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"I want our church people to give more! Can you help me accomplish this goal?" As a pastor you would probably never say
this, but you do think about saying it, right?
Is "people giving more" even a good goal? Is it a Biblical goal? Is it a goal you want to see accomplished?
Almost every ministry has unmet needs, and it is true that
having more money on hand would help to meet those needs. Increased
weekly offerings would certainly be a welcome blessing. Sometimes these unmet
needs of the ministry create additional burdens for the pastor.
But ministry leaders must be careful not to let these
burdens cause them to resort to man-centered tactics. Many non-ministry "charitable" organizations
use fear and guilt to extract money from donors. These tactics often prey on common fears and
promise cataclysmic consequences if a certain amount of money is not
raised. Some secular fundraising tactics
appeal to the self-interests of potential donors by promising gifts and other
benefits of "membership" in the cause. Have
you ever seen guilt or a
drummed-up urgent need used in
an attempt to extract money
from donors?
Taking a man-centered approach to ministry funding can cause
us to express our financial concerns to the people in a way that may actually be
discouraging regarding giving and stewardship instead of exhorting and
challenging. Leaders may even be tempted
to resort to the man-centered tactics that are driven by selfish motives.
A simple shift in mindset may be
needed. Instead of having a goal for "the
people to give more," the more appropriate goal is for "all the people to give
faithfully." After all, the requirement
of stewardship is faithfulness, not more.
This goal is right, and it may challenge our motives. Are we using people to build the ministry, or
are we helping people to grow in their responsibility and walk with God?
If the goal is more:
- We may
feel reluctant to teach the whole counsel of God regarding financial
stewardship.
- We may
develop a spirit of contending
or competing for the steward's
resources.
- We
might develop a jealousy over giving to other servants or ministries.
- We
will rely on our own power to accomplish the goal.
- We may
cause the donor to lose any eternal reward by encouraging wrong motives
behind the giving (wood, hay, and stubble).
If the goal is faithfulness:
- We
will see that teaching the whole counsel of God regarding financial
stewardship helps the believer's spiritual growth.
- We
will be ‘trusting the Lord' Himself, believing that God will instruct from
His Word, convince by His Spirit, and direct the steward as to where, when,
and how much to give.
- The
believer's faithful stewardship will be a blessing to the leadership as they
see the believer growing in this important area.
- We
will rejoice when others are blessed by the steward's generosity.
- The
steward will stand ‘approved of God' at the Bema Seat and receive eternal
reward for laying up treasure in Heaven.
Statistics tell us that a very small percentage of God's
people tithe. High percentages of people
giving nothing in offerings are reflected regularly in the annual giving
records of churches. We have all likely
heard that "10% of the people in a church do 90% of the work." Well, the giving records reflect something
quite similar: "90% of the giving is done by 10% of the people."
Simply challenging the people to give more is not likely to change this because it appeals to the
emotions of a man. However, solid,
conviction-building preaching and teaching about the role and responsibility of
the Biblical Steward is likely to result in repentance, obedience and
faithfulness. If the offerings reflected
all the people giving faithfully, the
lists of unmet needs would likely grow small, or disappear altogether.
As God-called preachers of the Word we must demonstrate our
faith and be like the Apostle Paul,) "For I have not shunned to declare unto
you all the counsel of God." Acts 20:27.
Eternal Vision created the publication Treasure Builders to assist pastors in developing their flock in
the area of Biblical stewardship. Treasure Builders is a bi-monthly
publication that is available by subscription either in bulk to churches or
individually to God's people.
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