TALKING
ABOUT MONEY IS IMPORTANT – EVEN IN CHURCH (cont’d)
I’ve been talking about the
importance of talking about money in church. An Article by Christian
Stewardship Network says this:
The average person spends 40 hours a week working to earn
money,
at
least a few hours a month planning and tracking their money, and a
significant
number of hours spending it. Money is a significant part of
our
daily lives, yet pastors think talking about it once or twice a year is
enough
to help people manage it better.[1]
This is so true! I’d like to add a
couple of “editorial” comments, or, more accurately, my thoughts on the above
statement.
·
For
some people, working 40 hours isn’t enough to earn “enough”
·
Some
people aren’t working even 40 hours, for various reasons
·
For
those not earning a “sustainable” wage, less time is spent earning, and more tracking
and planning
·
For
some working 40 hours, it takes two wage earners to support a family
·
For
some, budgeting works; others have never learned how to budget
·
When
so much time is spent by the folks in the pews or in the community earning,
worrying about, praying about, crying about, money, and we only talk about
money once or twice a year???
What do I mean by that last statement? Well,
that your money and your relationship to money isn’t important until it’s
important to us. And it’s only important to us when we need it!
It is an awful way to understand money as a church,
as The Church, as Christians, as followers of Jesus, as Disciples…
So:
Let’s re-think how we
talk about money as a church.
Let’s change our own
understanding of money as a church.
Let’s care more about
our neighbor and less about ourselves!
Reading back over this, it seems
harsh, but, unfortunately, true. Please, please, look at your own personal
relationship with money, work with your leadership on your church’s
relationship with money, and reach out to your folks in love, with hands
reaching out to hold a hand, to give a hug, and not to just receive an
offering.
Less
this:
More
this: