Despite economy, church panel finds reasons for optimism
Despite economy, church panel finds reasons for optimism
Feb. 9, 2004
By Nancye M. Willis*
UMNS photo by Mike DuBose
Sandra
Kelley Lackore, holding a church offering plate, talks about financial
stewardship during the Pre-General Conference News Briefing.
Sandra
Kelley Lackore, holding a church offering plate, talks about financial
stewardship during the Pre-General Conference News Briefing Jan. 31in
Pittsburgh. Lackore is top staff executive of the United Methodist
Church�s Council on Finance and Administration. A UMNS photo by Mike
DuBose. Photo number 04-061, Accompanies UMNS #047, 2/9/04
PITTSBURGH
(UMNS) - Even with some tough decisions to face, "this is a good time"
for the United Methodist Church to adopt a budget, according to an
economist who tracks the denomination's financial health.
Though
“we are in critical times because we have been through a recession …
there is a smaller chance of recession” in the near future, noted Don House, who heads the lay delegation of the denomination’s Texas Annual (regional) Conference.
House
also cited research showing that giving per member is growing faster
than national family incomes. "There is lots of money in the
denomination," he noted.
House
spoke to a group gathered for a Pre-General Conference News Briefing
held by United Methodist Communications Jan. 29-31. He was a member of a
panel on financial stewardship that addressed about 280 church
communicators, first-elected delegates and others preparing for the
denomination's top legislative assembly, which meets this spring.
The
panel also included top executives Sandra Kelley Lackore, General
Council on Finance and Administration; Barbara Boigegrain, Board of
Pension and Health Benefits; and the Rev. R. Randy Day, Board of Global
Ministries.
The
General Council on Finance and Administration will ask delegates to
approve a $585.7 million churchwide budget for the 2005-08 period,
reflecting a 7.3 percent increase over the $545.7 million for 2001-04.
Delegates also will consider requests for about $80 million to support
ministries that aren't included in the regular budget.
Local
United Methodist churches and regional and churchwide agencies were
dealt hard blows during the 2000-04 quadrennium. Local churches have had
difficulty living up to their commitments to support the mission and
ministry of the denomination for a variety of reasons, including the
effects of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the war in Iraq and
Afghanistan, the condition of the world economy, the decline in
investment value along with stock market instability, diminishing
reserves and rising health-care costs.
UMNS photo by Mike DuBose
The Rev. R. Randy Day is the top staff executive of the United Methodist Church�s Board of Global Ministries.
The
Rev. R. Randy Day, top staff executive of the United Methodist Church�s
Board of Global Ministries, talks about financial stewardship during
the Pre-General Conference News Briefing Jan. 31 in Pittsburgh. A UMNS
photo by Mike DuBose. Photo number 04-062, Accompanies UMNS #047, 2/9/04
Lackore
reminded participants that the denomination's mission - "making
disciples of Jesus Christ" - is foremost in efforts to finance the work
of the church. "To live out the mission statement, we need to budget to
go forward," she said.
"Only
when persons are there to put gifts into the plate can we go forward
with our mission," she said. "The good news is that, last year, two
additional annual conferences paid 100 percent of their apportionments."
Income
for the churchwide budget is supplied through seven "apportioned" funds
- funds supported by each annual conference in amounts set by a formula
based on local church expenditures.
The
church's mission agency, led by Day, has experienced the effects of the
economic downturn and decreased giving through program and staff
reductions, he said. "The Board of Global Ministries and others have a
heightened awareness of the vulnerability of God's family … (and) a
shattered presumption of security."
Noting
the widening gap between the world's rich and poor, Day said, "Poverty
is another form of violence … a weapon of mass destruction. We must work
together to stop the transfer of resources from the poor and
marginalized."
He
added, "Money itself is not the issue that motivates the United
Methodist Church, but the gospel and the United Methodist response to
it."
Boigegrain
emphasized the commitment of the pension and health benefits agency "to
keep our current and future promises … to provide support to those in
ministry so they can lead."
A
churchwide task force convened after the 2000 General Conference
recommended major changes to the pension plans for United Methodist lay
and clergy employees. Boigegrain noted that the proposed changes being
submitted to General Conference by the agency reflect an effort to
balance the supply of adequate, appropriate and secure benefits with the
cost of doing so.
UMNS photo by Mike DuBose
Barbara Boigegrain, top staff executive of the United Methodist Church�s Board of Pension and Health Benefits
Barbara
Boigegrain, , talks about financial stewardship during the Pre-General
Conference News Briefing Jan. 31 in Pittsburgh. A UMNS photo by Mike
DuBose. Photo number 04-060, Accompanies UMNS #047, 2/9/04
Demographics
of clergy and lay employees of the United Methodist Church show that
the average employee is 10 years older than the average mainstream
worker, Boigegrain pointed out. Rising health care costs are compounded
by the fact that clergy have moved from being one of the longest-lived
groups of employees to the topmost group with heart disease, she added.
"The world and the church are changing," she said. "We must make sure we can keep up."
The
$80 million in requests above the $585.7 million budget include a total
of $38.9 million to continue and expand the denomination's Igniting
Ministry media campaign and add a local church-based youth expression,
and $2.3 million for a communications initiative for the church's
central conferences - regional units in Africa, Asia and Europe. All
three requests are being submitted by United Methodist Communications.
Additional
requests also call for funds to support Africa University, a new Board
of Discipleship Division on Ministries with Young People, and ethnic
ministries efforts.
A
report of the proposed churchwide budget for 2005-08 is available at
the Web site of the General Council on Finance and Administration,
www.gcfa.org; a summary of the Board of Pension and Health Benefits
proposals is available at www.gbophb.org.
*Willis is editor for the Public Information Team at United Methodist Communications in Nashville, Tenn.
News media contact: Tim Tanton · (615) 742-5470 · Nashville, Tenn.