(I hope you will read all the way through to the comments at the end, and a couple of add-on notes we felt were necessary to add.–Joe)
The preacher friend sent me a note to say that the virus had spread to his church too. He’ll soon be moving back to his home state and trying to start over.
I asked for a favor. “Sometimes when you feel up to it, write me about what happened to you. What did the committee say, what were their reasons? What did you do and what do you wish you had done?”
I hate this.
It’s like divorce. Nothing about it is good. Sometimes it’s the lesser of two evils and you do it for your own survival but it’s still awful.
But a divorce is a defeat. A divorce sends a message to the world, the kind of message we don’t want to be sending.
When churches elect to terminate a pastor forcibly, they’d better have some good reasons, is all I can say.
From all I know of Scripture, the Lord does not take kindly to those who mess with His messengers and those who tamper with the unity of His body. Both issues are on the table when a church decides to oust a pastor.
Technically, I suppose, my friend was not fired. But the little group of members brought considerable pressure for him to resign. “If we take it to the church and the congregation terminates you, there won’t be any severance.”