The Wesleyan Church is a Protestant, evangelical, holiness denomination with a rich heritage. Our vision is transforming lives, churches, and…
Christian ministries caring for pastors, missionaries, and their families — through counseling, sabbaticals, peer cohorts, crisis intervention, marriage retreats, and the patient work of supporting those who spend their lives supporting everyone else.
Christian nonprofits in this focus area that have been verified against The Most Trusted Standard.
The Wesleyan Church is a Protestant, evangelical, holiness denomination with a rich heritage. Our vision is transforming lives, churches, and…
Vitality Women's Clinic is a Christ-centered ministry dedicated to fostering life, strength, and hope through compassionate medical care, meaningful…
Transform Minnesota is a regional evangelical association that connects churches to each other, and provides administrative services and…
The purpose of the Association is to empower churches and their leaders to discover and achieve their God-given mission by helping churches take bold…
Village Ministries International (VMI) is a non-denominational Christian ministry that takes the Gospel and God's Word to remote places not…
Village Missions trains, places, and supports qualified spiritual leadership in overlooked communities across the United States and Canada. We supply…
Why do we exist?Vineyard USA exist so that people would know Jesus and experience the power and presence of his KingdomHow do we behave?• We engage…
The Western Pennsylvania District is designed to help churches fulfill Jesus' command to make disciples of all peoples and to provide for the…
Western Seminary is a theologically conservative, evangelical seminary committed to gospel-centered transformation. Founded in 1927, the seminary has…
Youth Investment Foundation/Timber Bay exists to bring the hope and love of Jesus Christ to youth.We do this by affecting new attitudes and behavior…
238 nonprofits
Pastoral support takes many forms — from acute crisis intervention to long-term coaching relationships, from week-long renewal retreats to ongoing peer cohorts. The best work meets pastors and their families across the full arc of ministry life.
Clinical therapy and mental health services specifically for pastors and missionaries — addressing burnout, depression, anxiety, and the unique psychological pressures of ministry life. Licensed therapists who understand the realities pastors actually face.
Extended retreat experiences providing pastors and their spouses with rest, spiritual renewal, and the space to recover from years of pouring out — typically one to four weeks of restorative time at retreat centers staffed by experienced caregivers.
Confidential peer groups of pastors meeting regularly for mutual support and accountability — and one-on-one coaching by experienced pastoral mentors. The sustained relationships that prevent the isolation most pastors silently carry.
Marriage retreats and counseling for pastoral couples — and care for pastor's wives and children who carry the unique burdens of fishbowl living. Recognizing that ministry strain ripples through whole families, not just the pastor.
Emergency response for pastors in acute crisis — moral failure, ministry collapse, mental health breakdown, marriage rupture — and structured restoration programs combining accountability, character work, and (when appropriate) a path back to health and ministry.
Specialized care for missionaries serving cross-culturally — pre-field preparation, on-field support, marriage and family help, crisis intervention, and re-entry support when missionaries return home. Often more developed than care for domestic pastors.
Pastors carry weight most people never see. They bury congregants in the morning and counsel a marriage in the afternoon. They write sermons while their own children need attention. They absorb everyone's crises, manage everyone's expectations, navigate everyone's politics, and are expected to maintain a spiritual front through all of it. They are paid to be wise, available, patient, prayerful, and never visibly struggling. And they are deeply human — facing the same anxieties, marital strains, addictions, doubts, and exhaustions as anyone else, but often without the safe spaces and trusted relationships needed to address them.
The pastoral crisis is now well-documented. Research consistently shows that roughly forty to fifty percent of pastors have seriously considered leaving ministry in any given year. Burnout, depression, marriage strain, and isolation are widespread. Many pastors report having no real friends — congregants want a leader, peers can become competitors, and the role itself discourages the kind of vulnerability that genuine friendship requires. The very people called to shepherd often have no one shepherding them.
Pastoral support ministries exist to address this. Some provide counseling — clinical mental health care specifically attuned to ministry realities. Some provide sabbatical retreats — weeks of rest, renewal, and reflection at facilities staffed by experienced caregivers. Some provide peer cohorts — confidential groups where pastors can finally be honest with people who understand. Some provide crisis intervention — emergency response when pastors face moral failure, ministry collapse, or breakdown. Some focus specifically on pastor's wives and families, whose unique burdens have been historically underserved.
This work serves not just the individual pastor but the whole church. When a pastor flourishes, the church flourishes. When a pastor burns out, fails morally, or quietly resigns, the damage ripples through congregations for years. Supporting pastors is not a luxury or a side concern — it is essential infrastructure for the ongoing life and witness of the church itself. Donors who support this work invest in the long faithfulness of the people who carry so much for everyone else.
Beyond our standard verification framework, here are factors specific to pastoral support ministries that thoughtful donors often weigh.
Pastoral burnout, depression, and crisis often require real clinical expertise — licensed therapists, psychiatrists, and trauma-informed practitioners. Excellent ministries employ credentialed mental health professionals rather than assuming pastoral wisdom alone is sufficient response to clinical-level distress. Look for ministries transparent about the credentials of those providing direct care.
Pastoral care requires confidentiality — pastors cannot be honest if their struggles become known to congregations or denominational leaders. Excellent ministries maintain rigorous confidentiality while also having clear protocols for situations where safety concerns or moral failure require appropriate accountability. Look for ministries with published ethical frameworks rather than informal practices.
Pastor's wives and children carry significant unique burdens that have historically been underserved. Excellent ministries explicitly engage spouses and families — through dedicated programs, women's retreats, family resources, and care that recognizes ministry strain ripples through the whole household, not just the pastor.
Christian tradition is divided on whether and how pastors who experience moral failure (particularly sexual misconduct or abuse of power) should return to ministry. Excellent ministries are transparent about their position — what kinds of failures they engage, what restoration involves, what timelines they consider appropriate, and how they protect potential future victims. Look for ministries with clear, published frameworks rather than vague restoration rhetoric.
Pastoral health requires sustained support — ongoing coaching, multi-year cohort relationships, regular check-ins. Excellent ministries invest in long-term relational infrastructure rather than relying primarily on one-time retreats or single events. Look for ministries whose program design reflects the long arc of pastoral life.
Many pastors are underpaid and cannot afford professional counseling, retreat experiences, or coaching at market rates. Excellent ministries address this — through scholarship funds, sliding-scale fees, donor-subsidized care, or direct grants. Look for ministries that make access part of their mission rather than serving only those who can pay.
Explore verified pastoral support ministries above — or browse Christian ministries by other causes, locations, and award levels.