“The Way to San Jose” is a new PNJ series dealing with issues facing the Global Methodist Church as we approach the convening General Conference in San Jose, Costa Rica (September 2024.) The thoughts expressed are the author’s alone.

by Chris Ritter

When the Global Methodist Church gathers next September for its convening conference in Costa Rica, it will do so on a little-known centennial anniversary. The Methodist system of centralized apportionments crystalized in 1924 in the Methodist Episcopal Church as the primary mechanism for supporting connectional work. For the 100 years prior, general agencies and missions mostly relied on special offerings.

“Apportionment hangover” (a subcategory of UMC hangover) is something shared by most GMC congregations. It was not only the amount of money paid but the top-heavy and unaccountable structures it benefitted. Seemingly to prove that GMC “connectional funding,” is not apportionments by another name, the South Georgia Provisional Conference recently set their official conference funding rate at 0%. But they ask for 2% of the local church income. It remains to be seen if voluntary offerings will flow reliably enough to cover even a lean connectional structure. My guess is no.

The low cost of GMC membership for the local church has been a selling point. But this lives in tension with ambitious plans for mission, including church planting and cross-cultural ministry. Even with proposed partnerships carrying the bulk of international mission funding, the GMC is going to need money to move forward. A Global Church, like a global corporation, requires resources to exploit opportunities, develop leadership, maintain good order, and answer threats. Transitional realities, like uncompensated presiding elders (DS’s), hardly seem sustainable.

The Other Growing Denomination

As the GMC departs from UMC culture, it may wish to look to other denominations for workable funding models. The fastest growing denomination in the United States (beside the GMC!) is the Assemblies of God. AOG connectional ministries are funded, in most part, through a system of ministerial tithes. Instead of clergy putting all their tithes into the local church, they are expected to direct at least a portion of them to regional and general church bodies.

What type of revenue might clergy tithes generate? We have no salary data from the GMC, so models must be extrapolated from UMC numbers. Statistical tables from my UMC conference of origin, even with many small and part-time appointments, report around $2 million in clergy payroll per district. With ten districts, a clergy tithe would have roughly covered a quarter of the total UMC conference budget (enough to fund the superintendents). Denominations that require a clergy tithe tend to do so on the total income of the pastor, including secular income. If the GMC followed suit, these numbers adjust upward.

In the Southern Missouri Network of the Assemblies of God, ministerial tithes from 900+ clergy yield $2.7 million and comprise almost the entire general budget. Here the network (conference) policy states:

It shall be considered the standard of cooperation with Network policy that a minister contribute not less than one-half of his or her tithe, from ministerial and secular income, to the Southern Missouri Ministry Network… It is recommended that remittance be made on a monthly basis, and all active ministers of the
Southern Missouri Network who fail to contribute at least quarterly to the Network shall receive a letter
from the Network office requiring an explanation.

(SMMN Bylaws, see page 54.)

Other regional bodies of the AOG set their own rate. (I found another example rate of 7.5% of income.) There are guidelines for how clergy in extension ministries are to divide their tithes. The AOG national office additionally expects $300 annually from each ordained clergy’s tithe. With some 37,000 ministers (3 times of the number of churches!), this equates to around $11 million annually.

Benefits and Objections

Are there advantages to GMC clergy tithes being required as a means of funding connectional structures?

  1. Methodist clergy membership is in the conference, not the local church. There is logic that clergy tithes should help fund the conference.
  2. There would be immediate accountability for clergy to tithe. The Assemblies of God conditions credentialing to faithful payment of tithes. (Grace is also built into the system in cases of financial hardship.)
  3. Clergy will tend to be loyal to and invested in the work of the district and conference. Jesus said we can find our hearts and our money in the same place. (Luke 12:34)
  4. If the clergy of the conference find themselves unwilling to fund the conference, this might serve as an early warning sign that the conference not worth supporting.
  5. If the basic administrative structures of the denomination could be handled through clergy tithes, local church giving could be directed toward aspects of ministry that touch heartstrings and inspire generosity.
  6. There is currently no guaranteed appointment for GMC clergy and no ongoing cost for being a GMC clergy. Requiring a tithe from all clergy may tend to keep the clergy rolls clean, lean, and accountable.

Dr. Jay Herndon, secretary-treasurer of the Northern California and Nevada District of the Assemblies of God, answers objections he sometimes hears to their system of clergy tithes. 95% of the ministers, he says, understand the system and follow it. To the other 5%, he responds:

  1. “The tithe belongs to the local church.” That is nowhere in Scripture. In the Old Testament, the beneficiaries of the tithe were quite fluid over time and based on circumstance.
  2. “Tithing should be totally voluntary.” All aspects of Christian discipleship are voluntary. This is not the same thing as optional. Just as church members are expected to support the church financially as a condition of membership, ministers can likewise be expected to reliably support the denomination. Many offerings to God in Scripture are fixed and required.
  3. “Other groups don’t fund their denominations this way.” Dr. Herndon answers simply, “If you are an Assemblies of God minister, the first portion of your tithe belongs to the fellowship.” The clergy tithe is built into the constitution of the denomination and this expectation is part of their shared life.

One obvious question is whether a system of clergy tithes is just another way to shuffle money away from the local church. We simply do not have good data on the percentage of pastors that tithe to the congregations they serve. In the Assemblies of God example, only a partial tithe is generally required and generosity on the local level is assumed. My gut tells me that such a requirement would equate to new money, not just money redirected from local church coffers.

Taking Care of Business

In the life of a denomination, a good amount of the structure is related to clergy supervision and credentialing. If clergy tithes shouldered the supervisory and board of ministry functions, the GMC would be a long way down road toward fiscal viability. The clergy session at annual conference could become a vehicle for GMC clergy to manage the work their own tithes support.

A departure from past practice, this suggestion deserves to be controversial. Whatever we do should to be carefully analyzed with the law of unintended consequences in mind. The best reason to implement any system is that it is simply the right thing to do. As the GMC seeks to enhance accountability in all areas, there is an opportunity to replace the apportionment system with something more worthy of our aspirations. The AOG example demonstrates the effectiveness of each clergy significantly supporting the organization to which they pledge fidelity.

I look forward to reading your comments.

Photo Credit