|

Funding
The Local Church: The Debt-Free Debate
Joseph
R. Miller
The
Continuing Debate
I recently read the 1996 Moody Press book by Jeff
Berg and Jim Burgess, with
foreword by Larry Burkett, titled "The Debt-Free
Church". The distinction
is made in the text between debt as unsatisfied
commitments and
borrowing money from individuals or lending
institutions. The comment is
made that perhaps the book should have been titled
The Borrowing-Free
Church, placing the emphasis on the ills of
ever borrowing money.
The
majority of the quotations in the book are from Larry
Burkett`s writings or
from retired architect Ray Bowman who wrote "When
Not to Build". I disagree with both of these
authors on this topic. After nearly 24 years of work
as a conservative church development consultant, I
do not believe their views on this issue represent
an accurate interpretation of Scripture or a wise
approach to ministry and facility development.
I
agree with Berg and Burgess that there have been many
problems and failures in churches related to building
program debts. But building a case on atypical
extremes and abuses is wrong. Many churches have used
borrowed funds wisely and have prospered. Borrowing
churches are not necessarily carnal churches.
Furthermore, debt-free churches are not necessarily
spiritual churches. (There
was rich Laodicea, for example.) Many debt-free churches
are simply not doing
anything at all to reach people for Christ.
I
agree that surety for church loans is wrong, interpreted
as individual officers and members of the church co-signing
the loan, pledging their personal assets as collateral.
Instead, the church must develop its corporate ability
to borrow funds based on corporate assets and cash
flow. Officers of the corporation sign the loan documents
obligating the corporation, not themselves with risk
of their personal assets. The concepts presented in
the book are distortions of the church`s appropriate
corporate structure and operation.
I
strongly disagree with statements such as these in
The Debt-Free Church:
We believe that borrowing (especially for ministry
purposes) is always
risky, often wasteful, and almost always unwisebut
it is not a sin.
But we`re advocating what we believe to be a
more biblical approach: that
it`s unwise and unnecessary for ministries to even
borrow money.
.
. . Debt-free ministry is God`s will for all believers.
.
. . Borrowing is a worldly approach to ministry.
Quoting
Burkett:
God
wants to perform miracles; we instead substitute mortgages.
To
follow God`s ministry pattern means no borrowing.
I
strongly agree with the authors that borrowing should
not be a substitute for
sacrificial giving. Seeking to stretch people through
borrowing and an enlarged
budget is unsatisfactory.
A
Plea to Keep Your Balance
The reality is that very few churches have the funding
capacity to build appropriate facilities without an
extended time period to pay for the construction.
In many cases that is true, even if every member were
tithing. But are we to tell each church to wait to
move ahead until all members evidence their spiritual
maturity in sacrificial financial stewardship?
I
suggest these principles to keep your balance:
a.
The sacrificial giving of every member should be taught
and sought to raise
as much money as possible in a reasonable time that
will not further hinder the
development of the ministry.
b.
The smallest amount possible should be borrowed as
the last resort, rather
than the first course of action. Borrowing should
not be a substitute for
sacrifice.
c.
The shortest term for the loan should be the goal
of the church, thus
limiting the amount of interest to be paid. But interest
costs have to be
weighed against loss of ministry, and the inflation
of building costs over time.
d.
The size loan should be related to the cash flow of
the church, allowing half
of the cash flow for ministry operations and half
of the cash flow for missions
and loan amortization. (Unless you maintain a healthy
Jerusalem ministry,
you cannot always fund worldwide missions.) No more
than one third of the cash
flow should be used for loan payments.
e.
The supported ministry advantages must also be kept
in view. While a building
will not always make a church grow, facilities are
necessary for a growing
church. Maintaining healthy ministry minimizes church
division over facilities.
Your
enlarged facilities can accommodate more people, who
can then prepay
short-term borrowing, providing you are developing
true disciples. I have
watched many healthy churches prepay their loans.
They have ended with debt-free facilities with less
cost (in terms of ministry and facility) than the
cost of
waiting (when all issues are considered).
|