I quite often use the pay at the pump option at gas stations (one of the few times I use a credit card, since when you stick your card in the pump they will claim up to a hundred dollars on your account, and while they are supposed to promptly release the extra once they know how much you bought, it doesn't always happen. The other option is to pay inside after pumping the gas.) After comments by others on this forum a while back I now always take a receipt in case I am accused of doing a driveoff.
In my line of work the most common degree after the MDiv is the DMin. Some time back I did all the work for the degree except writing the thesis. When I went to the church I was serving at the time the tuition and time was a perk I negotiated when I went there. For various reasons I never wrote the thesis (my advisory committee considered the project I wanted to do to be a PhD type project, not a DMin, my father died about that time, my wife was having health problems, and I just don't like writing that much (Yeah, I know some of you will find that hard to believe.) The ROI is practically nil, although in that case, where I didn't have to actually make an investment, it isn't so bad. What it can do sometimes is attract churches that might not otherwise even look at your profile, but it really doesn't really add anything to what most churches are willing to pay. Its much more for personal achievement. I've thought about finishing the degree, but I am much more likely to invest the money and time in certification as an interim minister than the DMin. It can provide some good training for churches going through transitions (which describes many churches, including where I am now in a rural area going through the transition of a declining community), and a good option for semi-retirement as an interim minister.
In my line of work the most common degree after the MDiv is the DMin. Some time back I did all the work for the degree except writing the thesis. When I went to the church I was serving at the time the tuition and time was a perk I negotiated when I went there. For various reasons I never wrote the thesis (my advisory committee considered the project I wanted to do to be a PhD type project, not a DMin, my father died about that time, my wife was having health problems, and I just don't like writing that much (Yeah, I know some of you will find that hard to believe.) The ROI is practically nil, although in that case, where I didn't have to actually make an investment, it isn't so bad. What it can do sometimes is attract churches that might not otherwise even look at your profile, but it really doesn't really add anything to what most churches are willing to pay. Its much more for personal achievement. I've thought about finishing the degree, but I am much more likely to invest the money and time in certification as an interim minister than the DMin. It can provide some good training for churches going through transitions (which describes many churches, including where I am now in a rural area going through the transition of a declining community), and a good option for semi-retirement as an interim minister.