One of the most frequently noticed differences between The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and many other Christian denominations is the absence of paid clergy at the local level. Visitors are often surprised to learn that bishops, counselors, teachers, and many other leaders serve without financial compensation while maintaining full-time jobs and family responsibilities. This naturally raises an important question: Why do Mormons have unpaid clergy?
For Latter-day Saints, this practice is not about devaluing religious leadership or denying the importance of preparation and care. Instead, it reflects a deeply held belief that church leadership is a form of service rather than a profession. Leaders are called by God, not hired by an institution, and their authority comes from divine calling rather than salary or academic credentials.
Unpaid clergy reinforces humility, equality, shared responsibility, and reliance on Jesus Christ. It reflects a vision of a church led by ordinary people doing extraordinary service through faith. Understanding this belief requires exploring biblical foundations, early Christian practice, stewardship, lay ministry, spiritual benefits, and the role of agency in church leadership.
Lay Ministry in Practice
In The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, most leadership roles are filled by lay members. This includes bishops, counselors, elders quorum presidents, Relief Society presidents, teachers, youth leaders, and many others. These individuals are not professional clergy and are not paid for their service.
They are members of the congregation who continue in their normal employment while fulfilling church responsibilities. Leadership callings are temporary and rotate regularly, allowing many members to serve over time.
This system reflects the belief that the church belongs to its members collectively, not to a professional class.
Callings Based on Inspiration
Latter-day Saints believe leaders are called through prayer and inspiration rather than through résumés, interviews, or career advancement. Church leaders seek divine guidance when extending callings, trusting that God knows who is best suited to serve at a given time.
Members are encouraged to accept callings with faith, even when they feel inadequate. This reliance on divine calling rather than professional qualification is central to the concept of unpaid clergy.
Temporary Service
Most leadership callings last only a few years. This prevents the concentration of power, reduces burnout, and reinforces humility. When a calling ends, the individual returns to being a regular member without special status.
This rotation helps ensure that leadership is seen as service rather than entitlement.
Biblical Foundations for Unpaid Ministry
Latter-day Saints believe unpaid clergy aligns with patterns found in the Bible. In the New Testament, many early church leaders supported themselves financially while serving in ministry.
The Apostle Paul is a well-known example. He worked as a tentmaker while traveling, teaching, and leading the Church. Paul explicitly stated that he chose not to rely on financial support so that the gospel would not be seen as motivated by gain.
Early Christian leadership was often local, voluntary, and deeply integrated into everyday life.
Service Without Financial Motive
Latter-day Saints believe unpaid ministry helps remove financial motives from religious leadership. Leaders do not serve for income, status, or job security.
This reinforces sincerity and devotion. Members believe leaders are more likely to act out of love and faith when service is not tied to compensation.
Authority Through Calling, Not Salary
In Latter-day Saint belief, spiritual authority does not come from education, ordination fees, or salary. It comes from God through priesthood authority and calling.
Unpaid clergy reinforces the idea that authority is spiritual rather than institutional. Leaders serve because they are called, not because they are hired.
This distinction helps members focus on Christ as the true head of the Church.
Financial Stewardship and Church Resources
Another important reason Latter-day Saints have unpaid clergy is financial stewardship. Church funds come primarily from voluntary tithes and offerings given by members.
By not paying local clergy, these funds can be directed toward other purposes such as humanitarian aid, education, temple construction, disaster relief, missionary work, and welfare assistance.
Members believe donations should be used to bless as many people as possible rather than supporting salaries at the local level.
Focus on Charity and Service
The Church operates extensive humanitarian programs worldwide, providing food, medical aid, clean water, education, and emergency relief. Unpaid clergy helps make this possible.
Members often see unpaid ministry as a way of ensuring that resources go outward to serve others rather than inward to sustain leadership.
Accountability and Transparency
Church finances are managed carefully, with systems of accountability designed to ensure responsible use. The absence of paid local clergy simplifies financial administration and reduces potential conflicts of interest.
Spiritual Benefits of Lay Leadership
Unpaid clergy offers significant spiritual benefits to both leaders and congregations.
Because leaders live the same lives as those they serve, they understand everyday challenges related to work, family, finances, and faith. This relatability fosters empathy and trust.
Leaders are not separated from the congregation by professional distance. They worship alongside those they lead and face similar struggles.
Leaders Who Understand Real Life
A bishop who balances work deadlines, family responsibilities, and church service understands the pressures members face. This shared experience helps leaders offer practical, compassionate guidance.
Members often feel more comfortable approaching leaders who understand their daily realities.
Growth Through Service
Serving without pay encourages leaders to rely on God rather than personal expertise. Many leaders testify that their faith deepened as they served in roles they initially felt unqualified to fill.
This growth-through-service model reflects the belief that God qualifies those He calls.
Shared Responsibility in the Church
Unpaid clergy encourages shared responsibility among members. Because leaders are volunteers, the Church depends on widespread participation.
Teaching, organizing activities, ministering, and caring for others are shared responsibilities rather than tasks delegated exclusively to professionals.
This creates a strong sense of ownership and community.
Participation Builds Faith
Members who serve learn by doing. Teaching a lesson, organizing service, or leading a group helps individuals develop faith, leadership skills, and compassion.
Unpaid clergy supports a culture where everyone contributes.
Avoiding a Clergy-Laity Divide
In many religious traditions, a sharp distinction exists between clergy and laity. Latter-day Saints believe unpaid clergy helps minimize this divide.
Leaders and members are fundamentally equals. Leadership is temporary, and everyone is expected to serve at different times.
This structure reinforces the belief that all are children of God with equal worth and responsibility.
Addressing Concerns About Training
One common concern is whether unpaid clergy lack training. Latter-day Saints acknowledge that leaders are not professionally trained clergy, but they believe God provides guidance through revelation, scripture, and experience.
Leaders also receive ongoing instruction, handbooks, and support from higher church leadership.
When professional expertise is needed, leaders encourage members to seek qualified help. The role of a bishop is spiritual guidance, not replacing doctors, therapists, or legal professionals.
Unpaid Clergy and Quality of Care
Another concern is whether unpaid clergy can provide adequate care given time constraints. Latter-day Saints recognize the sacrifices leaders make and emphasize shared leadership to prevent overload.
Counselors and auxiliary leaders share responsibilities, and no one leader is expected to do everything.
This collaborative approach helps maintain quality care.
Unpaid Clergy and Equality
Unpaid clergy reinforces equality within the Church. Leaders do not receive financial privileges or elevated social status.
This equality helps prevent pride and fosters humility. Leaders are reminded that their authority exists to serve, not to elevate themselves.
Members often express appreciation for leaders who serve quietly and return to ordinary life when their calling ends.
Historical Development
From its early beginnings, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints emphasized lay leadership. Early members often served while building communities, farming, and working trades.
This tradition continued as the Church grew globally. Lay leadership allowed the Church to expand rapidly without reliance on professional clergy infrastructure.
Global Church, Local Leadership
As a global church, unpaid clergy allows leadership to arise from within local cultures. Leaders understand local languages, customs, and challenges.
This local leadership fosters cultural sensitivity while maintaining doctrinal unity.
Faith Over Convenience
Unpaid clergy is not always convenient. Leaders sacrifice time, energy, and sometimes comfort. Members believe this sacrifice is meaningful and Christlike.
Serving without pay reflects Jesus Christ’s example of selfless service.
Unpaid Clergy and Agency
Members are free to accept or decline callings. Serving is voluntary, not coerced. This preserves agency and personal choice.
When members accept callings, they do so as an act of faith rather than obligation.
Common Misunderstandings
A common misunderstanding is that unpaid clergy means leadership is unimportant. Latter-day Saints believe leadership is deeply important, which is why it is treated as sacred service rather than employment.
Another misunderstanding is that unpaid clergy leads to amateurism. Members believe divine guidance compensates for lack of professionalization.
Some assume unpaid clergy benefits the institution at the expense of individuals. Members often testify that service blesses leaders as much as those they serve.
Why This Belief Matters
Having unpaid clergy matters because it shapes the culture of the Church. It emphasizes service over status, participation over passivity, and faith over financial incentive.
It reinforces humility, equality, and reliance on God.
For believers, unpaid clergy reflects trust that Jesus Christ can guide His Church through ordinary people willing to serve.
A Christ-Centered Model of Leadership
Latter-day Saints believe Jesus Christ Himself exemplified unpaid, sacrificial service. He taught without charge, healed freely, and served without seeking status.
Unpaid clergy is seen as an effort to follow His example.
Leadership is measured by love, sacrifice, and faithfulness rather than income.
A Broader Christian Perspective
Many Christian traditions value volunteer service alongside paid clergy. Latter-day Saints extend this principle to nearly all local leadership roles.
They believe this approach strengthens discipleship and community involvement.
An Invitation
Latter-day Saints invite others to see unpaid clergy not as a lack, but as a deliberate expression of faith.
They encourage sincere seekers to observe how lay leadership functions in practice and to ask questions with openness.
They believe God honors willing service and qualifies those He calls.
Sources
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints – Gospel Topics: Church Leadership
https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org
Church News – Lay Ministry
https://www.thechurchnews.com
Doctrine and Covenants Central
https://doctrineandcovenantscentral.org
Scripture Central
https://scripturecentral.org

