BaptistPlanet

Southern Religion

Economic trouble hits churches, church organizations & congregations

A rapidly growing percentage of churches are sliding into economic difficulty, say the results of a February survey by the National Association of Church Business Administration (NACBA).

Church mission activity cutbacks have more than doubled in the past six months, keeping pace with other economy-related financial difficulties, found the NACBA survey of 800 churches in the U.S. and Canada.

The percent curtailing mission activities more than doubled from 10% in August, 2008, to 24% in February, 2009. So did the percent who said “their church was definitely having economy-related financial difficulties,” which more than doubled from 14% in August to 32% in February.

Fully 47% said staff benefits had been frozen or cut at their church, which was more than double the 18% reported in August.

Similarly, “20 percent said they had staff layoffs, and 26 percent reported postponing a major capital project.”

Despite those cautionary numbers, most churches are apparently still is good shape. In response to questions on the same survey, 63 percent “said their church saw giving stay the same or climb in 2008 over the previous year. “

churches_econ_sm

NACBA graphic

“I think we are starting to see more pain felt — although nothing like in the private sector,” NACBA deputy chief executive and a veteran Baptist church administrator Phil Martin told the Associated Baptist Press. He noted that regional economic differences are having an impact on how churches fare from region to region.

The Cooperative Baptist Fellowship announced last week that starting March 1, it would cut spending by 20 percent, cut partner funding by 30 percent, cut staff salaries by one percent and implement other cutbacks in anticipation of “worst-case” economic outcomes.

In Sioux City, Iowa, the economy forced 120-year-old Our Savior’s Lutheran Church to close its doors. The church held its final service Sunday, with a special luncheon afterward.

Sundaythe Rev. Deb Kociban’s at First United Methodist Church in McKeesport, Penn., prayed, “We are anxious, Lord. Help us to set aside the things that are bothering us.”

The Pittsburg Tribune-Review wrote:

One by one, congregants raised their hands when she asked if they knew someone in need of individual prayer because of illness, family struggles, lost jobs or other difficulties.

Tony Cartledge found in it all, as those of Christian faith often do, hope:

Successful dieters rejoice when they can tighten their belts and exercise longer. Perhaps some serious revisiting of vision and resources can lead churches and organizations to develop leaner, broader based, and more effective ministries.

Perhaps many of us who survive will do that personally as well.

February 23, 2009 Posted by | Churches, Economy | , , , , | Comments Off

Cometary beauty sings across tonight’s sky

Comet Lulin “should be a sweet binocular sight” during this once-in-a-million-years visit.

Detailed viewing information is available from Sky and Telescope.

February 23, 2009 Posted by | Science | Comments Off

The Pope’s salary

The salary and/or other remuneration of the Southern Baptist Convention president has been subject to some debate. His salary is reported to be nothing, although the SBC files no detailed, public financial reports.

As was made clear in the New York Times several years ago after a moment of confusion about the matter, the Pope in Rome has a salary of nothing.

The Vatican spokesman, Joaquín Navarro-Valls, ended speculation about the Pope’s salary, saying, ”The Pope does not and has never received a salary.” An ambiguous statement by Cardinal Sergio Sebastiani had suggested that the Pope did receive a salary. [07/20/2001]

The Holy See makes the details public:

The pope has the resources of the Holy See at his disposal. He can take out as much as he needs to carry out his mission and his duties. All the recent popes, on the occasion of their deaths, have left everything they personally owned to the Holy See, with the exception of some little gifts that Pope Paul VI left to his personal secretary and to some of his close relatives. The Holy See annually publishes a complete financial report which includes the expenses of the Pontifical Household. Gifts that come to the pope from heads of state around the world and similar gifts go to the Vatican Museums, where they are often on display for the public to view.

Vatican financial disclosures are available to the press. They are sometimes the subject of news stories, which of course are not always flattering. The British Guardian wrote last year:

The Vatican has blamed the weak dollar for pushing it into its first loss in four years.

Annual accounts published yesterday showed that the Holy See dipped into the red last year, recording a loss of €9.1m (£7.25m). It said this was “due mainly to sharp and very pronounced trend reversal in fluctuation of exchange rates, particularly the US dollar”.

Disclosure helps charitable institutions of all kinds earn and sustain the trust of their contributors.

February 23, 2009 Posted by | Catholic, Economy, Pope Benedict XVI, Religion | , , | 2 Comments

Out of (not just) our heads

Alva Noe in his book “Out of Our Heads: Why You Are Not Your Brain, and Other Lessons from the Biology of Consciousness” argues:

Our culture is obsessed with the brain—how it perceives; how it remembers; how it determines our intelligence, our morality, our likes and our dislikes. It’s widely believed that consciousness itself, that Holy Grail of science and philosophy, will soon be given a neural explanation. And yet, after decades of research, only one proposition about how the brain makes us conscious—how it gives rise to sensation, feeling, and subjectivity—has emerged unchallenged: We don’t have a clue.

His complex, unparadoxical argument is [oversimplification warning] that consciousness is our acts as we perform, perceive and indeed merge into them with every sensible aspect of ourselves, unfolding through time.

February 23, 2009 Posted by | Science | , , , , , | Comments Off

Wall-E top spiritual movie

walle

Named Beliefnet judges’ Best Spiritual Film of the Year is a movie in which the “word God was not present, but the reality was in Wall-E.”

On debut, Wall-E drove the right wing apoplectic because of its embodiment the “Care for the earth” ethic praised by judge Sr. Rose Pacatte as “a spiritual and moral imperative.” She goes on to say:

If humanity is to survive, it behooves us to discover the freshness of our souls. Spirituality is living our beliefs in relationship with God and others. The word God was not present, but the reality was in Wall-E.

That’s conservatism too, albeit not the secular political kind. Remember, Crunchy Con celebrated his parent/children screening of Wall-E by saying that the film “embodies a traditionalist conservative critique of modernity, one that advocates a more or less Aristotelian view of humanity and politics.”

We agree, and feel Beliefnet spoke well for those of us who regard hyper-materialism as evil.

Addendum

Oscar for best animated film goes to Wall-E.

February 22, 2009 Posted by | Cultural | | Comments Off

Civil unions + religious-conscience protection = acceptable?

A New York Times op-ed today offers an “innovative compromise” on same-sex marriage. In a single bill:

Congress would bestow the status of federal civil unions on same-sex marriages and civil unions granted at the state level, thereby conferring upon them most or all of the federal benefits and rights of marriage. But there would be a condition: Washington would recognize only those unions licensed in states with robust religious-conscience exceptions, which provide that religious organizations need not recognize same-sex unions against their will. The federal government would also enact religious-conscience protections of its own.

Convincing argument is given that the compromise the authors propose can be implemented and would, properly explained, be widely acceptable.

The damage being done our civil society by uncompromising conflict, as in California over Proposition 8, makes for them the case for compromise itself.

February 22, 2009 Posted by | Law, Religion | 1 Comment

Uh-oh

Obama tops Jesus in new poll. Reagan 4th, God 11th, reports the Christian Science Monitor.

February 22, 2009 Posted by | Cultural | | Comments Off

An ‘ill-informed’ blogger’s retort

swordsmen

Who are the unnamed, unnumbered “ill-informed bloggers” referred to amid the Mark Driscoll kerfuffle?

Peter Lumpkins identifies himself as “presumably” one. Then takes down by name and hyperlink several Southern Baptist bloggers who “have stepped into the batter’s box” for Driscoll. And who have done so while arguing that they are not quite on Driscoll’s team. Because they are “by no means endorsing all he does or believes.” Thus it follows:

. . . had those of us who chose to disagree had left the content of the diagreeables innocous, as do the defenders, we’d all just be one, big happy family!

February 22, 2009 Posted by | Religion, Satire | , , , | Comments Off

Catholic judges and the requirements of the church

In what may have been a radical break, the pope instructed judges as well as legislators when he spoke to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, warns Douglas Kmiec, chair and professor of constitutional law at Pepperdine University.

Writing in Time magazine, he said:

As written, the Pope’s statement has the potential, at least theoretically, to empty the U.S. Supreme Court of all five of its Catholic jurists and perhaps all other Catholics who sit on the bench in the lower federal and state courts.

It is of course possible someone in the Vatican was careless in preparing the statement. If so, its sweeping inclusivity may have been unintentional.

But the statement about the pope’s meeting with Pelosi nonetheless said:

His Holiness took the opportunity to speak of the requirements of the natural moral law and the church’s consistent teaching on the dignity of human life from conception to natural death which enjoin all Catholics, and especially legislators, jurists and those responsible for the common good of society, to work in cooperation with all men and women of good will in creating a just system of laws capable of protecting human life at all stages of its development.

Note the word “jurists,” and bear in mind how in that context it can be seen as a moral instruction that judges must use their offices to undo the law’s protection for abortion.

Then you can see the core of Kmiec’s disturbing scholarly analysis. The pope’s plain words may be seen as having put the requirements of faith in conflict with those of the oath taken by federal judges to uphold U.S. law.

February 22, 2009 Posted by | Catholic, Law, Pope Benedict XVI, Religion | 2 Comments

Some things still turn out right

With Westboro B*ptist Church’s leadership banned from the United Kingdom, their much-touted protest of Queen Mary’s College in Basingstoke’s staging of The Laramie Project, fell flat today. One person showed up, and lacking support for their views, left.

February 22, 2009 Posted by | Religion, The Arts | Comments Off

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.