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From A Wallet In The Purse of the Bride To Nickels For Beggars: The Divide That Binds Us

Author: Rob Martin
Date: 11.07.2012
Category: Resource Mobilization

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Serving in God’s kingdom requires the simple act of taking a walk with Him and doing what he shows you to do.

Leadership is bringing others along on the journey to help with the task.

Those on the journey who provide resources are partnering with you for the results you are seeking from the task.

Fund raising is the act of recruiting and nurturing your resource partners.

Simple. Straight forward - yet fund raising is one of the most convoluted and dangerous functions a leader of a mission will ever face. Add in the complexity of fund raising across cultural barriers and you have all the ingredients necessary to create a corrosive stew of fellowship destroying behavior. When not handled properly, the simple transaction of giving and receiving money can create an overdog-underdog sense of things at best, and, at its worst, can dehumanize the partners in sinful acts of manipulation on the fundraiser’s part or sinful paternalistic control on the donor’s part.

No wonder most people I’ve met confess to some amount of trepidation or outright fear and loathing when tasked with fund raising for their calling.  Like nickels for beggars, you can feel like you are working a busy intersection for food money.

Of course, not everybody hates fund raising - many have discovered the affirming joy and overwhelming sense of thankfulness that overcomes you when someone comes alongside and validates your task with a gift to keep you going.

On the giving side of things, that same sense of affirming joy and thankfulness to God for all you have been given, no matter your wealth, is available to the donor as well. Yet sometimes, the whole process of being asked for money can make you feel as if you are only valued for being a wallet in the purse of the bride.

So why isn’t this easier?

Six years ago, I had the privilege of sitting with a global mix of leaders from both the donor and missions communities, drawn together in a co-sponsored event by the Lausanne Committee for World Evangelization and First Fruit, Inc., a charitable foundation involved in missions giving. Vexing problems that were roiling our communities had pulled us together, primarily related to the breakdown in fellowship between donors and missions leaders over challenges related to agreements over outcomes, costs, impact of giving and even eschatology. We met for two days and launched a task force to come up with a road map for building better relationships between donors and missions in their common ministry.

From that process, the Lausanne Standards were born. We were seeking nothing less than a communion of giving and receiving. Equality at the foot of the cross and true fellowship in the fulfillment of their mutual callings were what donors and missions leaders alike needed. We focused on the most difficult aspects of the task - getting people to find this place across cultural barriers.

Underlying our task was the reality that a new era in the giving and receiving of money for missions was upon us; that of ownership and engagement on the part of majority world ministry leaders. Ownership meaning a new generation of majority world missions leaders were stepping up to take full responsibility for the governance, management and finances of their work and because of that, they were ready to engage with their partners as equals.

Keywords: Lausanne, Rob Martin, Resource Mobilization, Lausanne Standards, trust, accountability, contracts, relationships, money, influence, thankfulness, missions, donors, leaders

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When a ministry is more focused on its vision and purpose than it is helping a donor discover and fulfill his or her vision and purpose in life, hen it is facing a conf;cit of interest that will at best risk the relationship between them and at worst damage it over the long term.

Funding raising to be done right, must grow out of ministry to donors and not out of an organizaton need to raise funds.

Ministries need to become 360 degree ministries that are as interested in serving and ministering to those who underwrite their work as they are the people their ministry is primarily focused on. 


18.07.2012

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PhContributeBy Rob Martin 
 
Location: Newport Beach, California
Country: United States

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