2 Corinthians 8:1-15
Liturgy of Abundance
The Uprising of Stewardship
James Sledge May
10, 2015
From
time to time I’ve turned on my local PBS station hoping to watch Frontline or
Nova only to discover some well-worn show featuring over the hill folk
musicians. Instantly I realize it’s a PBS fundraising campaign. If I give $50 I
will receive a lovely tote bag. And if I give more, I will get an autographed
CD featuring some of the music.
I’ve
never really understood the strategy of putting on tired reruns rather than the
programming I’d like to watch to entice me to give. I can appreciate the need
for financial support. I just find the process a little distasteful.
I
suspect a lot of people have similar feelings regarding church stewardship
campaigns. They often feel a little contrived. If you’ve been around church
long enough you know what I’m talking about. You’ve seen the campaigns with
cutesy names such as The Pony Express. Everyone realizes that the church can’t
operate if people don’t give, but the process sometimes leaves something to be
desired.
It
doesn’t help that stewardship is often just a churchy word for fund raising. I wonder
if we don’t need to separate the two, to fundraise unapologetically and then,
quite separately, to help people grow into the joyful, life-giving practice of
stewardship, generosity born of new life
in Christ.
Getting
better at church fundraising is a pretty straight forward project. I’m not
saying it’s easy but it is mostly a matter of learning best practices. Stewardship
is another issue altogether because some of the basic tenets of Christian
stewardship are fundamentally at odds with the cultural and economic world we
live in.