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More thoughts on giving...

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I ended up the other night, speaking to a gathering of local church leaders and representatives (Deanery Synod) on: Eight thoughts on encouraging giving to the local church...piggybank.jpg, promising them some notes online and resources.

I put notes about the first four online just before the weekend here - so here are the rest!


  1. Inertia rules
    There's a big gap between deciding to act (i.e. to start to give or to increase a regular donation) that it can take weeks - and several 'nudges' - to encourage people from decision to action. Anything you can do, therefore, to make the process as easy as possible - from providing forms, answering questions (even before they're asked!) to giving an online 'button' to click and give (which we're looking into via justgiving.co.uk) - is worth the extra effort.

    Many people genuinely intend to get round to it, but just haven't yet... though making sure that reminders and help don't become annoying pressure is pretty key!

  2. Thank you! Thank you! Thank you!
    There are few things worse than taking the plunge, either with a new standing order, or increasing a gift (especially when it's more than would have been just comfortable) and getting... silence. Just take the time to write a simple "thank you" note - it means that the gift is acknowledged and appreciated, just as it should be.

  3. Don't take givers for granted
    I write to all regular givers twice a year with a letter that majors on thanks and which includes details of what the financial support for All Souls has made possible over the previous six months. It means that people aren't just presumed on, but get as much of an insight as possible into what their giving means in practice.

    Since I, as vicar, make sure I never see either who gives, or what is given, I write the letter and Sue (our administrator) sends them out for me - it's a slightly odd experience writing it 'blind'!

  4. Handle with care
    Never under-estimate just what a counter-cultural and major thing it is for most people to give away money they could have enjoyed for themselves and their families - especially in the dire financial climate we're walking through at the moment. Every charity, church or not, has a particularly major responsibility to be 'good stewards' of every penny that comes their way.

    That means that the 'nuts and bolts' of financial planning, controls, spending and oversight aren't just an added extra for people who 'like that sort of thing', but a vital way of taking seriously the trust that's been placed in us by those who've given in response to the vision of the church.
Now over to you...
  • What would you add as a 'ninth or tenth' thought on 'encouraging giving in the local church'?
  • If you were the Vicar - perhaps you are in your parish if you're a visiting reader of this blog - what would you do or not do?
  • And where could All Souls do better?
Tomorrow - the final part of this post - some resources for churches thinking through this area.

Thoughts on giving...

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I ended up the other night, speaking to a gathering of local church leaders and representatives (Deanery Synod) on:

Eight thoughts on encouraging giving to the local church... (snappy-titles-R-Us.com)

piggybank.jpg

I promised them some brief notes online and links to resources about giving. So here they are... A bit of a risk, I guess, publishing this in my own back yard - it's rather easier to "talk-the-talk" than "walk-the-walk", but if I'm not willing to test it out in front of the home crowd who end up on the receiving end of how we really do things here, then I shouldn't be saying it at all.

So, the briefest of notes to go with these deliberately provocative thoughts about giving - and ready for All Souls members to tell me/us how we match up!


  1. Why "need" and "Jesus says" aren't enough
    This is where I started the other Sunday in my sermon on giving : merely stating "we need your money because we can't pay the bills" (or whatever), or using Jesus' teaching about giving (vital as it is to preach it) to tell people to give to church just won't wash.

    There are endless needs out there on which to practice the very important spiritual discipline of giving - why this church? The answer is that "giving should follow vision" - so we ask the question: "Is this your spiritual home and does the vision you've heard of our ministry alongside God at work catch your heart and mind?" - if the answer's "Yes!", then that's a good reason to give... nothing else!

  2. Stories weigh more than numbers
    Which is why, of course, 'stories' are way more important than 'numbers'... If people want the budget figures then they can have them, but for most of us, we want to hear the stories of God at work that tells us this is a good place to "invest our treasure". Can you tell the story of what God's doing in your church and what we think he might do next?

  3. Participation is everything
    Jesus pointed to the widow who put in a tiny coin and spoke of her as a great giver! For many people, even a tiny (seemingly) gift is a huge deal - either because times are hard or because, for many, it's the first time they've voluntarily given away that which they might have kept and enjoyed for themselves.

    In terms of the health of a local church, the most important thing is that as many as possible are involved in giving - before one ever starts thinking about the amounts involved.

  4. Don't pass the plate
    Here's the thing I inherited at All Souls that I am most glad was done before I arrived - because I don't know I'd have had the guts to do it myself: we don't pass the plate! Why should visitors' experience of church be people asking them for money? And for regulars, why should we give the impression that giving is all about digging about for the change we happen to have in our pockets?

    By not asking for money week-by-week, it gives people who are becoming committed to church the space to ask (and they do) - how is all this funded? That's a good conversation to have... and it places the emphasis on those who are committed to the church's vision, funding it to make it possible.

More on Monday - the other four thoughts... and some links too... (and then I promise to return to thoughts on Romans as promised!!).

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