Offer a 90 Day Giving Challenge

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As summer approaches days get longer and ministry gets slower.

Pastor, if you haven’t already you’ll start to see attendance numbers drop over the next few weeks. Days at the lake and vacations will soon consume the lives of your church folk. With the drop in attendance you may also see a drop in weekly giving totals as well.

Now if you’re offering an online tool where people can setup an automatic payment that’s one way to help, but what are some other options you can use?

Here’s a quick suggestion that my pastor has used and had some success.

Now I’ll admit, this suggestion isn’t for everyone. I can see how some pastors may have animate objections to this idea so just take it for what its worth before you comment.

The idea is to offer a 90 Day Giving Challenge.

The premise is to encourage non-givers to give it a shot. God has already shown us that giving is the one area we can test him.

“Bring all the tithes into the storehouse so there will be enough food in my Temple. If you do,” says the LORD of Heaven’s Armies, “I will open the windows of heaven for you. I will pour out a blessing so great you won’t have enough room to take it in! Try it! Put me to the test!” – Malachi 3:10

If you’ve been around church long enough you know what the frustration that talking about giving can be. You’ve heard the negative comments when you preach about generosity. It’s no doubt that this area is one of the most difficult parts in our spiritual development.

So how do you present the challenge?

It’s basically this. Preach a sermon about generosity. As part of that message, make an offer to the congregation and the offer is simply this.

If you’re not a tither currently, start today and let me (you the pastor) know you’re taking the challenge. If at the end of 90 days you have not seen the blessings that God can provide or you’ve not been taken care of by taking an amount of your income and giving it back to God, I’ll give you a full refund of the amount you gave.

Now pastor, this challenge will take some fortitude on your part. You have to stand by your word and give the money back if they ask. (But I’ll add, in all the times we’ve done the challenge no one has ever come back and proved it wrong)

Secondly, we’re not talking about prosperity Gospel, health and wealth or any of that crap. If you’re planning to use this for that then just stop reading here and open your Bible.

Ok, rant over!

Seriously though, we’re not talking about God’s blessing monetarily like some cosmic bank deposit where suddenly a mass of money as a blessing from God is going to show up for the person taking the challenge.

What we’re talking about is the reality that God takes care of those who are faithful. Does that mean he’s going to magically provide a new car because we’ve suddenly started tithing? No way.

We do know, however that God is going to meet our needs. It’s amazing how God takes what we have and multiplies it to fit our needs when we’re faithful. As a businessman, it makes no sense to logically look at the facts of living of 90% of our income when up until now, we use every dollar that comes in.

But the truth is, it works. God provides and we’re on track taking that next step in our spiritual development.

OK, back to the challenge and experiences we’ve seen.

In most cases, the people that took the challenge not only didn’t ask for their money back, they also have turned into faithful givers. We even had skeptics take the challenge to prove us wrong.

Now I’ll admit, there’s a level of subjectivity here and that has to be taken into account. I’ll also concede that some will not agree with this method and call it a gimmick or heresy. You’re right, it’s not for everyone and every ministry.

I present the idea as just that, an idea to help encourage giving in your church and during the summer when giving gets tight, it’s a good time to remind people of the importance and blessing that giving back to God can be.

This is also not a hard fast, proven system. It’s open for refinement and customization for your congregation and ministry.

Ministry is hard and as a pastor you may feel sometimes like you live in a silo. While there are somethings we’re unable to help with for you we hope that we can speak into the financial management of your church and help you be better at wearing that hat.

If you try the challenge with your church, let us know. Comment below and tell us you’re going to try it and then follow-up and let us know the results. When we work together to build better ministries, the Kingdom is blessed in the strength of our numbers.

The Real Cost of Free

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This post originally appeared on our previous website at AxessNetwork.com, https://www.axessnetwork.com/blog/2011/08/11/the-real-cost-of-free/

One of the greatest fallacies in our culture is the perception of ‘free’ when it comes to church help. That simple word sounds so good to people, yet few realize that it is actually a misnomer. There really is nothing free. (Except salvation through Jesus Christ, but even that cost Jesus his life.)

Every time something is offered for free, someone, somewhere, somehow had to pay for it.

Many churches are operating under the assumption that their volunteers are free labor. The truth is that the free labor comes at a cost. While it may not cost in dollars directly, the intrinsic costs of volunteer labor can be substantial. Let’s look at a few examples.

If you have a volunteer that agrees to fill a need in your church that is awesome. But what if another need comes up; do you have a volunteer base that can pick up the slack? What if the first volunteer would be the best person for the new job, yet they are stuck in their current position and have no more time to give? Now what does that volunteer cost you? On the opposite side, one instance we’ve all dealt with is what if that volunteer likes the position they are in and think they are doing fine but they are not good at it? How do you tactfully tell them the truth?

Let’s say you farm out your churches website to a volunteer to design. Sounds great right? Well there are some additional costs involved in a website. In order to have a public website you must have a domain name and hosting account. Both these items will cost money. Let’s just say that you choose the cheapest domain registrar and hosting company. Your volunteer designed the site for free and it is now live. Low cost, inexpensive way to get a web presence right.

Wrong.

While it is true there are many discount web services out there, they relative cost is actually very high. This cost often comes in lack of service, lack of availability and flexibility and their template is plagued with ads. We haven’t even gotten to the user experience when they visit your website. Since you were cheap and went the inexpensive route you now have a website with low bandwidth meaning your pages load slowly and the user doesn’t get a good experience. The average user visit to a website is 7 seconds. If your page isn’t even loaded by then, the user is long gone never to return AND they have formed a perception about your church.

More labor talks. Let’s say you have some knowledgeable people in your church and you decide to have a Saturday work day to renovate some rooms. Great, skilled labor is expensive and keeping the work in house saves money right?

We met with a church that built their own building. Well, they had the shell built professionally but they finished out the inside. Only problem was that the pastor, who was in charge of design, missed the first work day. Another person stepped in and decided they could fit extra classrooms if they reduced one foot from all the rest. More room, Great! Only problem was that now none of rooms are adequate to fit the average size of their small groups. What seemed like a great idea at the time and may not have been given much thought is now coming back to bite them and they are regretting that decision.

Volunteer quality. We all know that there are plenty of people ready and willing to help their church. After all, we are called to be servants right? However, what happens when we have a person ready and willing, but unqualified to fulfill the task? What if they are adequately qualified, but their tastes are different than that of your congregation? What if they cannot meet the requirements but they are trying their best? How difficult is it for most people to confront another and tell them they are not doing something right? What if that person’s husband or wife was a key leader in the church? Now how much did that decision cost?

I have listed all these things in a way which I realize is very cynical. In many ways, I was sarcastic and brash. However, every scenario is real and something we have dealt with in one church or another. Here is our suggestion.

Take some time to analyze what areas of your church you are willing to use volunteer labor and then allocate the others to professionals. While on the surface, free sounds good, there are many times where free is actually more expensive than the alternative.

What is the value of the perception and image of your church in the community? Is it low enough to rely on free to maintain it?

Budget Line Hierarchy Bug

With the most recent update that fixes the pull down of your budget lines for expense recording, we have found a bug that prevents the selection of a child budget line if it’s more than 1 step deep.

We are working to fix the issue and will provide an update once complete.

For the interim, if your Account Manager hasn’t already mentioned to you, please select the next higher budget line and provide any pertinent child lines below detail that you intend.

For instance:

Ministries > Children > Preschooler Cookies

the pull down will reflect:

Ministries
Ministries > Children

To select Preschooler Cookies, do as follows:

Select Ministries > Children and put Preschooler Cookies in the Memo Field.

Sorry for the inconvenience and we will update once the issue has been fixed.

3 Simple Steps to Prepare for Summer Church Giving Slumps

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Believe it or not, Summer is right around the corner. Spring is here bringing sunshine, outdoor activities, green grass and allergies.

For churches, summer times means an increase in children’s and student ministry opportunities since kids are out of school. Unfortunately, it also brings family vacations and a significant decrease in church giving. We all know that there is a slump of summer church giving.

I’ve written previously about how to prepare for the Summer giving lull but here is a quick read on a few simple steps you can take now.

Here are three simple setups you can take now to be ahead of the summer giving lull.

1. Analyze expenses

Get your last couple bank statements. Are there expenses that were let’s say… less than necessary? I’m not here to question anything, but it’s a good place to start.

For many pastors, taking people out to lunch or dinner has become the norm. Perhaps reduce that frequency or opt for coffee instead.

Are there any subscriptions you pay that are not necessary? Anything you can save will help get over the giving shortage.

Most churches are very frugal to begin with so this may not be a big area but it’s worth considering.

2. Avoid or Put Off Big Purchases, Renovations

I’m reading a book currently where the author is talking about tracking expenses and finding ways to save for your company. One story he expressed was when riding with a business partner in the car.

His first day in town, there were some electrical things in the office that weren’t pressing but could be fixed. As they passed the hardware store he asked his partner if they should stop in and get the parts. The response from his business partner was “We’ll wait until tomorrow.”

Tomorrow came and as they passed the same hardware store he got the same response.

On his last day in town, 5 days later, and after they’d passed that same hardware store with the same response he couldn’t take it anymore and had to ask. He wondered why his partner kept putting off the stop. His partners response was something we could all put to practice.

His business partner replied and told him it was a game he was playing with himself. Since the fix was not dire, or dangerous, he kept passing the store saying the same thing to see how many days he could live without making the purchase. The longer he went, the less important making that minor fix became and he saved that small amount of money.

What areas in your ministry can you “wait until tomorrow”?

We’re all guilty of falling victim to the tyranny of the urgency or wanting the new shiny stuff now. I have to check myself on this almost daily.

Can you find 3 or 4 things that you could challenge yourself to wait until tomorrow?

3. Communicate With Your Church

Giving is one of those areas that make pastors sweat.

I get it, talking about money has become a taboo subject in our society and the church has definitely received a bad rep for that.

As pastor, this is just an area where you need to step up and lead.

Giving is one of those areas of spiritual development that is often the biggest hurdle for growth in our relationship with Christ. As pastors, we need to be the encourager.

I’ve already written in several areas on this topic and I think we can already agree on the importance of the giving talk (perhaps begrudgingly by some )

But as we come into summer, it’s important to express so that people know the importance of their continued faithfulness. Most people sitting in the pews won’t realize that summer is a slow giving time for churches.

Be open and honest to let people know that while you realize that vacations and other expenses are pressing for the paychecks, it is crucial that people remain faithful.

Talk about it, it will go a long way.

What are your suggestions? What things have you put into place to prepare for the summer giving lull?

Comment below so we can all benefit from your ideas.

Portal update – expense line order

An update was made to the portal that should help make it easier to find and select your budget or expense line for a transaction.

When requesting or recording a check or entering a transaction, when you select the “Add Expense Detail”, that list should now match the order and layout that your budget was entered.

We know this has been a big request by many so hopefully this makes things much easier to use.

If you notice any issues or things aren’t showing up as expected, please let your account manager know as soon as possible.

4 Financial Areas Where Pastor Needs To Be In Charge

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There are times where I really enjoy “stirring the pot.” Usually with my in-laws in a joking way, for some reason I enjoy taking areas that people stress about and stoking the fire.

In church life there a few subjects that tend to get the fires burning as well and many of them revolve around areas of church we help with which is the finances.

As a pastor and leader of a business designed specifically to help churches in these hot button areas I for sure have heard a number of discussions when it comes to the pastor and the church finances. This topic for some reason is one of those that people will stake their stance and stand firm.

While there may be some that continue to disagree, let me detail some areas where pastor needs to be involved in the decision and analysis process.

Here are 4 financial areas that pastors need to be in charge (or at least know what’s going on)

1. Budget Planning Process for the year

The pastor needs to be a key leader in the budget planning process. We speak with too many pastors that don’t know their budget, can’t explain why certain items exist or don’t know why certain lines have certain amounts.

Now some will use the budget as an easy way to say no and that can be a useful tactic, however, far too many just don’t know the details.

Your church’s budget has a very specific prominence for your organization. While it is not set in stone, nor is it law, it’s definitely a guiding document when it comes to spending and ministry decisions. Give it too much weight and it will hinder your progress, not enough and you will be talking about how to shut down the ministry. There is a healthy balance in managing the budget. We’ve written a post here about why your church needs a budget and here on how to start that budget planning process.

There is no excuse for a pastor to be subordinate to a finance committee.

A healthy budget process is led by the Pastor and Elders, then up to the finance team to work within that guidance to allocate the amounts and make the budget work. The pastor has to have ownership of the budget and the process that went into creating it.

2. Final approval or at least input in hiring decisions

For most, if not all pastors, they are the figure head of their local church. Even if the constitution of the church says otherwise many people will assume the pastor is in charge. Unfortunately, this puts many pastors in a tough position where the assumption doesn’t match reality.

One area that many average church goers may assume is that the pastor is “chief of staff” or quite simply, The Boss. They will assume that pastor also has a say in personnel decisions.

Because this assumption exists, its important that pastor has a say in hiring decisions. The senior pastor needs to at least be in the process of interviewing and making a decision in hiring new personnel. Without pastor’s input, it puts him in a very difficult position when decisions need to be made or when problems arise within the staff.

3. Monthly Reports and Analysis

One of the biggest things we’ve learned over the years of having our business is that pastor’s eyes will glaze over when we start talking about financial reports.

The ones that don’t glaze over usually have two different reactions. There are some that believe that pastor has no business knowing about the finances of the church, then there is the others that are scared of going to jail because the church may be doing something wrong.

While I’m not going to get in the debate about whether or not pastors should know the finances (because I believe wholeheartedly that they should!), I will contend that pastors should at the very least have some idea of what is going on with the financial health of the church.

Pastor needs to know certain metrics and stats that relate to the current status of the church.

We’ll talk more in depth on giving in the next point so in this section we’ll just discuss the overall finances of the church to include overall income and expenses. Pastors need to be the leader when it comes to how the church is stewarding the finances of the church.

What does it mean to be a good steward?

When I started in ministry I am so thankful that I worked for a tightwad pastor (a term I use as endearingly as possible). I am a spender; money definitely burns a hole in my pocket. If I have cash, its very easy for me to swing by the gas station for a Scooby snack or swing through a drive thru.

Having people in my life to help hold me accountable or at least to look up to makes that a little better as I’ve matured.

As I was tasked with managing the budget in my first ministry assignment, the pastor challenged me to consider everything in worst case scenarios. We handled the budget as if we’d go weeks without any additional income. To do this, we took all total budget amounts and planned on spending at 80%.

While there were some things I could contend that were hindered in the ministry by doing this, for the most part it was very effective as we usually had surplus at the end of the year. We basically used the old Fable of being diligent to store up for winter so that we’d not starve.

As pastor, you should be keenly aware of how the money is being spent in your ministry. In the next section we’ll discuss how to watch the income, but just as important is to watch spending.

There is a very fine line between empowering your ministry leaders and micro-managing spending, but it’s important that you keep tabs on spending.

What does that look like?

For starters, when you’re planning the year and budget, express your vision for spending. Consider sharing the 80% rule with your ministry leaders. Secondly, give them an amount they can spend without additional authorization so they are empowered to make ministry decisions (this amount may be the 80%, hint, hint!) But keep an eye on that spending. Know what your ministry leaders are spending in an on-going basis and track that against the budget.

For our Simplify Church Bookkeeping Clients, this is a report we provide every month where we break down your income and expenses by ministry area, but also show you how those amounts are trending against your budget.

We know many pastors get nervous when we start talking about money and others just really don’t know where to start so we try to simplify things and give a very simple and easy to read analysis on a monthly basis of where your church stands.

4. Giving Trends

Another contentious subject for pastors and finances is keeping track of giving. If you want to start a big debate in a room full of pastors just ask the question about whether or not the pastor should know the giving information.

While we won’t debate that specifically here, there are ways that pastor can know what is going on without having to get into individual details.

Pastors need to be aware of the general giving in their church. They need to know the total for the week. They should also be aware of the amount of giving per unit and how that is trending over time. Both of these numbers can be evaluated without the pastor knowing any information on individual givers.

To analyze the weekly total, pastors should consider a few things. Once the total is counted, we need to look at the amount for this week which is pretty obvious. That amount should be then analyzed a number of ways. Let’s look at the giving over the past 10 weeks.

Why 10?

If we look at 10 weeks it allows us to see trends while removing months that might have 5 Sundays. That fifth Sunday can skew month by month analysis so taking the ten weeks into account gives a better measure. Ten week analysis also allows for seasonal trends to be taken into account. Depending on how those ten weeks are laid out, you may have a few high weeks mixed in with traditionally low weeks. Depending on big employers and their payroll schedule in your area that might also weigh in to how the giving trend looks.

For instance, our church is in a military community. Because we have a large contingent of military families in our church, we know which weeks of the month will be larger giving amounts than the others. You may also be in a community where many of your givers work for the same employer and experience the same result.

When analyzing the ten weeks, try to choose a consistent 10 weeks year over year. This will allow you to see trends as your church grows over time and provide a comparison to see how things are growing in your ministry.

Giving Per Unit

This measure takes into account an average gift amount of those people attending your church. You can analyze two numbers here but the best benchmark of giving health is to look at your total amount of giving divided by your attendance (minus kids) for that week.

If you want to get even more general, take this number of your total giving divided by your average attendance.

Keeping an eye on this number will give you a range to understand the giving health of your church. While there are no hard fast numbers here, some trends have been analyzed over time to determine some good averages. According to Tony Morgan and his post about “Measuing Church Health”, an average per capita giving number they’ve analyzed working with lots of churches is $41.

What does that mean?

Basically, a healthy church can expect to receive $41 for every person that attends their church on average.

Now, that measure will be dependent on several factors of your ministry and won’t hold true for everyone. For Example, if you’re reaching a lot of lost people that have never been around church before, that number for your church may be way lower since they may not be as aware as a young Christian about tithing.

However, you can use that number as a gauge to track over time. A good practice is to look at that number each week and month to see how your giving is trending. As total income changes this number will ebb and flow accordingly.

For pastors keeping an eye on giving trends, they will be in a position to understand what is happening in their church and possibly proactively catch upcoming changes before they happen.

3 Reasons your Easter service should be Excellent!

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Believe it or not, Easter is just around the corner.

I realize with March snowfall totals increasing that makes it more difficult to believe but it is real and your Easter Sunday service will be here before you know it.

For many churches, Easter is the most attended service of the year. Several posts have been written on the topic about why that is the case so we won’t revisit too much except to say, Easter is a great chance to put your best foot forward.

Now, before all the haters start hounding me with comments that we should do that every week let me explain.

Yes, we should always do everything we do with excellence. Every week our goal should be to knock it out of the park and be better than we were the week before, but Easter is just one of those weeks that we should put extra emphasis on excellence.

Now, I didn’t say do something different or outside of the culture and identity of your church. If you’re a traditional piano and organ worship church Easter Sunday is not the week to pull out the Les Paul’s and Drums. It’s the Sunday to take that piano and organ and make it the best rendition of “Just As I Am” you can muster.

(Sorry, didn’t mean to spark the worship style debate there)

So why is Easter the week to put on our “Sunday Best”

1. You have the opportunity to reach people that may not otherwise step foot in your church

We all know that there’s an entire group of people that will only step foot in a church on Christmas and Easter.

Some are family members of your church, others just think it’s the right thing to do on those holidays.

Regardless, you have them at your church for a couple hours.

Now I’m not saying its time to hold them hostage and preach hell fire and brimstone to them. (And if you do then you might as well stop reading now.)

What I am saying is that you have a chance to speak into their lives that you may not have otherwise. Make them feel welcome. Make them feel accepted and know that Christians are not all weird and this church thing is actually a really good thing.

This post would get too long if we got into all the things we could chat about here so we’ll just leave it at the general rule that you now have people in your facility that may not otherwise have ever been there.

What are you going to do with that opportunity?

2. Easter is often the catalyst for the remainder of your year

To go in line with the first point, your Easter service can be the catalyst for the remainder of your church year.

Easter is a great opportunity to fire up some momentum in your congregation. In most cases, your Easter service will be one of the highest offering totals you’ll have for the year. As we mentioned in the previous point, you’ll have an opportunity to meet people that you may not have otherwise. There will be a quick influx of momentum for you to take advantage of.

Plan out the service but also go a step further.

The time to start planning your Easter service is several weeks before. Get your staff, leaders and volunteers to start planning with you.

Have your children’s leaders be sure to plan out your staffing levels so you can make sure every kid has a great time.

Get with your first impressions or welcome team and make sure they have the Varsity team ready to serve that day.

Do you have 2 services? Consider giving the facility a quick cleaning in between services so that the people coming to the second service have a great experience when they come in the door.

Those are just a few ideas but the point is to be intentional about the day. Plan it out now for what you’re going to do on that Sunday but also how will you de-brief and follow up?

Plan that process out as well so that you can use the momentum of that service for the remainder of your year.

3. Because Jesus

It’s difficult to reduce this idea into a short post but we’ll keep it there. While we talked about the service here we didn’t really get into the actual theology and part of your service where you just bring Jesus.

We can have a great looking, clean facility, friendly greeters and a fun time for the kids but none of that matters if people don’t leave hearing about Jesus.

While we’re not a site to help you be a better preacher or show you how to develop a great small group ministry, we do understand that after all is said and done, your church exists to share and glorify Jesus.

I cannot stress this enough.

It seems almost elementary to our ministry to say that Easter is the crux of our ministry. Easter is why the church exists (the cross of Easter not the service) and with that why wouldn’t we want the most important day of our faith to be done with excellence?

What does your church do at Easter to show excellence? Comment below and we can all help each other better reach our communities.

Three Things to Consider Now That Your Church or Ministry is An Employer

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So your church has taken a big leap and hired your first employee. Guess what, you’re now an employer.

As the church grows so does the need for help. There are many cases where you can be blessed to have volunteers pitch in, which we all know is a double-edged sword, but there are just times that it’s time to hire that first employee.

We’ve written information about having volunteers and how sometimes there are positions that are just better filled by a paid person.

Hiring that first employee is something that needs to be done with some forethought.

I’ve met several pastors that have hired their first employee and in hindsight realized they did it for the wrong reasons. Yes, there may have been work that they could do, but their motivation was really the pride that hiring an employee would mean that the church has some how now “made it”.

In reality, hiring that first employee in some cases has been the detriment for the church. There is a whole new set of needs and requirements that come into play now that your church is an employer.

Here are three things to consider now that your church has employees. In most cases, your ministry just got more complex.

1. You now have a new set of legal requirements and filings

As an employer, you are now on the “radar” of the government. I write that sort of tongue and cheek, but it is true. There is a new set of expectations from your organization now.

At the very least, you are now responsible for notifying the government via monthly or quarterly forms that detail the payroll information for the previous quarter. This requirement starts the day you begin compensating a person in an employment relationship.

“But we only pay a pastor and his compensation is all housing allowance…”

Doesn’t matter.

If that person is paid as an employee of your organization, you need to file the forms. Many times in this situation you will file the forms with $0.00 in the box for the taxable compensation numbers, but nonetheless the forms still need to be sent.

Secondly and very important, in most if not every case, the pastor IS and employee. Pastors are considered “Dual Status” which means they are an employee for Federal withholdings, but considered self-employed for SECA amounts (Medicare and Social Security). We will cover this in more detail in another post detailing pastors compensation.

Just remember, now that you are compensating people as employees, you have an obligation for accurate records.

One more thing on this before we move on, it is NOT ok to circumvent this by saying the person is an Independent Contractor and pay them via 1099-MISC. The IRS has very clear guidelines regarding this and that person has to met certain criteria to qualify. This is an area we see many churches handling incorrectly. We will also address this in an upcoming post.

2. You are now a boss.

Chances are you went got into ministry because your life was changed by the Gospel and you want to serve the Lord by helping others know the life changing Good News of the Gospel. You chose to be a pastor to preach the Word, disciple and encourage others in their faith, and work to spread the story of Jesus with your community.

I’ll bet you didn’t get into ministry with plans to run a small business.

As pastor of your church you are in a unique position once you hire that next employee. You serve a dual role as both pastor and boss.

Many lead pastors will attempt to delegate this responsibility to a committee or leadership team which will work in some instances, but is not the best solution. You’ve probably been around enough churches that are committee driven and in almost every case, those churches have horror stories on how people (pastors) have been treated.

I could write volumes of stories that I’ve seen and heard of churches and situations that have occurred with committees.

This has also been solved in some cases where churches have hired a pastor specifically for these areas. The Executive Pastor role has become popular recently in churches realizing that there is a huge need for someone to be focused on the administrative responsibilities of the organization.

What happens if you can’t afford that XP role? Guess who the responsibility falls to?

As an employer, there will ultimately be one person the IRS or state and local government looks to for as the “manager” of the organization. As much as many pastors try to say they’ve delegated this role, at the end of the day it will fall on them.

We’ll detail much more later but just remember you now have a dual role in the organization as “shepherd and boss”. Don’t let this role scare you, it really is a great opportunity when handled correctly.

3. Your Employees have expectations of you now that you are an employer

One of the greatest joys that people can have is working for a ministry. The fulfillment of knowing your work is being done for the Lord cannot be found anywhere else.

The minute you hire an employee, there is an expectation on you as the employer. This is a very simple area of being an employer, but is important as well.

Your employees need to have consistent, intentional communication on their role. This goes beyond just talking about job responsibilities and assigning tasks, but an ongoing communication on expectations and feedback.

Setup a time to have a routine, intentional chat with your employees. In our company, I push to have a weekly “check in” chat with every employee. Usually just 10-20 minutes those chats allow me to maintain the pulse of our organization. I get to know what’s going on personally with each person but also can keep a handle on their work-load and how they are feeling.

Secondly, you should have routine performance reviews. This is an area where many churches lack and problems arise. Let me share a scenario.

Let’s say you have an employee that gets hired and is a great worker. As time goes on, because there’s just a plethora of work to get done, and they are such a go-getter, they are able to expand and take care of many things. As boss, you see this as great because it keeps those tasks off your plate.

Months go on and because the work just gets done, you don’t have a chat or job performance review with the person.

Sounds great right?

As you know in most churches we assign tasks on the fly. Most people are doing what they do because they were the only person around that knew how to do something.

Let’s project this out to a story I hear many times. Let’s say that person continues to grow their role and because they have not had any guardrails or parameters of their position put in place, they are responsible for a lot of different things.

Now that person is perhaps in a role that you didn’t originally have for them. Let’s say you want to scale back their responsibilities a bit or they have begun acting “too big for their britches”. How are you going to have that conversation without it being confrontational and awkward?

Without consistent feedback and vision from you, your employees will develop their own vision of where they think things need to go and that may not match your vision.

Remember as well, It’s not just the employee that is affected by your decisions, but their family as well. We’ll definitely cover this in a later post.

Conclusion

There is so much we can cover on this topic and we’ll continue to publish posts to help you be a better “manager” of the church as an employer.

If you’re concerned about managing the records and legal requirements as an employer, consider outsourcing that to our Church Bookkeeping System. We’ll take care of everything from that perspective so that you don’t have to worry about it. It’s also better than bringing on a volunteer to do it and hope that they know what they are doing.

Choosing to hire that next employee is more than just a status to say that you’ve somehow now “made it” as a church. It’s an entirely new level of ministry that needs to be handled with some forethought and planning.

All that aside, when you’re church becomes an employer, you’re now able to impact more lives and it’s just that next step as the Lord continues to bless your ministry and grow where you’re reaching.

Are Churches Required to Provide a Contribution Statement Every Year?

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Church Answers

Are churches legally obligated to provide contributions statements or donor receipts every year?

The quick and easy answer is no.

There is no obligation on the church or ministry to provide a statement of giving to donors who have made a donation to the church in the previous year. There is no deadline to provide it and there are no penalties if a letter is not provided.

Many churches are still operating under the assumption that to maintain their not for profit status, something has to be provided, but that is not the case.

For many, this goes back to a situation very similar to those statements and phrases that people mistakenly think are actually scripture. Those things that sound good enough to be biblical but have actually just evolved over tradition.

That is the case here. The IRS has made it very clear in their guidelines for contributions that the organization is not responsible to provide any documentation of the gifts. In fact, they go on to say that it is the donor’s responsibility to request a statement if they want to itemize those donations on their tax return.

Now, let’s get into the practical fact of the matter.

It’s always a good idea to provide a contribution letter to your donors. Most churches, if not all, are completely reliant on the faithfulness of their givers to pay the bills and keep the power on. Without faithful givers, ministry doesn’t happen.

Giving is already hard enough in church and most churches struggle when it comes to cash flow. A sincere thankfulness for their generosity starts with a contribution letter.

What does that do?

A contribution letter is an opportunity for you to speak to your church. You have an open door to thank them for their generosity, but also share how those donations impacted the ministry of your church.

A contribution letter is an opportunity for you to speak to your church. You have an open door to thank them for their generosity, but also share how those donations impacted the ministry of your church. Let them know how many people were saved in the previous time period, how many baptisms and the other tangible things the ministry was able to do only because the donor was faithful and generous. As always, a simple thank you can go a long way.

We have many more articles around the site speaking to encouraging generosity so you can look around for those but for now, just know, that your church is NOT required to provide a donation letter, but it’s still probably a good idea to do anyways.

Check Printing Delay January 13, 2017

Due to icing conditions in the St. Louis area on January 13, 2017, there may be a delay in printing of checks submitted that day.  All checks submitted prior to 8am CST January 13, 2017 have been processed and sent.

If you have a payment that has to be made immediately, please contact Ginger or Josh and we’ll find alternate arrangements.

Thank you for your patience.

Is Your Church Financially Healthy?

We’ll Show You HOW To Find Out And     WHY It Matters In This Free Guide!

It’s time to change the way we talk about giving in church!