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Christian schools have struggled
throughout the modern Christian school movement to honorably compensate their
teaching professionals while keeping tuition rates affordable. While most schools are supported by some
limited fundraising efforts, a modest church contribution, and other
miscellaneous income sources, the conclusion is undeniable that tuition
provides the critical measure of support for the ongoing operations of the
ministry.
An endowment can provide a much-needed
source of income outside the school's
current tuition-based budget. Unlike
some of the unsatisfactory alternatives, an endowment will not require the
school to risk compromising its quality (huge class sizes), its affordability
(unaffordable tuition rates), or its autonomy (government funding).
Because endowments are sometimes
perceived as complex and even mysterious,
administrators may tend to dismiss the idea without further investigation. Eternal Vision is a ministry organization
dedicated to teaching Biblical stewardship and building endowments for
Christian school ministries, and the lessons we have learned along the way may
help de-mystify the use of endowments in Christian school ministry.
The
Endowment Concept
What
is an Endowment?
In general, a financial
endowment is a fund made up of donations to an institution made with the
stipulation that the fund be invested, and the principal remain intact. This
allows for the fund to have a much greater impact over a long period of time.
The endowment is intended to
be kept permanently and invested to provide income for continued support of an
organization. Usually, the income stream
generated by an endowment is earmarked for a specific expense within the
operations of the charity for whose benefit the endowment was established.
Why should Christian schools consider using an endowment?
Ministries who have need for
continued support will benefit from establishing an endowment to provide a
perpetual cash stream to meet those ongoing needs.
Ministries like Christian
schools often promote their small student-to-teacher ratio as a positive reason
to enroll students; and it certainly is.
However, this positive creates a problem on the revenue side of the
picture. By limiting the number of
students, we are imposing a greater per-student burden to provide for the
compensation of each teacher. Can all of
the provision for market-level wages
for a teacher come from tuition paid by the students in his or her class? Or would this require us to charge a tuition
that is beyond the reach of many families; especially those with multiple
children in the school?
In Christian schools, this
inherent tension is often relieved by asking the teacher to settle for much
less compensation in order to make the tuition affordable for parents. One person bears most of the burden. An endowment can remedy the problem.
Why hasn't the endowment approach been used before?
It has been used before, in
fact, for centuries. Every major college
and university has at least one endowment.
The world's largest educational
endowment contains more than $34 billion!
(Harvard University) The Harvard
endowment funds salaries for department chairs, scholarships for students, expenditures
for facility care, and much more.
Why haven't Christian schools used the endowment approach?
Most Christian day schools
have not been actively involved in establishing endowment funds. Is this true because endowments are
wrong? I believe endowments have not
been used because we have not been "multi-generational" in our thinking.
Some have said, "We just need to trust the Lord and live by
faith!" When I hear a statement like
this it is only fair to ask the individual what they mean by "living by faith." Would they say:
"Living by faith means we will do
nothing but wait until God miraculously places our provision into our hands,"
or
"Living by faith means we must live
hand-to-mouth and consume every dollar we bring in"?
I believe it is more accurate
to define "living by faith" as:
"Taking God at His Word and acting accordingly."
There is a big difference
between the two mind-sets! The former
allows opportunity to ignore responsibility while trusting in our own thinking,
or imagining what God may be up to. The
latter is based in what God has already said in His Word; Bible principle which
requires faithful obedience.
The
Biblical Basis For Endowments
Is the endowment approach a
faithless approach? I think not. In fact, I am convinced that it is thoroughly
a matter of faith. The issue of faith
centers on God's provision.
In the context of our
endowment work with ministries, Eternal Vision focuses most heavily on
providing additional resources for educational staff salaries and scholarships
for students. Simply stated, the
ministry must have enough revenue from either gifting or fee revenue, or a
combination of both, in order to meet the provision needs. Both sources
require faith.
We must trust God to provide
for the financial needs of the ministry, whether through gifting or by the
provision of students who will pay the tuition fees. As we have already seen, tuition alone can
never provide the resources sufficient to honorably compensate the school's
teaching professionals while keeping rates affordable.
The endowment approach
requires prudent structuring of resources and trust in God to provide
them. The resources come from gifting
and good financial management. Both
components are Biblical: Giving is
certainly commended in Scripture. So is
good management of our resources!
Consider
the following passage of Scripture:
"Be thou diligent to know the state of thy flocks, and look well to thy
herds. For riches are not for ever: and
doth the crown endure to every generation?
The hay appeareth, and the tender grass showeth itself, and herbs of the
mountains are gathered. The lambs are
for thy clothing, and the goats are the price of the field. And thou shalt have goats' milk enough for
thy food, for the food of thy household, and for the maintenance for thy
maidens." (Proverbs 27:23-27 KJV)
In order to be a faithful
steward, both knowledge and attention must be given to the resources God
entrusts to us.
Solomon also says, "A prudent man foreseeth the evil, and hideth
himself: but the simple pass on, and are punished." (Proverbs 22:3 KJV). A wise leader will look ahead, and because he
does, he sees a calamity heading his direction.
He takes action to avoid the destructive impact of the calamity. This is good stewardship.
And finally, just spending our
resources is not considered wise stewardship, "There is treasure to be desired and oil in the dwelling of the wise;
but a foolish man spendeth it up." (Proverbs 21:20 KJV). Saving and investing are both commended in
Scripture. Spending every last dollar in
hand is not a Biblical approach!
The endowment concept is also
based on an understanding that God already owns everything. If it all belongs to God then "spending it
up" is not the issue. The issue becomes
the positioning of God's resources.
Consider this familiar cliché:
"If you give a man a fish, you feed
him for a day; if you teach a man to fish, you feed him for a lifetime."
When it comes to ministry
gifting we could learn from this saying.
A gift for the provision of a current need is used up the day it meets
the need. A gift to an endowment is an
investment that continuously gives to meet ongoing needs. The difference required is an ability of
leadership to see past the immediate wants of the day to the long-term
stability of future generations. Will
you have the wisdom to take a multi-generational approach to your tenure in
ministry leadership?
Eternal Vision, Inc. is a ministry
dedicated to helping Baptist churches, Christian schools, and other ministries
in teaching Biblical stewardship and building ministry endowments.
Attorney Matthew J. Davis is an expert
in Christian education and ministry employment legal issues. He serves full-time as Corporate Counsel
& Vice President for Eternal Vision and teaches Business Law as an adjunct
professor at Maranatha Baptist Bible College.
Attorney Davis grew up in Illinois where his dad pastored for nearly 20
years. Attorney Davis is admitted to
practice law in Illinois, Florida, and Wisconsin.
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