Creating Money Ministries
with
Congregations
and Church Structures
Ministry of Money
Prologue
Ministry of Money was born twenty-six
years ago out of Church of the Saviour's sense of mission--every human
being is created with his or her own special call. For more than a
quarter century our special mission has been to journey with people of
faith who are struggling with "how much is enough" for them to
keep and "how much is enough" to share with a broken world.
More importantly, our work is to encourage others to become free of
their attachments to money and things and to live out joyfully God 's
call for their lives and resources
We have utilized four main means for
accompanying persons in this faith struggle. First, we lead "money
and faith retreats" around the United States as a way of giving
North Americans a safe place to talk about money. Second, we travel with
people to very poor countries around the world to put them in places and
with people who become their teachers about the really important
things---things more important than money and possessions. Third, we
publish a quarterly newsletter that has served for more than twenty
years as a source of support and information for people seeking to
understand their own addiction to money and things. Fourth, staff serves
as sounding boards and guides for persons who struggle at various points
in their lives around issues of money and faith.
Fifteen years ago another expression
of our ministry was born to respond to the special needs of women around
issues of money and faith. It was called "Women's
Perspective:" In February 2001 Women 's Perspective requested of
the board of Ministry of Money that they be allowed to become a separate
non-profit organization. Their request was granted and this has then
moved Ministry of Money into a new discerning of its own work in the
field of money and faith.
For nearly twenty-five years the
founder of Ministry of Money served as its director. In the spring of
1998 this founder-director asked the board to find a replacement for
him. In April 1999 the board hired a new director. Simultaneously, the
board began to recognize its own need to assume a different kind of
leadership for the organization. It began a process to name, claim and
proclaim the core values and corporate call for Ministry of Money. This
has entailed working with several consultants and holding two
discernment and planning retreats. This work has resulted in an
expansion of the board and recognizing the need to take on a whole new
dimension in our money and faith call.
A New Vision
For the past two years, increasingly
Ministry of Money has received requests from large congregations,
clusters of churches, consulting groups for churches, and denominational
structures to work with them on the issues surrounding congregational
stewardship. These requests have come from what has been known in the
last fifty years as "Mainline" denominations. Ministry of
Money has for its entire history connected mostly with these same
mainline denominations. However, for its entire history it has only
connected at very superficial levels with denominational structures. Our
work in the past has been to "only" respond to requests that
come from small groups of individuals who usually happen to be members
of mainline churches. Seldom have we sought groups to work with and
never have we actively worked with larger structures within the church.
It is no secret that
"Mainline" denominations have been on the decline for the last
20 years both from a membership point of view and from a budgetary point
of view. Pastors and their congregations suffer the same frustrations
year after year. They are forced to pay higher and higher expenses to
keep their churches going with fewer members and often reduced income
coming into the church. They see "Independent" churches
growing tremendously every year and their own congregations suffering
from lack of Spirit, enthusiasm and commitment.
We at Ministry of Money, both board
and staff, believe we are being called to grow into an expanded version
of our original ministry. We believe we are called to help renew the
mainline Church. This is an awesome and compelling call. We are a small
organization and will probably remain so. However, as so often is the
case, we believe we are being called to be a kind of "leaven in the
loaf." It is abundantly clear that mainline congregations suffer in
large measure due to the fact that many churches seem to have lost the
real meaning of being called to faith in Christ. These same churches
attempt year after year to find this year's "Magic Bullet"
that they can use to coerce their members to give at higher and higher
levels to the church. Almost always, this kind of process fails. The
heart of stewardship and people's individual call to real stewardship is
almost never addressed within these congregations.
In the last six months alone Ministry
of Money has been approached by the following churches, groups of
churches or denominations to assist whole groups of churches to begin
their approach to stewardship from a different place: I) The five
conferences of the United Church of Canada; 2) 74 congregations of the
Presbytery of the Twin Cities; 3) The six "Parish Resource
Centers" across the United States--each of which has relationships
with more than 250 local congregations; 4) The retired directors
organization for the National YMCA; 5) Intervarsity Christian Fellowship
for black students; 6) Mercer Island Presbyterian Church; 7) The
Episcopal Diocese of North Carolina; 8) The Virginia Annual Conference
of the United Methodist Church.
The Need
Quite obviously, working with anyone
of these groups of churches could be an overwhelming task for a small
organization like Ministry of Money. Yet, we believe this is what God is
calling us to. We must find new and effective ways to respond to how God
is directing our ministry .
Currently, our staff includes only one
full-time person, Mark Lancaster, as director. The staff also includes
the following part-time persons: Jan Docktor-director of program;
Harriet Taylor-associate director; Vilma Montalvan-bookkeeper; Rosemary
Diehl-administrative assistant; Jean Bollinger-technical person; Wiley
Beveridge and Dana Cunningham as musicians and Bob Hadley-l/2 volunteer
staff for program and board member. In addition to these staffpersons,
we do have 8-10 persons who volunteer their time to lead pilgrimages and
an additional 15-20 who co-lead retreats.
Just to accomplish the current tasks
we have before us, our current staff cannot keep up with the workload.
To take on this new call from God will require additional staff and
program support to make it work. It will also require much additional
support from our volunteer base to be able to respond to even a fraction
of the requests that are currently under consideration.
The Focus: Volunteer
Discipleship-Mentors
After much prayer and deliberation, it
is clear that we must seek funding to undertake our new call. We believe
that with a slight increase in staff we can initiate the first stages of
this call by utilizing both current and new staff to create a unique
kind of volunteer. It has been our practice for decades to nurture,
train and then ask volunteers to serve as unpaid staff for all of our
retreats and pilgrimages. This has proven tremendously valuable for both
our ministry and for the volunteers. We believe that this same
utilization of volunteers will prove even more important for the new
work we are being called to with denominational structures. Repeatedly
during both retreats and pilgrimages our participants comment on how
important it had been for them to hear the stories about money and faith
that our volunteer staff share with those present.
We believe we have a unique
opportunity to build on our past and current use of volunteers for the
development of our new ministry to clusters of churches and
denominational structures. It would be our hope to train and work with
Discipleship-Mentors who would form a distinctive national network in
mainline congregations. These volunteer-mentors would assist our staff
in the formation of "money and faith groups" in congregations
who both develop their own local retreat programs and ongoing groups to
sustain support for those struggling with money as a faith issue. We
believe that this could be a vital link in the currently difficult task
of revitalizing mainline Protestant congregations.
We are also hopeful that this new work
with Discipleship-Mentors will provide the opportunity for their unique
work in the area of philanthropy. Our hope always is that as persons
participate in our retreats and pilgrimages they will begin to look at
the sharing of their resources with others around the world differently.
However, we always find that another donor is the best person to
encourage this kind of generosity in their fellows. In an ultimate way,
then, our volunteer-mentors could be the best guides for others in their
congregations and denominations in the area of philanthropy or
stewardship, as we would name it.
We believe that it would take at least
three years to initiate this new volunteer recruitment and training
program and would thus find it necessary to seek funding over that
initial three-year period. From a variety of sources we are seeking
$500,000 that would include $185,000 for year one, $165,000 for year two
and $150,000 for year three. Funding would include the hiring of at
least one full-time staff person and perhaps increasing the hours of two
of our current staff. The remainder of the funding would be for
programmatic expenditures like curriculum development and having staff
spend time with congregations as they discern the way in which God is
calling them to be faithful stewards. By the end of 2003 we would hope
to know whether or not this new initiative could be self-sustaining. It
would be our desire to work with the church structures to create an
evaluation process to determine level of success toward identifying at
least twenty-five Discipleship-Mentors, creating appropriate
training modules for them, establishing "Study Circle" groups
in fifty congregations and determining future curriculum needs for these
for groups and congregations.
Ministry of Money may be contacted at
minmon@erols.com.
|