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Archive for the ‘501(c)3 ministry’ Category

How Not to Win a Pastor’s Support… Part Two

This is the second part of my post on the things a missionary, a short term missionary or church planter should NOT do if they are hoping to win a Pastor’s support. You can can find Part 1 here: “How Not to Win a Pastor’s Support - Part One

When you do get to meet and visit with a local church pastor for the first  time, it’s important that you make a strong first impression. As the old saying goes, “you never get a second chance to make a first impression.” Hopefully, you made an appointment and didn’t just crash in on the pastor’s day. If he was expecting you, and agreed to see you, chances are he’s interested, unless you talk him out of it! Here are three “don’ts” you’ll want to avoid so that you won’t  ”turn off” the budding relationship…

#1 Don’t hit the pastor cold turkey with this question: “We’re here to see if your church can start supporting us?” That’s a question to which there is no possible way he can answer “yes.”  It can’t be done. There are some preliminaries here that have to be dealt with, so even though it sounds like an honest, up-front approach, I wouldn’t lead with that punch. In building a relationship, it’s nice if you ask a few questions to which he can say, “yes,” in some form, e.g., “Can you tell us the process by which we can apply for support?” Almost every pastor can say ‘yes” to that question, and now you’re rolling. You’ve got momentum, and you’ve got something to talk about that can be done.

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#2 Don’t fail to bring any materials: I’m often stunned at people who drop by, or come on Sunday, and want to tell me about their work, and are looking for support, but they didn’t bother to bring any printed material. It’s almost like they came to church, perhaps to worship, and were suddenly inspired to talk to the pastor about support. But wouldn’t it make sense to have some specifics, in writing, that could be left with the pastor, or passed on to the missions team?  If you are building a new relationship, carefully prepared and nicely done materials will help you build credibility. If your materials make your ministry look like a fly-by-night shoestring operation, it does not inspire potential investors.
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#3 Don’t call up a pastor you haven’t seen in years and say, “We’re really in a financial bind and we’re calling to see if you can make a major special contribution, like this week, and via Fed Ex?”  Do missionaries actually think that in times like these, local churches have bank accounts with surplus funds just sitting there? Do pastors come in on Monday and say, “Look at all this money, I wish someone had an idea of what to do with it?”  Give me a break here, I want to help you, but you have to be realistic. It always takes time to get funds together, there are budget cycles, and even with contingency funds, there are procedures to follow to get at those funds. Yes, you’re under pressure in a financial crisis, but you can’t transfer that pressure anywhere except to God, and expect good results.
Again, as with part one of this blog entry, I confess to sounding like Mr. Gripey Pastor here. But honestly, all three of the above have happened to me in the last month. My heart is breaking for missionaries whose support funds are drying up, but for the life of me, I don’t understand why so many are so out-of-tune in ways of attacking the problem that might actually work.
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We have resources to help: our eBook  ”Ugrading Your Missionary Financial Support” gives very practical methods to help you in getting your missionary support up to where it needs to be. Another eBook, “Raising Support as a Church Planter” is specifically aimed at helping those in church planting ministries.
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Maybe you’re doing ministry independent of a larger organization and need to know how you could become a 501(c)3 ministry so that you could give tax-deductible receipts. Well, we’ve got something for that, too, in our eBook “Steps to Starting a 501(c)3 Ministry“.
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You can find all of the eBooks, and more, on our MissionFundrasing.com/Products page.

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Charging for the Gospel?

My family and I used to work with Wycliffe Bible Translators (WBT) in Papua New Guinea (PNG, just north of Australia). We lived in-country for a total of six years. My role was as a missionary pilot. The role of WBT is to translate the New Testament (or more, if able) into the viable languages that have no written scriptures in their own langauge.

Whenever a Bible Translation Project reaches its “completion”, there is a large celebration by the people-group receiving the published scriptures. One item that many people in “sending nations” find peculiar is that the receiving people are asked to buy the scriptures that have just been translated into their language. “We’re talking about the scriptures here, and salvation…and, you’re a ‘missionary’. Why are you charging for the work of the ministry?”

Meanwhile, there is an interesting website called “Business as Mission Network“, and it promotes exactly what its title implies, “Using businesses as an opportunity for spreading the Gospel.” Some of their tenets are:

  • Committed to The Local Church: The business supports partnership with the indigenous church in the community.
  • Glorifying to God: The name of God is the ultimate object of praise, not the name of the business.

One of these opportunities is providing business loans to people in developing countries. To the chagrin of some, the lenders charge interest for their loans. But, there is an interesting dynamic when it comes to money and certain types of product, including “christian product”. This same dynamic also appears in PNG regarding translated New Testaments: “If it’s free, it must not have much value. It isn’t worth much, otherwise you wouldn’t be “giving” it to me.”

Hope International is a non-profit Christian-based organization which has the goal of alleviating poverty via holistic means, including providing the business loans mentioned above…and again, they charge interest. But listen to a question they sometimes receive: “Why do you charge interest to the poor? Why not just offer interest-free loans or grants?” In reply, a woman who has her own counseling business directed at the poor stated:

  • “It actually makes a lot of sense why they charge interest.” She shared that when her practice first opened, decades ago, she provided free counsel to underprivileged women—single mothers, former inmates, etc. “They rarely showed up for our scheduled sessions. If they did show up, they kind of blew it off.” She went on to discuss why she now charges these at-risk clients. While she discounts her service significantly, she still charges a fee. The change, as she described it, has been remarkable. “Now these women value my services. They come on time, they are invested, and they soak up every minute of their sessions. It’s been a dramatic shift since I’ve started charging a fee.”

Just as “freedom isn’t ‘cheap’ just because it’s ‘free”, neither is the gospel, nor any other commodity of value. Providing “free” money is counter-intuitive; providing free Bibles sometimes “devalues” God’s message; providing free counseling requires no commitment to change…thus, we charge a fee!

Somebody once “tweeted” in Twitter and asked why this website, MissionFundraising.com, charges $12.77 for its eBooks that supposedly help missionaries and church planters spread the Word. The author of these books, Jim Walters, replies:

  • “I’ve sold bunches of them, and given away bunches of them, and people pay more attention if they bought them (or had them bought for them). When free, they are regarded as ‘worthless’.”
So, if you’re pursuing a short term mission trip, or a Church Planting ministry, or considering starting a 501(c)3 ministry so that you could provide tax-deductible receipts to your donors, we have some products that may be helpful to you. Yes, we will charge you for most of them, but that’s only because “freedom is never ‘cheap’ just because it’s ‘free’.”
Gary Skrobot

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Seth Godin’s Leadership Perspective Applied to Missions

I found an interesting post about how Seth Godin’s (famous marketer) perspective on how to change the world can be applied to missions. Follow this link to view a 17 minute video of Seth Godin’s talk, and/or read an interesting application of that talk to missionary work.

Gary Skrobot

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What You Need to Start a Non-Profit 501(c)3 Ministry

If you are a citizen of the United States of America, there are certain rights to which you are entitled, and certain responsibilities which you must fulfill. One of the most prevalent responsibilities each citizen has is paying taxes. In turn, we all receive certain benefits because of the taxes we pay.

Jesus told us that it is right and proper to pay taxes when he said, “Give to Caesar what is due Caesar, and give to God what is due God.” But, we also infer that while giving to Caesar what “he” is due, there is no need to give more than what is due!

The government of the United States provides its citizens an incentive to financially support non-profit organizations, such as churches, mission organizations, et al. This incentive is rather powerful, as many citizens would prefer not to give financially, unless they are able to take advantage of the government’s incentive, namely, the Tax Deduction.

If you are asking people to support your ministerial work, but are unable to offer your supporters a tax-deductible receipt, you are very likely inadvertently showing potential donors the door, while they continue looking for someone else to whom they will give their tax-deductible dollars, instead.

Setting up your own non-profit 501(c)3 ministry may not be as difficult and overwhelming as you think. Yes, there is an application to file, a bank account to open, even a Board to select; but, all of this can be rather straight forward if you have a helpful checklist to follow.

Be sure to check out our Products page, and especially our “Steps to Starting a 501(c)3 Ministry” handbook.

Questions? we’re happy to do our best to answer them. Just add a comment to this blog post with your question, and we’ll let you know what we know.

Jim Walters

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