
Which statement reflects your feelings when
it comes to raising financial support to attend NYC ’07?
1. “I’m asking for money.”
OR
2. “I’m telling people what
God is doing (or what He wants to do) and I’m giving
them a chance to be part of it.”
If you sense God is sending you to NYC ’07 to open
your life to Him, to be challenged to change the world and
grow deeper in your faith and journey with Him, then we encourage
you to invite others to help you attend NYC ’07.
It’s not unlike the Apostle Paul who wrote, "When
I go to Spain . . . I hope to . . . to have you assist me
on my journey there." Romans 15:24
How do you find the financial aid you need to attend this
once-in-a-lifetime event?
How do you get people to consider making donations?
Here's a funding strategy outline:
1. Let your daily prayer times be permeated with the sense
that you are looking primarily to the Lord to provide your
finances.
2. Make a list of individuals and churches with whom you
can share your vision and call. Ideas for contacts:
o The church where you attend
o People at your work place (current and summer)
o Acquaintances outside your normal church circles (neighbors,
for instance)
o Friends involved in other Christian groups and ministries
o Friends and contacts of your parents
o Relatives
o Christian parents of your friends
o Your close friends
o Your NMI President (Nazarene Missions International)
o Your NYI President (Nazarene Youth International)
3. Prioritize your list into your "Top 10," Second
10, Third 10 and so on.
Those "Top 10" donors will probably provide two-thirds
of your financial support.
4. Prayerfully individualize your fund-raising appeals.
1. Ask appropriately.
2. Don't be afraid to ask for large gifts of money.
3. Decide the best way to contact each person on your
top 10 list and what gift range you would like to ask
them to consider giving.
Possible ways to contact are:
o Face-to-face funding presentations telling them about
NYC ’07 and how it can impact your life for years
to come.
o Phone call followed with an information letter and
response card and envelope
o Fund-raising letter with an information sheet and
response card and envelope, followed up by a phone call
if they do not get back to you in time
o Church presentation
o Other creative options such as car wash
4. Pray, then contact each person on your "Top 10"
list. Set yourself a deadline to get this done
5. Follow up with them as planned
6. Repeat steps 1-5 for your second 10
7. Continue steps 1-6 until you reach 100% of your fund
raising goal
Answers to Tough Questions about Raising
Support by Jay Gary
Ever feel that raising support is just a "second-class"
task? Ever wonder what the Bible has to say about it? Here
are some straightforward answers to tough questions from someone
who has raised support many times to serve God.
Q: Is raising support biblical? It seems lazy
and selfish to ask people for money to support my ministry
A: Raising support is not simply a form of Christian
begging. When Jesus entered a new town, he regularly accepted
the hospitality of others and instructed his disciples to
do the same (Matt. 10:11). Jesus didn't just receive money
from people on the "most likely to give" list, either.
Luke records that Jesus even accepted monetary gifts from
women, a culturally unacceptable practice at the time (Luke
8:3).
It's no surprise that you or anybody else might doubt the
biblical basis of raising support; the New Testament records
individuals and churches who didn't believe in the idea
either. Take the Corinthian church: These Christians felt
their missionary should work for a living (1 Cor. 9:3-6).
Because of this attitude, Paul never asked them for financial
support (vs. 15). Yet the whole chapter defends his right
to receive financial assistance from them. Later, Paul scolded
them for their immature view toward him and their reluctance
to support him when he wrote, "I robbed other churches
by receiving support from them so as to serve you"
(2 Cor. 11:8).
Throughout Scripture we find God expects His people to
support those involved in full-time service. He instituted
a tithe as the means to support the Levites (Num. 18:24,
Neh. 13:10-12). And throughout the history of Israel, God
promised to bless those who invest in this work (Pro. 3:9-10,
Mal. 3:10).
Paul said emphatically to the Corinthians, "The Lord
has commanded that those who preach the gospel should receive
their living from the gospel" (I Cor. 9:14). And John
wrote Gaius saying that it was a good thing to support servants
of God because "it was for the sake of the Name that
they went out, receiving no help from the pagans" (3
John 5-8).
Q: Isn't it more spiritual to let only God
know about my needs, rather than to publicize them to churches
and individuals?
A: It may seem more spiritual not to solicit
funds and just pray about your needs. But there are other
biblical approaches.
New Testament missionaries weren't exclusively "faith"
missionaries, who made their needs for support known only
to God. Paul's life offers three patterns for raising support:
1. Asking No One But God. At times, Paul made no efforts
to raise support. He simply made do with what God provided.
Sometimes that was more than sufficient; at times he went
hungry. "I have learned the secret of being content
in any and every situation, whether well fed or hungry,
whether living in plenty or in want. I can do everything
through him who gives me strength" (Phil. 4:12-13).
Paul never wrote that he prayed for financial support, but
we can assume that during these lean times he presented
these needs to God.
2. Making Your Needs Known. At other times, especially
at turning points in his ministry, Paul explicitly asked
other Christians and churches for financial support. "When
I go to Spain.. .I hope to have you assist me on my journey"
(Rom. 15:24). The original language here confirms that Paul
was asking for monetary assistance. Paul also encouraged
churches to support other believers financially who once
worked directly with him (Rom. 16:1-2).
3. Using Personal Earnings. Paul supported himself and
his coworkers by making tents on some occasions. He states
in Acts 20:34, "You yourselves know that these hands
of mine have supplied my own needs and the needs of my companions."
Seasonal or part-time jobs can appropriately finance ministry.
In summary, the Bible doesn't rigidly prescribe one method
of raising support over another. Rather, it gives us freedom
to be led by the Holy Spirit according to our situation.
I have found that to be obedient to God, I've needed to
practice all three methods at some time or another.
Q: I'm willing to do what God wants, but right
now I simply don't feel as though I could ever raise support.
Can you help?
A: I think a lot of people, including me, find
themselves in your shoes. Let's face it, raising support is
uncharted ground for most of us. The truth is that at times
we will. Jesus spoke from his own experience when he cautioned
a young aspiring missionary, "Foxes have holes and birds
of the air have nests, but the Son of Man has no place to
lay his head" (Luke 9:58).
Some people feel that raising support is tantamount to
accepting Christian welfare. Yet the Bible strongly states
that this is part of God's economy, His way of financing
the spread of the gospel. Therefore, raising support isn't
"unChristian." Maybe the real problem we face
is that raising support feels so "un-American."
As Americans, we are supposed to be "rugged individualists"
who refuse handouts and stand on their own two feet. Financial
independence is the goal. The real problem with raising
support, then, is not that it's at odds with any practice
in the Bible. Maybe your problem with raising support (and
mine) has more to do with it being counter to the American
way of life.
Adapted by permission.
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