done. And it’s not meant to be any of that. This is preventive health care, if you will.”

–Alan Goforth | Metro Voice

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