1001 New Worshiping Communities webinar explores way to continue fundraising, even during a pandemic
July 13, 2020
Leaders of worshiping communities may be hesitant as they seek to bolster funding during a pandemic. But there are ways to do that by inviting people to do what they want to do anyway, the Revs. Jon Moore and Princeton Abaraoha told about 40 people participating in a webinar called “Funding your Ministry in a Time of Crisis,” put on by 1001 New Worshiping Communities.
“People want to give. People delight in the feeling of making a difference,” said Moore, a mission engagement advisor for the Presbyterian Mission Agency. “Nowhere is that truer than in the time of a disaster, a time of great community need.”
Giving can take on many forms. Abaraoha, field staff for African Intercultural Ministries in Racial Equity & Women’s Intercultural Ministries in Racial Equity & Women’s Intercultural Ministries and a pastor in the Houston area, said that about 15 years ago, a man at his church was unable to make a pledge. Instead, he promised to come to church early each week to set up the sound board, make coffee and perform other welcoming chores. “He was embraced and loved and has brought others to church,” Abaraoha said. “He never misses a Sunday giving of himself to the church.”
Rather than preemptively cutting their budgets, churches and worshiping communities might start with going to their donors, explaining the situation and asking if they’d be willing to increase their giving, Moore said. He referenced Paul’s encouragement to be generous found in the apostle’s second letter to the church at Corinth: “During a severe ordeal of affliction, their (the churches of Macedonia’s) abundant joy and their extreme poverty have overflowed in a wealth of generosity on their part. For, as I can testify, they voluntarily gave according to their means, and even beyond their means, begging us earnestly for the privilege of sharing in this ministry to the saints.”
“You sense in that passage that desire that is born out of being in a desperate situation is their desire to give,” Moore said. “Nowhere is that more true than with Presbyterian Disaster Assistance. Every time there is a disaster, the financial balance sheet of PDA swells. People give much more because they are interested in making sure they can make a difference through their giving.”
Not everyone can give, or can give more, he said. Some can’t, and some won’t. Some would but they can’t, because they have lost their job “or there are other places they need to support.” But “those that will are the people that we need to find, and you do that by asking. Few people will give if they aren’t asked.”
The first person to ask for stepped-up giving is yourself, he said. That’s followed by the community’s strongest givers, because “they value the community and derive the most meaning in their lives from the community.”
The next group is the leaders, who “understand the community.” Then it’s time to reach out to the community itself. “People may give when they hadn’t, or may give more than they have,” he said.” Lastly, it’s time to reach out to people outside the community — your own network, the networks of leaders in the community and the network of donors outside the community.
The request “is best done one-on-one,” he said. Despite the current impossibility of sitting down with somebody to talk, “we have to find the means for having these conversations with people.” Moore said that for him, the best means are old-fashioned telephone calls and Facetime.
“This is a time of mutual concern,” he said. “We are trying to find out how things are going with them. We find out what they are struggling with before we move on to our own needs.”
Mike Ferguson, Reporter/Editor, Presbyterian News Service
Daily Readings
Morning Psalms 5; 145
First Reading Joshua 2:1-14
Second Reading Romans 11:1-12
Gospel Reading Matthew 25:1-13
Evening Psalms 82; 29
Today’s Focus: 1001 New Worshiping Communities Webinar
Let us join in prayer for:
PC(USA) Agencies’ Staff
Carissa Herold, Presbyterian Women
Beth Herrington-Hodge, Presbyterian Mission Agency
Let us pray:
Gracious God, what amazing opportunities we have to learn about you through our experiences with each other. May we find remarkable ways to live out our call to notice your life shining in others. And in doing so, may we affirm in them that they, too, may hear your call. Amen.
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