The Clergy Project

The Clergy Project
Abbreviation TCP
Motto Support | Community | Hope
Formation 2011
Type Non-profit
Legal status 501(c)3 Educational Organization
Region served
Worldwide
Membership
Approximately 770 Online Community Participants
President
Drew Bekius
Key people
Co-Founders: Dan Barker, Richard Dawkins, Daniel Dennett, Linda LaScola, Carter "Adam Mann" Warden, and "Chris"
Parent organization
Freedom From Religion Foundation, Richard Dawkins Foundation for Reason and Science
Website clergyproject.org

The Clergy Project (TCP) is an international nonprofit organization based in the United States that provides peer support to current and former religious leaders who no longer have faith. The group's focus is to provide private online forums for its participants,[1] and assistance through career transition grants, hardship grants, and free sessions of psychotherapy.[2]

About

Launched in March 2011 as a collaborative effort to provide an online space where deconverted clergy could gather to support and encourage one another, the Clergy Project eventually grew to become its own independent organization, receiving 501(c)3 status in early 2015. An all-volunteer-led organization overseen by a board of directors and staffed by a team of committees, TCP seeks "to provide support, community, and hope to current and former religious professionals who no longer hold supernatural beliefs."[3]

From the very beginning, the Clergy Project's efforts have centered on its online community of forums with a secured, private website that is only accessible to screened, registered forum participants. Project applicants must meet two qualifications for forum admission: being both religious professionals (current or formerly employed) and non-supernaturalist.[1][4] Though most Clergy Project participants come from various streams of Christianity, membership also includes those of Judaism, Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam, and Scientology.[5]

In January 2017, the Clergy Project's board of directors selected Drew Bekius to serve as its second president, following Terry Plank (2014–2017).

History

Dan Barker Richard Dawkins Daniel Dennett
Linda LaScola Carter Warden

The Clergy Project traces its origins to the 2006 International Humanist and Ethical Union (IHEU) Convention in Reykjavik, Iceland where Dan Barker, a former preacher, met with scientist and activist Richard Dawkins.[6] At the convention, Dawkins expressed interest in Barker's history as a former clergyperson and in better understanding the challenges that come with leaving professional ministry, such as translating the value of a Master of Divinity degree to secular employers and loss of community support structures.[7] Dawkins wanted to find a way to help others in situations like Barker's, but a solution did not immediately present itself.[6]

In 2010, philosopher Daniel Dennett and researcher Linda LaScola published a pilot study called "Preachers who are Not Believers."[8] Barker had assisted them in locating three of their five original participants, and a larger study was later conducted and published as Dennett and LaScola's book Caught in the Pulpit: Leaving Belief Behind. This second study featured thirty additional participants, many of whom were individuals who had reached out to Barker over the previous twenty years.

Also in 2010, Barker and Dawkins met once again to discuss what a potential project might look like in their efforts to help clergy closeted in disbelief. This time Dawkins brought Robin Elisabeth Cornwell on board, then-executive director of the Richard Dawkins Foundation for Reason and Science. Soon she met with LaScola and Barker at the National Museum of the American Indian's Mitsitam Cafe in Washington, DC in January 2011. Here they planned the details of what would become their project's Online Community of Forums, aided by two anonymous current ministers on the other side of their computer screens. Those two anonymous participants went by the pseudonyms Adam Mann and Chris.[9][10]

On March 20, 2011, The Clergy Project officially launched with fifty-two charter members, many of whom were longtime contacts of Barker's and participants from LaScola and Dennett's study.[6]

The Richard Dawkins Foundation provided the funding and technical support needed to create and administer TCP's Online Community of Forums as well as the subsequent website ClergyProject.org, which was later launched as a marketing tool and application portal. The Freedom From Religion Foundation likewise assisted TCP with a focus on its financial side.[11]

As TCP grew to evolve beyond a mere project, its ad-hoc governing board implemented the role of Executive Director, appointing Teresa MacBain as Acting-ED, who served only a few months in 2012, followed by Acting-ED Catherine Dunphy who served throughout 2013. In early 2014, the ad-hoc board decided to discontinue plans for an Executive Director position, instead determining that TCP would remain entirely volunteer-led without paid staff, overseen directly by a Board of Directors and staffed by a number of committees. Terry Plank was selected to serve as TCP's first President, along with John Compere as Vice-President, Gretta Vosper as Secretary, and Robert Parham as Treasurer. The process of incorporation was completed one year later, with The Clergy Project becoming its own 501(c)3 in early 2015. TCP's first annual meeting took place on the Online Community of Forums in January 2016.

Services

Online community of forums

The focus of the Clergy Project is that they have a private online platform for screened and registered participants, who are "current or former religious professionals who no longer hold supernatural beliefs." Clergy and other professional religious leaders can come out "anonymously, using an alias" and avatar before they are ready to come out completely.[5] Members can ask for help, seek information and find themselves in a community where they are not being judged. Access to the forum is "invitation only".[12]

Many of the individuals use the online community to find support that they are lacking in their day-to-day lives.

The online community also provides the kind of support that former clergy need because of the sense of loss that many feel when leaving their religion. The process of coming out of theology is often compared to experiencing the death of someone because research shows that there is a sense of loss and a real loss of community support.[13]

Transitional assistance grants

Many former clergy are very concerned about leaving their religious careers and education because they aren't sure where to find jobs while still needing to provide for their families.[5] In order to help forum participants obtain secular employment, The Clergy Project, aided by the Stiefel Freethought Foundation provide funds for a Transitional Assistance Grant (TAG).[3] The grant provides six months of outplacement services through RiseSmart which helps grant recipients in their search for new employment. Costs for services which include "skills assessment, resume assistance, linkages to job opportunities and access to professional career advisers" is paid directly to RiseSmart.[2] Co-founder Carter "Adam Mann" Warden was the first recipient of an outplacement grant in 2013. He publicly announced his atheism at the Freedom From Religion Foundation Convention in Pittsburgh in October, 2016 (FFRF News Release and FFRF video of speech) .[10][14]

Hardship grants

In special circumstances, the Clergy Project makes individualized hardship grants available to its forum participants. Grants are distributed on a case by case basis.

Free counseling

Recovering from Religion's the Secular Therapy Project has made free counseling available to all Clergy Project forum participants. Twelve sessions of psychotherapy with secular licensed therapists, either online or on-location, are made available to all forum participants.[15]

Notable figures

Several participants entered the project while still in their religious vocation and subsequently transitioned to new careers through the help of the project, such as co-founder Carter Warden, mentioned above. In 2012 Jerry DeWitt was dubbed the first "graduate" of The Clergy Project because he was the first member to give up his anonymity and come out publicly as an atheist, though the organization does not use the term "graduate" in any technical sense.[12]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "Joining Private Online Community". The Clergy Project. 2014. Retrieved 12 February 2015.
  2. 1 2 "Transitional Assistance Grant". The Clergy Project. 2014. Retrieved 12 February 2015.
  3. 1 2 "Who We Are". The Clergy Project. 2014. Retrieved 12 February 2015.
  4. Erickson, Doug (18 March 2013). "The Wisconsin State Journal In the Spirit Column". Wisconsin State Journal. Retrieved 5 February 2015.
  5. 1 2 3 Merica, Dan (13 June 2012). "Unbelieving Preachers Get Help to 'Come Out' as Open Atheists". Cable News Network (CNN). Retrieved 25 February 2015.
  6. 1 2 3 "The Clergy Project History". The Clergy Project. 2014. Retrieved 12 February 2015.
  7. Hagerty, Barbara Bradley; Conan, Neal (7 May 2012). "When Religious Leaders Lose their Faith". Talk of the Nation (NPR). Retrieved 5 February 2015.
  8. Dennett, Daniel; LaScola, Linda (2010). "Preachers Who Are Not Believers" (PDF). Evolutionary Psychology. 1 (8): 122–150. Retrieved 14 February 2015.
  9. Merica, Dan (4 June 2013). "Atheists to start 1-800 hotline for doubters". CNN: Belief Blog. Cable News Network, Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. Retrieved 15 February 2015.
  10. 1 2 Warden, Carter (October 18, 2016). "Freedom From Religion News Release". Freedom From Religion Foundation. Retrieved December 2, 2016.
  11. "Groups Support Pastors, Priests Leaving the Pulpit". Freedom From Religion Foundation. 14 October 2011. Retrieved 25 February 2015.
  12. 1 2 Hallowell, Billy (10 May 2012). "Atheists Launch Scholarships for Clergy Who Want to Escape the 'Supernatural' & Abandon the Pulpit". The Blaze. Retrieved 5 February 2015.
  13. Simpson, William David (1 May 2013). "When God Dies: Deconversion from Theism as Analogous to the Experience of Death". Western Kentucky University Masters Theses and Specialist Projects. Retrieved 5 February 2015.
  14. Warden, Carter (October 18, 2016). "FFRF Video of Carter Warden". Freedom From Religion Foundation.
  15. "About The Clergy Project". ClergyProject.org. Retrieved March 22, 2017.
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