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That is an interesting read.
I did one of those salary calculators online and it said that with me experience and such I should charge $1700 an hour. If it is local, I am happy with a Diet Dr. Pepper and a Moon pie.I’m of the opinion that you should be paying your speakers like you would pay your own speakers.
Considering that your guest is not your church administrator, doesn’t have the follow-up to do for a Sunday meeting, $100 per day plus traveling expenses means that you are paying your speakers the equivalent of $26000 per year based on a five day week.
Compare that to your church budget and consider your speaker.
Are they employed by their home church or are they relying solely upon their speaking engagement?
If you occupy a week of their time you are looking at 500 per week plus expenses if this is their sole source of income. (Assuming that you are paying your own pastor the same amount.)
Your speaker must also figure their medical expenses from this number also.
From the perspective of the church, when in doubt, ask the speaker what he requires. Better to avoid the situation than create a scenario of hard feelings.
From the perspective of the speaker, consider your calling. Some people will be concerned about your needs more than others. Paul had only one church concerned with his needs at one point.
At no point is it healthy for either party to decide how the other should handle their own finances. If an agreement cannot be reached, it is better not to go forward when money is a problem.
Oh come on. Two moon pies at least!I did one of those salary calculators online and it said that with me experience and such I should charge $1700 an hour. If it is local, I am happy with a Diet Dr. Pepper and a Moon pie.
It does in a way. I don’t feel as bad for him putting all that work in because he gets a month of Sundays out of a week of work. But that doesn’t change the fact that he has to travel and should be paid for the work that he does. It affects my sympathy. He still needs to eat. And live the same number of days between Sundays as everyone else.So, a speaker comes to your church to speak - suppose he as preached that same message at four other churches?
Would that make a difference?
I fully agree about travel - that is seperate from preparation.It does in a way. I don’t feel as bad for him putting all that work in because he gets a month of Sundays out of a week of work. But that doesn’t change the fact that he has to travel and should be paid for the work that he does. It affects my sympathy. He still needs to eat. And live the same number of days between Sundays as everyone else.
Thank you for the “you’re #1” sticker. It makes me feel better about not being able to feed my family.There is no such thing as honorarium in the bible.. God is a rewarder of those who seek diligently.. just a give your guest preacher any token of appreciation for been a blessing to your congregation.. not this thing called honorarium..


Thank you for the “you’re #1” sticker. It makes me feel better about not being able to feed my family.



I am split here.I'd say that a man's time ought to be worth something.
They say that in order to properly prepare for a 45-minute sermon, it takes about around 40-45 hours of study and preparation. What would be a good "Hourly Rate" for this person's time? What is the hourly rate for someone to do diagnostics and repair on your automobile?
What about the monetery investment this preacher likely made in order to attend a good Seminary and become competent in the matters of theology and doctrine? What of the lost wages that he could have made had he not spent all that time learning languages, hermeneutics, and so forth? Poor preacher did all this just so you could nit-pick and criticize the sermon afterwards???
One should never go into the ministry in order to become financially well off. They should not be in it for the money at all but those who are benefiting from his labor ought to make contribution to his temporal needs!
If you bring in a speaker, you should cover his travel expenses, meals, and lodging. On top of all this, you should compensate him based upon the "added value" his time and efforts are bringing to you and your congregation.
Where I have mixed feelings is the question of what should a pastor's salary be when the church can afford it. Clearly the Pastor should not be struggling to feed his family in a large, affluent congregation that can afford to support him. However, is it proper for the pastor to earn in the top 20% of the congregation? The top 10%? The top 2%?I am split here.
I do agree here.I am split here.
We do not serve God for compensation. The ministry should not be looked at the sane way we would view a secular career.
At the same time the minister should expect the church to help meet his needs. Perhaps he can only work a part time job due to the time needed to prepare for a sermons and meet the needs of a congregation. He trusts in God to provide funds to meet what his part time job cannot.
I do not like the idea "my time is worth such and such" (like the 2k in the article). That is a business, not a ministry.
The hard part for me to swallow is the ministry becoming a profession (like a lawyer, a dentist).Where I have mixed feelings is the question of what should a pastor's salary be when the church can afford it. Clearly the Pastor should not be struggling to feed his family in a large, affluent congregation that can afford to support him. However, is it proper for the pastor to earn in the top 20% of the congregation? The top 10%? The top 2%?
I struggled with that question.
At what point are we "muzzling the ox" and at what point is the "Shepherd" too far removed from the real life issues of "the flock"?
Calvary Chapel actually follows such a model. In addition to their theological and pastoral training, it is required of those training for the ministry either to have or to acquire some sort of trade in which to support themselves.I believe the ministry needs to be "blue collar". Not necessarily that one has to depend on a secular job (but a part-time job is not a bad idea). But what I see often is the idea "I earned a doctorate and expect my salary to reflect my status" type of thinking.