Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Church Opens Subway Franchise to Bring Jobs to Community
Church Opens Subway Franchise to Bring Jobs to Community
Mar 7, 2026 3:24 AM

I have previously expressed my appreciation for the popular TV show, Undercover Boss, in which business leaders from large corporations spend several days working alongside lower-level employees.

In an episode on Subway, Don Fertman,the restaurant chain’s Chief Development Officer, goes undercover at several locations across the United States.Most of the episode includes your typical Undercover Boss fare — a bumbling executive, dedicated workers, teer-jerker employee recognitions —but I was struck by a particular branch that Fertman visits along the way.

Located in the heart of Buffalo, New York, the restaurant is located in the same building as True Bethel Baptist Church, and further, is owned andoperated as a franchise by the church itself. The reason? To provide employment and job training to the surrounding neighborhood.

plete episode is provided below. To watch the piece on True Bethel, jump to the 24-minute mark:

pleting his rather routine employee duties, Fertman spends a good deal of time chatting with Reverend Darius Pridgen (28:30), the head pastor, who explains the origins and aim of the idea:

The reason we actually put it in the church was because there weren’t a lot of opportunities in this neighborhood when I got here. We had a high murder rate, and a lot of people not working. So, a lot of people always talk about, “Just give people jobs.” Well, that’s not the key, if they haven’t been trained. So we started collecting an offering. We called it a “franchise offering” – literally called it a “franchise offering.” But we’ve got to do more than build a business. We’ve got to train people. We try to push people into the next level of life.

The episode concludes with Fertman waiving the franchise fee for the church to open another similarly suited store in a nearby neighborhood. In addition, he encourages a room of Subway executives to consider it as a model for the future.

Whether those ideas actually pan out, it’s encouraging to see work and opportunity valued in such a way. True Bethel did not sit idly by, assuming a narrow, fatalistic mindset, despite the trouble that surrounded them. Instead, it saw human dignity and potential, and took the necessary steps to help others achieve personal fulfillment, transforming munity in turn. Stretching well beyond mon constraints of acceptable “church ministry,” True Bethel reached directly into their economic ecosystem.

But although it’s encouraging to see Subway recognize the value of the True Bethel model, we should note that this was, first and foremost, an independent, bottom-upinitiative by the church. Businesses have a role to play, but munities needn’t twiddle their thumbs in waiting. Non-profit initiatives and ministries should remain core features of Christian service, but the church needn’t limit its imagination to soup kitchens, prayer meetings, and daycare centers. There is more work to be done.

The church must prophecy and minister in a way that recognizes all areas of human need and human service, and that includes the economic sphere. Work and service are central to Christian mission, and True Bethel is setting a great example in helping folks connect to society as they further participate and excel in this divine call.

[product sku=”1033″]

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Audio: Samuel Gregg Discusses ‘Evangelii Gaudium’ on Kresta in the Afternoon
Continuing our roundup of ment on Evangelii Gaudium, here’s Acton’s Director of Research and Author of Tea Party Catholic Samuel Gregg joining host Al Kresta on Ave Maria Radio’s Kresta in the Afternoonto discuss Pope Francis’ Apostolic Exhortation, with particular emphasis on its economic elements. This interview took place on Monday, December 2nd. ...
Moving Money From One Place To Another Is Not Economic Stimulus
The Obama Administration seems to think that moving money from one place to another constitutes economic stimulus. A Washington Times editorial points this out. First, the administration is pushing food stamps, or SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program), as a way to get the economy moving. “I should point out,” Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said on MSNBC two years ago, “when you talk about the SNAP program or the food-stamp program, you have to recognize that it’s also an economic stimulus...
10 Things You Should Know About the Minimum Wage Debate
1. Both sides of the debate believe they are arguing in defense of the poor. Most people who support or oppose minimum wage laws and/or increases share mon objective — helping the working poor. Because both sides have noble intentions, the merits of the debate over minimum wage laws and minimum wage increases should be based on empirical evidence that it will actually help, rather than harm, the poor. 2. Economists disagree about the effects of small increases in minimum...
How John Locke Influenced Catholic Social Teaching
Joe Hargrave argues that John Locke and Pope Leo XIII have more mon than you might imagine: It isn’t often that John Locke is mentioned in discussions of Catholic social teaching, unless it is to set him up as an example of all that the Church supposedly rejects. After all, Locke is considered one of the founders of a liberal and individualist political tradition that was rejected by the papacy in the 19th and 20th centuries. However, a closer examination...
Do We Need To ‘Check Our Faith At The Door?’
Increasingly, Americans who adhere to a religion are told they cannot “force their beliefs” on others. Simply stating publicly that one doesn’t believe gays have the right to marry can cost you your career. Literally hundreds of lawsuits are now in motion against the government because employers do not want to be forced to violate their religious beliefs by paying for employees’ contraception and/or abortions. Richard W. Garnett ponders this topic in today’s Los Angeles Times. Garnett takes the reader...
How to Think About Money Like the Working Poor (Part 2)
Yesterday I began a series of posts which attempts to explain why the working poor tend to make terrible financial decisions and how they think about money differently than other economic classes. In my initial post I wrote, Imagine that instead of having to deal with consumption smoothing decisions, at most, several times a year, you had to deal with them several times a month, or even several times a week. Now also imagine there is no workable solution that...
Mandela’s Vision for Ecumenical Economic Engagement
Here’s a key section from a speech given by Nelson Mandela in 1998 at the World Council of Churches: At the end of a century that has taught that peace is the greatest weapon in development, we cannot afford to spare any effort to bring about a peaceful resolution of such conflicts. Nor can we allow anything to detract from the urgent need to cooperate in order to ensure that our continent avoids the negative consequences of globalization and that...
PovertyCure International Short Film Festival: Invitation To Vote And Attend
is an international network of organizations and individuals seeking to ground mon battle against global poverty in a proper understanding of the human person and society, and to encourage solutions that foster opportunity and unleash the entrepreneurial spirit that already fills the developing world. In order to continue to educate and inform people about entrepreneurial solutions to poverty, PovertyCure is hosting the PovertyCure Film Festival and Feature Documentary Preview on December 12, 2013 in New York City. According to PovertyCure,...
The Reforming Power of Children
“All good, enduring reformation begins with ourselves and takes its starting point in one’s own heart and life,” writes Herman Bavinck in The Christian Family. “If family life is indeed being threatened from all sides today, then there is nothing better for each person to be doing than immediately to begin reforming within one’s own circle.” Such a process of reformation plex and varied, and is somewhat unique for each of us. But for the moment, I’d like to focus...
Can Egypt’s Zabaleen Trash Collectors Save Cairo from Environmental Disaster?
Cairo is an amazing place. I lived and went to school in this city of over 9 million in the early 1990s. On top of the recent governmental conflict and unrest, it’s a city that has for a long time been devastated by pollution and environmental problems. The smog alone is a constant irritant to the senses. During my time in Cairo, one of the most dramatic and life-changing events was visiting “Garbage City.” This neighborhood is where many of...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved