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Funding
The Local Church: Liabilities Of Fund Raising
Joseph
R. Miller
As
I awaited my opportunity to present church development
at the church board meeting, the church treasurer
presented the financial report. Since announcing
our building fund, we have accumulated $30,000 through
designated givingnot nearly enough to launch
our building program. However, our giving in the general
fund and missions accounts is way down.
I
have often heard similar comments in churches that
have established a building fund, invited the people
to contribute offerings to the fund, or engaged in
fund raising for expansion. In many instances, giving
has been designated to the building fund which previously
had been directed to the general fund or missions.
This practice may have minimal risks in a committed
congregation of assimilated members who accept ownership
of ministry and giving responsibilities. But there
are many liabilities that must be considered in most
churches characterized as 80/20 churches80 percent
of the giving and serving from 20 percent of the people
(a national average in evangelical churches). What
are the liabilities of fund raising to be avoided?
a.
The appeal is primarily to the existing contributors.
The self-effort of the church leaders usually appeals
to the committed. The engaged fund raiser may raise
more money because of his experience, but he still
appeals primarily to existing contributors. Aggressive
marketing strategies by the fund raiser will be resisted
by most church constituents.
b.
New people are not assimilated through fund raising.
Ownership of responsibility to give depends more on
attitude than on ability. The appeal must be preceded
by commitment. Fund raising assumes a sufficient commitment
level to achieve the goal through promotion and direct
challenge.
c.
There is high risk of offending those who do not have
the grace of giving (2 Corinthians 8:17).
The believer who also has this grace desires the opportunities
to give as a demonstration of his love for Christ
the indescribable gift (2 Corinthians
9:15) for our salvation. But the believer devoid of
this grace may respond, All they want is my
money!
d.
The appeal in fund raising is usually need-oriented
instead of obedience- and love-motivated. Historically,
most churches have increased the budget in hopes of
stretching the giving. Or another designated fund
was established in hopes that multiple opportunities
would mean multiplied giving. This may work with the
committed givers but the uncommitted are not inspired
by needs since their own selves and personal wants
and desires leave them with already unfulfilled needs.
e.
Fund raising provides minimal development of tithing
obedience as the beginning of the believer`s giving.
The tithe principle of giving to Christ through the
local church the firstfruits (10%) of gross wages
as an act of believer/priest worship (1 Corinthians
16:2) is an act that
(1) Acknowledges God`s ownership of all, including
yourself,
(2) Commits life`s needs, wants, and desires to biblical
obedience, and
(3) Trusts God to provide as He promised when He has
first place. These stewards want to give sacrificial
offerings beyond the tithe to demonstrate
(4) Love for Christ. Fund raising usually assumes
this stewardship principle.
f.
There is no plan included in mere fund raising for
development of general and missions budgets through
systematic tithing. The common approach is to present
the building plans and project budget. Based on past
experiences in the church, it is expected that the
people will respond again to the need. In most churches
today, the number of respondents is decreasing, especially
among the younger me first generations.
g.
You could rob the general fund and missions budgets.
When great energy and promotion are thrust upon the
special funding campaign, regular giving is often
neglected. How often have I heard treasurers of churches
and Bible colleges say, I`m struggling to pay
the bills. Instead of enlarged giving, promotion
alone encourages redesignated giving.
h.
Fund raising may make it necessary to repeat the pledge
drive every two or three years. If the growing church
depends on fund raising to maintain or increase the
funds for amortization of borrowed funds, it is difficult
to get off the treadmill. The alternatives are to
quit growing so you can stop building and be debt
free to coast after the loan is paid off, or you can
develop systematic giving so that capital development
can be a part of the regular budget to facilitate
church growth or church planting on a cash and limited
borrowing basis.
i.
Biblical instruction is usually minimal in fund raising.
The substitute for internal Holy Spirit motivation
of the believer pursuing holiness is marketing strategies
and salesmanship to raise money. Participatory Bible
teaching is needed for change. Most conservative pastors
resist explicit preaching or teaching on giving, fearing
categorization as a televangelist or money-hungry
preacher. But the typical fund raiser usually uses
tactics other than Bible instruction. Don`t expect
him to care for the pastor`s Bible teaching responsibility.
j.
Signing a pledge is rejected by many. I have heard
from some who fear that being unable to fulfill a
pledge could bring God`s judgment as with the unfulfilled
vow in the Old Testamenta questioned interpretation.
Furthermore, there is strong objection to the practice
of some churches who notify the people who are lagging
behind in their pledge.
k.
Extended pledge giving (usually for three years) may
overlook those challenged by an initial large sacrificial
offering. The potential contributor with wealth or
substantial cash reserves is seldom challenged by
a monthly budgeted amount over an extended time. Instead,
he is challenged by the appeal for a large single
gift, hopefully with view to sacrifice (giving up
something the heart was set on for what is now perceived
as a higher purpose).
l.
Capacity for borrowing is often the apparent goal
in fund raising, with qualification based on individual
pledges rather than on tithe based corporate treasury
capacity for borrowing demonstrated in the budget.
This creates greater liability for the church if individual
designations for the loan payments decrease. But when
undesignated tithing precedes offerings, borrowing
is minimized, special funding appeals are minimized,
and the church qualifies to borrow on the basis of
budgeted cash flow including capital development.
Then sacrificial offerings for the project from stewards
practicing the grace of giving are generous, contributing
to personal and corporate spiritual growth, to evangelism,
and to enlarged missionary enterprise.
Stewardship
development should precede fund raising. Obedience-oriented
and love-motivated giving always exceeds need-oriented
appeals. Don`t avoid the issue of giving; the Bible
doesn`t! Challenge your people to obey, surrender
self, sacrifice, love Christ, and give to Christ from
the heart. Then it will never hurt!
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