Churches confront mass federal layoffs

As mass federal job cuts hit D.C. and beyond, United Methodist churches rise up—offering protest, prayer, and practical care in the face of political cruelty and spiritual collapse.

Rev. Rachel Cornwell, wearing glasses at center, joins with Rev. Donna Claycomb Sokol, wearing a clerical collar at left, and other D.C.-area pastors in a time of prayer and protest on Ash Wednesday on Capitol Hill. The gathering was organized by Repairers of the Breach, led by Bishop William J. Barber II, who called on faith leaders to stand together in prayer and moral resistance against injustice (photo courtesy of Rev. Rachel Cornwell, Dumbarton United Methodist Church).

by Heather Hahn

Even as Toria Herd faces an uncertain future in her career working with Head Start, she knows she can count on her congregation at Capitol Hill United Methodist Church to have her back.

“I just have really appreciated the outpouring of support,” said Herd, who has a doctorate in developmental psychology and works with the federal early childhood education program in jeopardy under the Trump administration.

“Even my friends and family who don’t live in D.C. right now are not really understanding how bad the vibes are in the city. So, I think, having a community that sees you and understands the stress (and also understands how bad things feel right now to everyone in the city) is really meaningful.”

Her congregation is among the United Methodist churches across the United States stepping up to support federal workers, contractors and others harmed by the Trump administration’s large-scale job cuts and slashing of government services.

For these churches, the past two months have brought expanding disaster as their members face loss of income and, in some cases, online harassment, while ministry partners that could help fill the gaps deal with a loss of federal grants. That has left United Methodist church leaders scrambling to provide comfort and mitigate the damage through prayer, pastoral care, job-search help and budget adjustments that support their financially strained membership. Some United Methodists also have joined in nonviolent protest and lobbied lawmakers on behalf of federal workers.

At the same time, United Methodist leaders also recognize they have an enduring message of God’s love to share at this moment.

“We are in a crisis,” said Rev. Erik Alsgaard, pastor of Community United Methodist Church in Crofton, Maryland, near D.C. “A crisis is a chance for the church to be the church. By that I mean, it’s a chance to show love and forgiveness and, when possible, grace and mercy. But as 1 Corinthians 13:13 says: ‘The greatest of these is love.’”

For many United Methodists, embodying God’s love means supporting people hurting right now.

Rev. Stephanie Vader, senior pastor of Capitol Hill United Methodist Church, emphasized that federal workers are patriotic and hardworking people—not the do-nothings of caricature.

“I cannot stress enough how people in my church don’t take federal jobs unless they are in love with their country and really want to be in service because, honestly, a lot of them could make a whole lot more money in private industry,” she said. “But it is a ministry for them. It is a deep, deep passion, and it is a deep part of their practice of loving God and loving their neighbor.”

Some 60 members at the church (which stands four blocks from the U.S. Capitol building) have seen their lives upended by the federal purge. When the cuts began, church leaders worked to pair federal workers and contractors in the congregation with members willing to provide a listening ear and other support.

“We had a strong response on people saying that they had things to give,” said Ryan Clements, the church’s director of discipleship and service. “So, it was clear that people wanted to help and to care in some way.”

For Rev. Donna Claycomb Sokol, senior pastor of Mount Vernon United Methodist Church in downtown Washington, both prayer and binding up the broken are key. She prays regularly for laid-off and furloughed employees as well as those still employed but living with the anxiety that they could see their life’s work disrupted at any moment. She and other church members also have engaged in public protest and changed the church marquee to proclaim, ‘We Stand with Federal Employees.’

“And I pray for our administration to see the deep pain and destruction they are causing,” she said. “I also remind our congregation often how much I want to know what they are going through so I can pray even more specifically or show up more tangibly.”

The mass layoffs (led mainly by billionaire Elon Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency) already have sparked chaos, anger, fear and legal challenges across the U.S. Meanwhile, little evidence exists that DOGE is achieving its asserted goal of reducing waste, fraud and abuse.

Whole sections of agencies are being eliminated with seemingly little thought, said Rev. Ginger E. Gaines-Cirelli, senior pastor at Foundry United Methodist Church in Washington. She added that career civil servants often are given only a 15-minute window to clean out their offices before they must leave the property.

“As a resident of D.C. and pastor of Foundry, it has felt like a vengeful, invading army has moved into our home and is gleefully (waving around a chainsaw) cutting people off from meaningful work, from life-sustaining resources and from medical research that could save lives,” she said. “People will starve to death and die of diseases in places around the world and in the United States because of what is taking place right now.”

According to The Associated Press, federal judges have fully or partially blocked actions related to DOGE, federal funding and federal workers in nearly 20 cases with more still pending. Federal agencies have the authority to reduce their workforce, but federal law details a process to do so. In many cases, judges are finding that the administration simply ignored the law.

Two judges have ordered the reinstatement of probationary federal employees fired at DOGE’s instigation, but so far most agencies are only putting those employees on paid-leave status. Another federal judge ruled March 18 that DOGE likely violated the U.S. constitution in its dismantling of USAID and blocked further cuts to the agency. However, that ruling stops short of reversing USAID’s job terminations. In the meantime, the administration is appealing these and other rulings.

Meanwhile, the cuts continue across the federal government, affecting services as diverse as the national parks and nuclear security.

Those cuts are having an impact well beyond D.C. Oak Grove United Methodist Church in Decatur, Georgia, has a number of members who worked at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, where nearly 1,300 people (10% of the workforce) have been forced out. The church also has members weathering cuts at the Federal Emergency Management Agency, as well as at United Methodist-related Emory University, which like other research universities has seen National Institutes of Health grants halted.

Some church members who are research scientists also have been subject to online harassment, said Rev. Beth LaRocca-Pitts, the church’s senior pastor.

The church has set up a support group and hired a professional counselor to work with members experiencing the pain of the federal contraction and the targeting of scientific research.

“It’s a very distressing situation because it does seem to be affecting so many people from so many sectors,” LaRocca-Pitts said. “It’s very difficult to figure out. I think all we can do is encourage our people to support one another, to listen to each other, and to be compassionate towards each other.”

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