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Keeping Faith in Fundraising
Keeping Faith in Fundraising
Keeping Faith in Fundraising
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Keeping Faith in Fundraising

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Fundraising has always been an essential element of the Christian life: churches, schools, and many other organizations rely on it to function. But it is a risky enterprise, fraught with questions and challenges. How can Christians raise funds with integrity?

In this book Peter Harris and Rod Wilson, experienced fundraisers themselves, bring fundraising within the scope of normal Christian life and work. They consider fundraising in light of the relationships that lie at its heart—with God, with creation, and with ourselves.

After first laying a biblical foundation by discussing 2 Corinthians 8–9, Harris and Wilson develop seven themes central to the giving and receiving of money: integration, people, work, success, need, method, and money. In a final section, the authors offer their own personal experiences, questions, suggestions, and valuable insights that they have gained from their many years of fundraising as Christians.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherEerdmans
Release dateDec 28, 2016
ISBN9781467446952
Keeping Faith in Fundraising
Author

Peter Harris

I am sometimes known (by those who approve of wizards) as The Wizard of Eutopia. I live in The Story Ark, an old army barracks on the main road of Kaiwaka, 'The Little Town of Lights' - blink and you miss it, only at night you can't because it has fairy lights everywhere. For twelve years I've been building, also on the main road (well, a little to one side of it), a sculptured ferrocement 'folly' called Café Eutopia. What is Eutopia and why should you care? Well, it's an organic café, a temple to Love Beauty Truth and Freedom, and a bookshop - not necessarily in that order. See photos. For lots more, taken by tourists from all over the world, just enter 'Cafe Eutopia' in Google images. The tourists love me; the locals keep asking, 'When's he going to finish the darned thing?' Unbeknown to them, for even more than those twelve years I've also been building a much more ambitious, unseen 'folly' - a fantasy epic named (in a dream after I failed to come up with a title) THE APPLES OF AEDEN. I've also written a few other books, as you can see - fiction, non-fiction and some in between. To release the writing from the computer screen (and beat the gatekeepers of traditional publishing)I started a digital printshop and developed a quick method of book-binding, and more recently, embossing and 'edge-carving' antique-fantasy-style books (and, at the other end of the book spectrum, ebook uploading). I spent much of my earlier life, like many of us in the troubled 'post-everything' West, in an angsty quest for Truth (between enterprises intended to feed us but always threatening to consume us - spinning wheels, clocks, oval picture frames). A teen convert to radical Christianity, I thought I should become a Bible translator, so I got a BA in classical Hebrew and Greek. But in the process I 'lost my faith' (quite rationally I think!)and became an angsty agnostic. To feed a growing family, I tried to focus on the oval frames and sacrificed a few tormented years on the anvil of manufacturing, much of it in a cold, dickensian defunct woollen mills in Dunedin. Upon reading Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance I had an epiphany which saved our business. But in 1990, just when we had paid off my father-in-law and even started to make some money, the rubberband of my soul (I felt) was stretched to breaking point, and I had to leave the workshops of the North where we had moved, and go to the City to study ...

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    Keeping Faith in Fundraising - Peter Harris

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    Introduction

    On our very first meeting seventeen years ago we began talking about fundraising. For both of us it had been a major component of our working lives and as we talked we realized we had been on a considerable journey. That journey had been one that began in reluctance, and had continued in occasional exhilaration, frequent bafflement, almost constant frustration, and even emotional turmoil. Now, we realized, we were coming into a new season where we had both sensed a renewed calling to fundraising as ministry. Over the next ten years we continued to share stories and learning until we finally realized it was time to draw some of the threads together so we could understand better what we had lived through, and where we might be going in this very demanding part of our working lives. We had begun to realize that we were not alone in the complex set of reactions that the challenge of both fundraising and giving evokes in many people and so we were encouraged to write this book.

    We wanted to examine the relationships that lie at the heart of fundraising which faithfully reflect the character of the triune God. We wanted to bring fundraising back where it belongs within normal Christian life and work, inspired by the Holy Spirit, modeled on Jesus, in conversation with our loving Father. We wanted to establish some solid biblical foundations for what is almost intrinsically and intentionally a risky enterprise, rather like the farming and fishing that Scripture offers as model activities for all growth that is begun, continues, and ends in faith. So what follows is the fruit of our own learning, and conversations with literally hundreds of both donors and fundraisers.

    Rod begins with a story:

    It was a donor meeting in a restaurant, and I was faced with the familiar challenge of listening wisely to the donor and speaking with integrity about our college’s vision. My wife Bev was beside me at the small round table as she often was at these meetings, and as always I was grateful for her prayerful spirit and engaging sense of humor. Across from us was someone we had known for a long time. Warm and winsome and sharp as a tack, she had broad interests and spoke with a wide knowledge of many subjects. She had been widowed a few years earlier and had never given to our community out of her own funds, but our college had been the recipient of a generous gift for a building campaign that came from their family foundation. Our recent meetings had been out of friendship with her, and not interest in her family’s philanthropy, as it would not have been appropriate to talk to her about funds when she was in the middle of a grief journey.

    Many months before that particular lunch, I had mentioned to her that the college wanted to put in place an endowed chair in Christianity and the arts. While so much of the Christian world seemed to work around a large chasm between these two areas, our institution saw the arts and the Christian faith as integrated and recognized that both find their source in the true Creator. As she was a patron of the arts, this had resonated strongly with her existing interests, and I had been able to outline the financial realities of such an undertaking. An endowed chair would require an investment of $3 million, which would be put in our foundation, and the interest that accrued in subsequent years would be used to cover a number of facets of the arts at the school. She was not the only one who had heard the case; I had spoken with many people but after a few years had raised only $1.7 million of the $3 million target.

    It is clearly a first world problem when you are discouraged that only $1.7 million has been given, but raising it was my task and I cannot deny that it was how I felt at the time. When you set a philanthropic target, believe it is for a good cause, and ask people to contribute, you hope that you will meet the goal, but I was only a little over halfway. And to compound the problem I was running out of people to talk to and was having trouble generating another list. So while extremely thankful to those who had got us to $1.7 million, I had begun to strategize about how to have the chair with less money invested. It was quite straightforward actually. If we did this or that, then maybe we could move in this direction or that one. The joys of human initiative and diligence!

    My preparation for the lunch included self-statements along the lines of she has not said anything about the endowed chair in spite of previous communications, so more than likely her silence means no, and it would be better to steer clear of that subject today, and maybe follow up the meeting with an indirect ‘so have you thought any more about the endowed chair?’ but maybe even that would be unwise. Fundraisers may know that internal bind. You are trying to read the cues, and listen to the messages and the sounds of silence; and so you pay attention, listen well, and are respectful. So I went into the meeting discouraged, thinking that this was simply the prelude to another meeting, which would have to be rescheduled with all the complications that entails. There was also some frustration as I realized again that many are the preludes in the life of a fundraiser!

    After an extended time of catching up on our lives I was taken aback when the following question came from the other side of the round table: Can you tell me more about where things are with that chair you were hoping to establish in Christianity and the arts? Fundraisers may be told that they should not be surprised by anything, and much less show it, but I think I came close to falling off my chair. She was not supposed to ask this question, but I was able to get out a few sentences to the effect that I was encouraged that some funding had come in and things were moving along. I also knew that fundraisers were supposed to be positive, so I dug deep and did my best.

    How much have you raised? she enquired.

    1.7 of the 3 million, I replied.

    That is really interesting because I went to see my financial advisor last week and told him that I was going to give you $1.3 million when you came to visit me today.

    I have done enough fundraising and read enough books to know that my next line should have been eloquent and bathed in gratitude, but I could not get any words out. I was simply too emotional, which for some may be unprofessional, inappropriate, and certainly not in step with the dignity of asking for money, but it was not a choice! It was clear that Bev and our donor friend across the table were similarly moved. You get the picture? Two adults with an older adult in a nice restaurant, all deeply affected by their conversation. I have often wondered since that day how others in the restaurant saw this interchange. Was it a couple telling a close friend that they are getting a divorce? Was it an older person indicating that she has terminal cancer? Was this the first meal after a husband and father died? But it was none of these. It was an incredibly specific moment in a fundraising relationship where a particular financial need was met with inexplicable precision by a prayerful donor. It was an event that could not be accounted for by any natural, observable, measureable means, nor could it be replicated by the utilization of a foolproof technique, or understood as a reflection of the brilliance of the fundraiser.

    In many ways what happened round that table and my attempts to understand it, taken together with our shared wrestling with a long series of philanthropic experiences, are what raised many of the questions that led us to write this book. If we call ourselves Christian fundraisers, is this story normative in the sense that this is how things should happen all the time? Was it in the realm of the miraculous and so should we expect encounters like that only infrequently while our normal ways of fundraising dominate the rest of the time? Was it simply coincidental and there was no clearly divine aspect to the lunchtime interchange? Are there principles embedded in this story that need to be teased out and understood as we establish some biblical, theological, and spiritual ground for understanding fundraising?

    ***

    As we wrote this book it became apparent to me (Peter) that we were working across at least five fault lines or great divides, all of which are illustrated in this story. The first one emerged as we fought our way across our own cultural fault lines to write a book that works for us both, and so hopefully for others in equally different and varied contexts. Rod’s fundraising meal took place in a Canadian context, and we are both aware that there are major differences between the Canadian and British cultures that we come from. The way some Canadians are able to talk of money is quite different from the discretion that most British people prefer, and I would imagine the story itself could generate many diverse cultural reactions. A good friend of mine worked as personal assistant for many years to one of the most entrepreneurial Christian leaders of his generation. The man he worked for had written hundreds of fundraising letters, all typed by my friend, but when I told him that I was writing a book on fundraising he simply said, O dear . . . (long distasteful pause), why? Talk of money, or fundraising, is inevitably in bad taste in some circles.

    Given that fundraising itself is conducted very differently all around the world, I wonder whether Rod’s opening story reflects both unique cultural features and some common facets that would be true anywhere. Would donors in the UK or China, for instance, be as transparent as this woman, or would fundraisers in other countries respond with tears to such a large and exact gift? We have both raised funds in many countries and seen striking cultural differences between them, but we have become very aware that much of the potential and many of the problems of contemporary fundraising as practiced by Christians seem common to all.

    Secondly, and more seriously than the cultural divide we faced, we realized that for each of us, the topic of fundraising itself was haunted by the space that can open up between the donor who has means on one side of the relationship, and the person or organization who has needs on the other. This power imbalance frequently seems to be the unspoken and unwelcome guest in any conversation, and in different ways it affects people on both sides. While Rod’s experience of weakness and inadequacy was met with the donor’s relinquishing of financial power and control, we recognize, sadly, that this may be unusual in most of our fundraising meetings.

    The power imbalance has caused us some grief over the years, and we know we are not alone. As we interviewed donors and fundraisers to calibrate our conclusions for this book, we heard stories that were freighted with frustration and even pain. So we want to look hard at power and vulnerability by looking at these questions that lie at the very heart of the gospel. It may be that we can make progress by recovering our confidence that fundraising itself can be redeemed so it can do biblical justice to both strength and weakness, however we perceive them.

    Our third divide also made itself felt in the encounter that Rod has related above, and it is the gap that constantly threatens to open up between pragmatism and principle. Whatever works would seem to be the guiding rule for much of the fundraising that we have come across in a number of Christian subcultures. Or perhaps that should be sub-Christian cultures. Either way, and even more unfortunately, we have heard the phrase in the real world as a frequent framing for Christian talk and behavior about money. It is as if financial considerations mean that belief or trust in God becomes impractical. We have seen this pragmatism manifesting itself in suspect arguments, opaque accounting, certainty that donors must respond as the social sciences predict they will, reliance on technique, and the unspoken assumption that bigger is going to be better for any Christian organization. As we have looked honestly at our experience in fundraising, punctuated as it has been by a number of episodes such as the one Rod has recounted, we find it hard to offer any pragmatic lessons as they are constantly subverted by the inexplicable and apparently grace-filled surprises. But we do think there are some principles that we have learned, and we hope to explain them as best we can in the pages that follow.

    We assume that those who trust in God rather than putting their faith in mere expertise or pragmatism want their fundraising to be rooted in the appropriate soil. However, we have both been troubled by how to work out of a redeemed approach to fundraising that focuses on faith and vision without relying unduly on competence or technique.

    A fourth and serious divide is between the way money is earned and how it is given. On the occasion of the major gift, Rod did not know the source, either at the time or subsequently. He knew the donor well and trusted her and that was the compass he used. However, we believe that for a Christian it is vitally important that the funds are accumulated in a way that is coherent with how and to whom they are given. Many foundations, and even churches, currently support all kinds of important causes. But surprisingly often they are investing their money in companies and commercial enterprises that are adding to the very ills in society, and abuses of creation, that their own foundation exists to heal or combat, and that the churches lament. A minimal

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