Updated statistics: Christians Giving Less to Churches, More to Nonprofits

Call & ResponseThe Lead, and MLive all do a nice job summarizing the new stats from the Ronsvalles at empty tomb that Christians are giving less to churches and more to nonprofits.

Religious News Service summarizes (via The Lead):

A new report from Empty Tomb Inc., an Illinois-based Christian research organization, contains an analysis that found from 2007 to 2008, Protestant churches saw a decrease of $20.02 in per-member annual charitable gifts.Meanwhile, Empty Tomb’s analysis of federal data found that annual average contributions to the category of “church, religious organizations,” which includes charities like World Vision and Salvation Army, increased by $41.59.

One reason? Churches spend more money on congregational finances and less on missions beyond the church walls, which is unappealing to people who want to support specific causes with a tangible, visible benefit.

Other highlights of the study noted by MLive:

Among the findings, based on data from about one-third of U.S. churches:

  • Giving to churches declined to 2.4 percent of a donor’s income, lower than during the first years of the Great Depression; an additional $172 billion could be available if church members tithed 10 percent.
  • Church giving spent on “benevolence” including global missions and social services slipped to 0.35 percent of income, the lowest in the study’s 40-year sample. Giving for “congregational finances” including staff salaries and building maintenance was at 2 percent, roughly steady for the previous 20 years.
  • While charitable giving nationwide fell 10.6 percent from 2007 to 2008, donations to “church, religious organizations” increased 6.5 percent, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Best quote comes from Sylvia Ronsvalle via The Lead:

Ronsvalle called the findings “unintended side effects of the ‘seeker’ mentality” that creates a consumer mindset within U.S. churches, one that says “‘We’re here to serve you,’ not ‘We’re here to transform you into somebody who serves others.’”

You know that I am the first to note that churches are no mere victims in this predicament, but I am beyond disappointed that none of the commentators, Ronsvalles included, take nonprofits to task for their co-starring role in this tragedy. Surprisingly, nonprofits are uniformly portrayed as heroes and paragons of responsibility and impact in these pieces.

We’ll change that in our next post.

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Imitative Philanthropy: An Alternative to Issue Philanthropy and Impact Philanthropy

A post by Sean Stannard-Stockton this week, The Rise of Issue-Agnostic Philanthropy contrasts two schools of philanthropy, Issue Philanthropy and Impact Philanthropy. The best way to define them is to quote a question Sean poses in the post:

Quick quiz, which would be more satisfying to you as a donor:

  • The act of making a gift to a charity within the issue area you are most passionate about.
  • Having conviction that the gift you made to a charity actually made a real difference within one of the many issue areas about which you care?

My answer:

Option C: Giving a gift that further shapes me in the image of Christ.

This got me to thinking: Imitative Philanthropy is the alternative to Issue Philanthropy and Impact Philanthropy, and it’s an alternative that ought to characterize Christian giving.

Many Christians today are captivated by the idea of giving to issues that matter to them. Roll out the laundry list–there’s everything from homelessness to missions to crisis pregnancy. Fund raising appeals from nonprofits championing these causes frequently make claims related to impact:

  • Give now and help twice as many people through our matching gift program.
  • Give now before we go out of business and our cause disappears from the earth.
  • Give before the end of the month because the need is that urgent.

Such appeals are markedly absent from the Scripture, where primacy is given to God’s goal of growing us to full maturity in Christ, shaping us in his image. Here, we give because in giving we mirror to the world the grace God has given to us. In giving, we become further shaped in his image. For example, Jesus’ words in Matthew 5:44-45:

But I tell you: Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, that you may be sons of your Father in heaven.

Is your philanthropy based on the issues you care about, or your desire to make the biggest impact possible? If either, consider Option C: giving in order to imitate your heavenly father so that you and those around you may come to know him more fully and be shaped in his image more completely.

(Oh–and before you dismiss such an approach as naive, make sure to read this send-up of Impact Philanthropy.)

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Real Food Does NOT Come in a Box, and Neither Do Real Donors

The best insight I’ve ever received into major donor development and the coaching of champions came from my wife, Hyun Sook.

“Food,” she opined, “does not come in a box.”

We were not at that moment talking about major donor development or the coaching of champions. Nor were we at that moment married. Rather, we were engaged, and she was visiting my townhome and taking astonished inventory of my pantry, which, as you can now surmise by her comment, consisted entirely of foods in boxes and wrappers –freeze-dried noodles of this kind and TV dinners of that kind, Library of Congress-sized stacks of ramen noodles, and more jars of peanut butter than are stocked in the pantries of most Mormons. The only thing in my whole house that passed The Food Test was a single watermelon that she had bought me a week or two earlier, which I had not yet touched because, I reasoned, it was too large to fit in the microwave, the one food preparation apparatus I was able to successfully operate.

I am happy to report that not only do we remain sublimely happily married, more so with each passing year, and not only do I now eat healthier than even cheetahs in the wild thanks to my wife’s peerless care, but I learned lessons about major donor development and the coaching of champions from this godly companion that I simply could have never learned anywhere else.

Namely:

If food doesn’t come in a box, donors sure don’t either. They’re Holy Spirit-built, not nonprofit-discovered; invited, coached, and challenged, not solicited; savored with our full attention, not wolfed down in five minutes while we are busy doing other things.

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