Now, preachers and ministers come in all stripes and varieties, I understand that.
In the denomination I serve, there are some who are called “jack-leg preachers,” and it is not a compliment. No dictionary defines that term, but mostly it means they are self-taught, self-designated, and probably self-called.
I’m not talking about these.
I’m referring to solid God-called well-established servants of the Lord who have been cut off from the church they were serving for one reason or the other and now find themselves unemployable.
I’m referring to faithful preachers of the Word who should be out there leading a congregation, but have not been able to find one willing to give them a try.
Most pastor search committees are deathly afraid of unemployed preachers. They ask–and with good reason, by the way–if you’re so good, why aren’t you in the pulpit now? If you’re so faithful, how could any church have cut you loose? If you’re such a good prospect, how come no other church has snapped you up?
The short answer to these questions is simply that churches tend to be afraid to risk calling a preacher who was “let go” by his former church.