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Delegates urged to consider future, not past, as they
develop budget
April 29, 2004
By Linda Bloom*
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A UMNS photo by John C. Goodwin.
Sandra Kelley
Lackore presents the Financial State of the Church to the 2004
General Conference. |
PITTSBURGH (UMNS) — United Methodists must
consider the future instead of clinging to the past when they decide
on the denomination’s budget for the next four years.
That’s the advice of the church’s top financial officer to delegates
of the United Methodist General Conference, meeting April 27-May 7.
In her April 29 report, Sandra Kelley Lackore, chief executive of
the General Council on Finance and Administration, held up an
offering plate to remind herself and conference participants that
their decisions are “not just about dollars” but about gifts to
God––given by people in the pews.
She acknowledged that the denomination’s financial foundation is in
“need of repair,” at least partially due to a narrowing base of
support.
Because of membership loss, consolidations and other factors, there
were 216 fewer U.S. congregations to contribute funds in 2004,
compared to the previous year.
General Conference establishes the total amount of money needed to
support all churchwide ministries. That amount is then apportioned
to each of the 63 annual (regional) conferences in the United
States. Each of those regional units decides upon ways to request
fair-share amounts from individual churches. The requested amounts
are based on several factors including church budgets and
membership.
Currently, half of the total denominational budget is apportioned to
only 3,655 of the 34,780 U.S. congregations, according to Lackore.
One challenge at the local level, she said in a follow-up press
conference, is to help both clergy and laity realize “the tie that
exists between their spiritual life and their giving life.”
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A UMNS photo by Rasul Welch
Sandra Kelley
Lackore (at podium, center) is the top staff executive of the
General Council on Finance and Administration |
According to the council’s written report
to General Conference, economic conditions in the United States from
2001-2004 also had “a significant impact on financial receipts for
the general apportioned funds.”
Financial demands on local churches have meant fewer dollars to
support general church infrastructure. Statistics from 1998, for
example, showed that 83.2 cents of each dollar remains in the
congregation, while only 12.8 cents goes to support district, annual
conference and jurisdictional ministries, and only 4 cents is
forwarded for denomination-wide support.
On a more encouraging note, Lackore said that 7 of 10 local
congregations paid 100 percent or more of their apportionments to
the general church in 2003. “Since 1995, giving in our local
churches has gone up more than family income,” she added.
Lackore said later that she also is more optimistic about the
American economy, citing analysis from Don House, an economist and a
United Methodist who serves on the council’s board of directors. “He
believes we are on the other side of this economic recession,” she
explained.
The issue of declining funds is not confined to the United Methodist
Church. The Presbyterian Church USA will have to slash $9 million
from its 2005-06 budget, she reported, and the Evangelical Lutheran
Church in America also must trim several million dollars. The
Southern Baptists, she noted, have experienced a financial decline
over the past decade.
General Conference delegates cannot turn their backs on new mission
initiatives or necessities such as pension and benefit plans. But,
Lackore said, “As you look at each dollar to be spent –– each new
initiative proposed –– you will ask, I hope, ‘Where we are headed?’”
The GCFA’s proposed quadrennial budget of $585 million is “merely a
starting point” for delegates, she said. That figure does not
include proposals from other agencies or groups; those requests
total an additional $80 million for mission initiatives.
Lackore advised delegates to preserve what is worthwhile, eliminate
what isn’t and be “innovative” in the process.
The final budget, she said, must reflect what the delegates believe
are the missional and financial priorities of the church. “Do not
think of it as a budget of dollars, think of it as a sacred trust.”
*Bloom is a United Methodist News Service news writer.
News media contact: (412) 325-6080 during
General Conference, April 27-May 7. After May 10: (615) 742-5470.
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