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Church Contributions through Fundraising

by Todd Nelson

In 1988, tax-deductible donations to US charities surpassed One Hundred billion for the first time in US history and church fundraising was a large portion of that number. To put it in perspective, One Hundred billion is more than the profit revenue of all the Fortune 500 companies combined. And if charitable donations were used as a sales figure, charitable organizations would rank second in the Fortune 500 behind only General Motors and almost $20 billion ahead of Exxon Mobil. It's no exaggeration to say church fundraising is big business.

The chase for charitable donations has reached new heights in recent years, particularly in church fundraising. To offset reductions in federal funding during the 1980s and to maximize their share of philanthropic giving, the estimated 800,000 organizations that are categorized by the IRS as charities are increasingly hiring fundraising managers and challenging them to raise increasingly larger totals of gift profit.

Although no dependable statistics are available, it can be guessed that tens of thousands of men and women today carry out fundraising jobs as paid workers involved in church fundraising as well as activities for other non-profit organizations. One meter of this growth is that membership in the National Society of Fund Raising Executives has grown from fewer than 2,000 to more than than 10,000 in only 10 years.

The practitioners, whether they are involved in church fundraising or raising donations for another organization, conduct prospect searches to identify potential givers, accept credit card payments from donors, plan special events to cultivate givers, solicit gifts by direct mail, phonathons, proposals, and face-to-face meetings; and write and edit publications to report fundraising results and to recognize givers.

To help them carry out these duties, practitioners rely on church fundraising methods that have evolved through anecdotal material and studies that have mostly been administrative in function. Collectively, these principles form a powerful perspective of the church fundraising function that focuses on how to generate money without questioning the rationale for the function of its effect on recipient organizations and society.

Although varying opinions may be offered in response, church fundraising research has made very little progress in answering these questions. Without a theoretical base grounded in the literature of academic disciplines, church fundraising traditionally has been dismissed by educators as a subject worthy of scholarly research.

Part-time practitioner/scholars normally have provided research on church fundraising that has been occasional. Even though there has been a dramatic increase of scholarly activity in the area of philanthropy, church fundraising as an organizational function has not been identified as one of the agreed upon problems that define that domain of study. This lack of scholarly excitement in church fundraising is shown by the fact that only 3% of research projects on philanthropy and nonprofit organizations over the last 5 years have focused on church fundraising, but interest in this area continues to grow.

This article was written by Todd Nelson, Marketing Director for Capital Merchant Solutions, Inc (HolyProcessing.com). CMS has been in the merchant account business for nearly 10 years, and offers free merchant accounts to both online and retail businesses. CMS also offers a unique program called "Automatic Tithing", which allows Churches to allow their members to automatically donate using their credit card or debit card. This article may be republished as long as absolutely no changes are made, and the resource box is included. Copyright 2007 - Capital merchant Solutions, Inc. - All rights reserved.

Published June 13th, 2007

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