Wednesday, June 25, 2014

Healthy Congregational Practice...


The Lake Institute puts out periodic materials on religious giving. Their Giving USA 2014 report can be accessed free here. In most congregations, giving hasn't recovered from the 2008-9 recession. In those congregations where it has, these are the "distinguishing marks."
Recommended Approaches: Not all congregations have experienced declines in giving. According to the Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability (cited in the report) the congregations that grew revenue in 2013 over 2012 were defined by four distinguishing marks. Their per attendee giving rates were much higher; they set budgets lower than anticipated income; they provided a variety of methods for giving; they were intentional about stewardship. These observations led to four recommendations:
  •   Be transparent in the use of gifts and their impact: Donors are increasingly giving to causes they identify with, not just institutions they trust.
  •   Provide multiple ways for donors to give: The offering plate and envelopes do not provide consistency for those who might be absent and would be willing to give electronically.
  •   Personally solicit major gifts: There is a pastoral responsibility to the wealthy that is not about money but may include asking them to be generous.
  •   Consistently thank donors: Personally written thank you notes and phone calls conveying gratitude deepen relationships.
  • Research like that provided by Giving USA enables those who are attempting to do the good work of raising religious funds to arm themselves with accurate information so they may plan and act with confidence that they are doing what is most beneficial for their organizations and donors. Gain understanding from the research. Form a plan that reflects new perspectives. Execute the plan. 
Remember stewardship training is available for sessions/congregations of every size. It can be customized to help meet your specific challenges. There will also be a stewardship workshop at the big Little Tent event in August.

Wednesday, May 14, 2014

Stewardship Prayer...

A great prayer from Henri Nouwen

Dear God,
I am so afraid to open my clenched fists!
Who will I be when I have nothing left to hold on to?
Who will I be when I stand before you with empty hands?
Please help me to gradually open my hands
and to discover that I am not what I own,
but what you want to give me.
And what you want to give me is love,
unconditional, everlasting love. Amen.

Friday, February 28, 2014

Per Capita explanation...

Here's an explanation of per capita that you might use as a "spoken offertory" or in a newsletter or bulletin insert. It references some specifics for my church, but tweak those parts to reflect your own experiences. We posted signs all over the church that said "Got Per Capita?" and the amount for our church for this year for our presbytery giving (including the actual per capita assessment for GA). After several weeks, do this in worship:

Got Per Capita?
You’ve seen the signs...so what exactly is per capita and why are we talking about it today? 
Per capita is an amount of money per active adult member that congregations pay to the larger Presbyterian church. You might hear it referred to as a head tax, but it’s really better thought of as our gift to each other.

Per capita directly pays the bills for our General Assembly meetings, so that everyone who is asked to represent us at that meeting can participate regardless of distance or financial resources. But it does more than pay that bill.
Per capita helps us help each other do mission, ordain ministers, solve problems, support new congregations. The Young Adult Volunteer in Mission program and Jay Hankins and Allie Utley participated in is supported in part by per capita money.

You may be thinking that we don’t see much that happens with that money...not like we see the work of the dollars kept here at Forest HIlls and you might be right. Much of the denominational work and mission may not be visible to us at this moment. But this church exists because of the generous gifts other presbyterians provided when we beginning. The larger church provided us with ordained pastors, the larger church helped us organize, the larger church nurtured our faith so God could call us together as a congregation to serve here in this part of High Point. It’s like pitching in to pay for gas on a road trip with friends. You don’t see the gas, but it keeps the car moving forward and it gets us where God wants us to go.
The tradition of this church it to let you know what our per capita is for the year and encourage you to participate by giving that amount. Some members “pay it forward” and pay someone else’s per capita as well...just for fun...perhaps in honor of their connection or their influence on faith and life in this community.

We know the church of Jesus Christ extends far beyond our walls. Per capita is a way we enact the belief that we are part of a greater church, part of a greater purpose, part of things seen and unseen that we could not imagine or achieve on our own.

Thanks be to God.

Thursday, October 31, 2013

Litany for Stewardship

Used (adapted) by Susan Andrews at the Stewardship Kaleidoscope plenary. Taken from Walter Brueggemann's Awed to Heaven, Rooted to Earth. She used the first part to begin the plenary, the second to end it.

Part 1:
Creator, giver of new creation….
Spirit, multiplier of loaves…
We are children of your bounty,
         daughters and sons of privilege…
We live amidst ample food, ample clothes,
         ample housing,  ample cars, ample stereos,
         ample friends, ample security…
We have ample and count on it,
         reckoning our luxuries to be necessities..
And we are grateful…
In our gratitude,
         we notice the war refugees in Syria…
         we notice the war on poverty
                  even with our government surpluses…
         we notice how you grace our church
                  midst our fear and rage and cunning…
we ask about inheriting eternal life…
         and turn away with our great possessions…
Giver, Giver, Giver who overrides fear in utterance
                  who overrides scarcity in abundance…
                  who overrides parsimony in generosity…
                  we are among the 5000
                  we are dazzled by twelve baskets left…
Our gratitude does not match your generosity,
         but we are grateful…
For all your gifts including the gift of your very own life to us,
We give you thanks…Amen.  And all the people said…..Amen

              (Walter Brueggemann, Awed to Heaven, Rooted in Earth, p. 140, adapted)

Part 2:
You are the giver of all good things.
         All good things are sent from heaven above,
                  rain and sun,
                  day and night,
                  justice and righteousness,
                  bread to the eater and
                  seed to the sower,
                  peace to the old,
                  energy to the young,
                  joy to the babes.
We are takers, who take from you,
         day by day, daily bread,
         taking all we need as you supply
         taking in gratitude and wonder and joy.
And then taking more,
         taking more than you give us,
         taking from our sisters and brothers…
                  taking because we are frightened, and so greedy,
                  taking because we are anxious, and so fearful,
                  taking because we are driven, and so uncaring.
Give us peace beyond our fear, and so end our greed.
Give us well-being beyond our anxiety, and so end our fear.
Give us abundance beyond our driven-ness,
                  and so end our uncaring.
Turn our taking into giving…since we are in your giving image:
         Make us giving like you…,
                                    giving as he gave himself up for us all,
                                    giving, never taking. Amen.

(Walter Brueggemann, Awed to Heaven, Rooted in Earth, p.33)

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Understanding the Tithe…an adult lesson on stewardship

A lesson on the tithe for adults. You can see the lesson, but if you want to print, you might want to shoot me an e-mail and let me send you a PDF. There is also a power point I can send that includes a basic introduction slide and the responsive readings. I have it in Keynote or PPT. Please let me know which you need.

Grace and peace in this stewardship season!





Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Don't Let Um Tell Ya...

Much of what I read about stewardship say you should never try to focus a campaign on debt reduction. People won't give to debt. People only give to exciting new things. The only effective campaigns are for brick and mortar projects.

New hymnals?  Can't do that. We don't have the budget money and no one will give to that.

New bells? New paint in the fellowship hall? Can't. Won't. Never happen.

Let me just say this.

My church has carried a $57,000 deficit from 2008 when the economy crashed and we didn't make our budget. In 2012, we asked the congregation to give to a debt reduction fund on fifth Sundays so that we could move on to the mission God had in mind without this anchor.

The fifth Sunday in September, the deficit was retired, less than two years after we begin the campaign.  Why? Because there are people in our congregation who are moved by the Spirit to give mightily to debt reduction.  "They hate debt."

Never say never. God knows what needs to happen in your congregation. God knows the plans for good God has for God's people.

Stop assuming that God cannot work to solve a problem or meet a need. Speak the need. Pray mightily. Give generously as leaders. Watch the miracle of God at work in our lives!

And don't let um tell you it can't be done!

Monday, September 10, 2012

Good Ideas...

Some stewardship ideas from Pat Patrick at New Creation Presbyterian Church:

     
The following are suggestions and ideas to incorporate into any stewardship campaign or program. These may not fit or be appropriate for all churches. They are offered to spark creative conversations on stewardship.

This story is shared for a stewardship theme:
     A woman loved fresh flowers. Every week she stopped at a Florist. The woman would purchase $20.00 to $25.00 worth of fresh flowers for herself. They gave her “joy” and were “uplifting” for her spirit.
     This woman could not give up her flowers. So she decided she could give up other extras such as her daily trips to the vending machines at work. She also could pack her lunch to give up those fast food meals daily. And, she was willing to cook more dinners at home for her family than going “out” so often.
Stewardship is about sacrificing something you can do without to bring life’s energy and joy to others. Stewardship does not seek to take life’s energy and joy away from us.

                               **********************

Sometimes the idea is “if we build it, they will give”. The movie “Field of Dreams” worked on camera, but... No one wants to wake up to a mortgage payment that can’t be paid. No one wants to lose members over the building. It’s not about the building, it’s about the relationships.

Prioritizing relationships is ULTIMATE stewardship:
                 GOD - CHURCH - CONGREGATION

WHERE IS OUR RELATIONSHIP WITH GOD? Have we “loved” one another outside our church walls as Christ loved the least, less, and the lost?

                                ************************
     
Matthew 14: 28,29
“Lord, if it’s you,” Peter replied, “tell me to come to you on the water.”  “Come,” he said.

STEP  OUT  OF  THE  BOAT with  FAITH is a stewardship theme. Making a large fishing boat on a sea of waves. Seeing a hand reaching down to the water in front of the boat.

                                 *************************

What makes us share and give our financial support to our church ??

A  REAL  PURPOSEFUL  MISSION  FOR  THE  GOOD OF OTHERS.
                  Not Salary Increases.
                  Not Administration Increases.

Repairs and Maintenance are necessary, but not exciting stewardship. These can be planned as a separate smaller appeal for such projects.

Giving and sacrificing to outreach of our brothers and sisters locally and globally lights the fires in our hearts.

                                *************************

ALIVE  IN  CHRIST

To be alive; change and growth happen. Nothing is ‘alive’ unless it changes and grows. Plants, animals, humans and congregations change and grow as part of the cycle of life.

Is your church alive? Has your church changed? Has your church grown in their outreach ministry?

“We’ve always done it this way.”   “It’s up to the individual.” “Ourselves first.”  These statements and many more extinguish the fire of stewardship.
                  
                             *************************

FIXED   INCOME           

We hear the phrase “fixed income”All of us live on a ‘fixed income’ unless we work on commission.

The older generations want to reduce or pay off the debt. Many lost their savings and interest in these last few years of banking or corporate turmoil. The younger generation requires two working to support the family. Volunteers are harder to recruit. Mothers aren’t at home during the day. Job security is no more. Words like “lay-offs”, “part-time”, and “no benefits” are common day terms. Uncertainty is a dark cloud over many. 

“FEAR NOT.......BE NOT AFRAID.”  “BELIEVE IN THE LORD YOUR GOD.”  Remember the many times in your life, that God was present. Tell stories of faith, written or verbal. TRUST is
built on FAITH. And it is with FAITH that STEWARDSHIP is a success.

                           ***************************

SPRING   INTO   STEWARDSHIP

Some churches are changing the date of their stewardship campaign. In the fall, October/November, when our minds and pocketbooks are thinking of Christmas, travel, and spending money. In the SPRING, April/May, we look at our annual income for taxes. The pressure of Christmas is over. Our positive outlook is to “New Life” promised by the celebration of Christ’s sacrifice on the cross for each of us.

                           ****************************

THE  GENEROUS  GIVER

Let us not forget, ‘the generous givers’ in our congregations--those folks that give freely and joyfully. Those who ‘give more than enough’ for small campaigns and special requests during the year. Those ‘generous givers’ who give with dedication and commitment faithfully on a weekly/biweekly/monthly offering. A ‘generous giver’ is alive and strives to follow Christ in love.  
   
  OH ,TO BE CALLED A ‘GENEROUS GIVER’!!!
             Celebrate generosity where you find it!!
       Be a ‘Generous Giver’ Stewardship Campaign!

                            ***********************

WHAT  IS  ENOUGH ?

Exodus 16:4 “Then the Lord said to Moses, “I will rain down bread from heaven for you. The people are to go out each day and gather enough for that day....”

What is enough? What can we give up for Lent? (And longer for our church.) Each year, we are encouraged to “fast” or give up something for Lent. Six weeks of doing without chocolates, lattes, movies, etc. This year, “FAST” or GIVE UP the money you would have spent on your chocolate, lattes, movies, etc.

Consider the following weekly ledger for week #__ in Lent:

                        MY LIST OF GIVING FOR LENT

$_______Candy, Coffees, Sodas, Snacks
$_______Fast Food Meals
$_______Dinner Meals Out           
$_______Books, magazines, video games, CD’s, DVD’s, movies
$_______OTHER
________________
$              TOTAL giving for week #____ in Lent