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Planned giving in the Church: Is it spiritual enough

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Title: Planned giving in the Church: Is it spiritual enough


1
Planned giving in the Church Is it spiritual
enough?
  • Karen Cooper
  • Richard Ely
  • ICSC, New Orleans
  • September 2004

2
Purpose of presentation
  • to initiate dialogue about spirituality and
    planned giving here at ICSC

3
What were NOT going to do
  • provide a rationale for giving
  • provide a theology or psychology of stewardship

4
Our focus
  • marketing
  • our thinking
  • more effective marketing equals more planned
    gifts
  • more planned gifts equals a more effective Church

5
What we realized
  • we needed to
  • identify prospects
  • determine their values
  • determine their motivation
  • the key is the specifically Catholic element of
    these values and motivations

6
Looking at obstacles
  • obstacles similar to all non-profits
  • obstacles unique to being Church

7
Todays presentation
  • present our discoveries and unresolved questions
  • initiate a dialogue at ICSC about spirituality
    and planned giving

8
Giving statistics for religion
9
Sources of charitable giving
10
Uses of charitable giving
11
AAFRC comment
  • In general, charities rely on philanthropic
    support for about one-fifth of their funding. For
    some groups, such as religious congregations and
    United Ways, gifts are often the only source of
    money.

Press release for Giving USA 2004 at www.aafrc.org
12
What counts for religion?
  • religious congregations
  • national or regional offices of
  • faith groups
  • mission societies
  • religious media
  • groups formed for worship or fellowship

Giving USA 2004, p. 94
13
What does NOT count?
  • separately incorporated (even if faith-based)
    organizations that provide
  • health care
  • social services
  • education

Giving USA 2004, p. 94
14
Contributions to religion
15
IRS statistics
16
Number of bequests for religion
17
Dollar amount of bequests for religion
18
Apples and oranges
  • IRS statistics capture only bequests of those
    estates filing federal estate tax returns
  • Giving USA statistics include IRS statistics

19
Questions created by statistics
20
Is religion late to planned giving?
  • initial reaction no
  • American Bible Institute offered earliest
    charitable gift annuities
  • origin of trusts is based in the medieval Church

21
Has religion kept pace?
  • religion has not kept pace
  • CARA report only 57 of US dioceses have
    foundations
  • mainline Protestant Churches have national
    foundations but less local presence
  • Jewish and Evangelical Christian communities lack
    national structures

22
Religion has committed fewer resources
  • Why?

23
Smaller staffs
  • often one person shops
  • responsible for
  • stewardship
  • annual giving
  • managing data base
  • planned giving -- if theres time

24
More emphasis on annual giving and capital
campaigns
  • planned giving not traditionally included in
    parish capital campaigns
  • rare for campaign literature to mention it
  • endowments are only an option for over-goal
    dollars
  • planned giving seen to distract and compete
  • urgency for immediate dollars pushes endowments
    lower on the priority list

25
Why smaller bequests?
  • our demographics different from other
    organizations?
  • tax considerations are our constituents less
    motivated?
  • are our donors fed up or tapped out from
    repeat requests for annual and capital gifts?
  • we dont know!

26
Our contention
  • Emphasizing the Churchs unique spirituality in
    planned giving marketing could have important
    benefits

27
Spirituality
  • what our religious traditions are about
  • examines questions of human existence
  • different spirituality among different traditions
    within the Church

28
Key concepts
  • there are shared values and perspectives
  • there are shared experiences and histories
  • these experiences make us the unique human beings
    that we are

29
These shared experiences
  • a source of religious identity
  • a source of cultural identity.

30
Our contention refined
  • identifying these values, perspectives and shared
    experiences could help marketing of planned
    giving
  • if we could determine how to apply them

31
Benefits of identifying values
  • speak to our donors core values
  • open up opportunities beyond technical issues of
    planned giving to educate our donors about their
    specifically religious values
  • tap additional sources of motivation

32
Other benefits
  • increase our own credibility
  • garner additional marketing resources by
    emphasizing our role in the particularly
    religious aspects of the Church

33
More tangible benefits
  • increase fundraising revenues from planned giving
  • increase Churchs mission effectiveness
  • these values make talking about endowment and
    estate planning issues easier
  • note dual meaning of mission

34
On religious or spiritual level
  • help our community grow in the unique ways called
    for by the Gospel
  • help our members become better disciples
  • deepen their religious experiences and increase
    their sense of what living out their faith
    entails
  • provide opportunities to express this increased
    understanding in concrete ways

35
Our experiences (shared with others!)
  • experiences that
  • humble us as people
  • point out the truth of our contention

36
Our experience
  • prospects and donors often describe their
    motivation to make gifts in profoundly religious
    language
  • many enjoy the tax and financial benefits, but
    their primary motivation is expressing their
    faith in a tangible way
  • examples

37
Judeo-Christian spirituality of giving
38
Todays presentation
  • a different idea from fundraising stewardship
    -- not post-gift activities of thanking
  • rather, peoples response to Gods activity in
    their lives

39
The Jewish perspective
  • tzedekah justice and acts of righteousness
  • mitzvah commandment or good deed
  • tikkun olam repairing or healing the world
    the action of serving justice

40
Overarching ideas
  • giving is an obligation and a duty
  • emphasis is on today, the here and now
  • survival of the Jewish community and faith is
    primary
  • Jews participate in tikkun olam through mitzvahs
    so they can develop tzedekah in this world

41
How to do we relate spirituality to planned
giving?
42
Working definition
  • from National Conference of Catholic Bishops
    pastoral letter on stewardship.
  • goes beyond the traditional time, talent and
    treasure

43
A Good Steward is one who
  • receives Gods gifts gratefully
  • cherishes and tends them in a responsible and
    accountable manner
  • shares them in justice and love with others
  • returns them with increase to the Lord.
  • Stewardship, A Disciples Response A Pastoral
    Letter on Stewardship. National Conference of
    Catholic Bishops, 1993. www.usccb.org.

44
Our contention
  • this description of stewardship offers specific
    counsel
  • for ones response to Gods activity in his or
    her life and
  • for how one conducts his or her own unique faith
    journey
  • helps address key planned giving and estate
    planning issues

45
This description and planned giving
46
Receiving Gods gifts
  • everything we have is not solely ours
  • rather a gift that we receive from God
  • what gifts have we received?
  • only material gifts?
  • what about our values?
  • how grateful are we for all these gifts?

47
Cherish and tend
  • only about 42 of people have wills
  • do our donors have wills?
  • having a will is part of ones faith journey
  • how do we nurture our values?
  • Planned Giving in the United States 2000, A
    Survey of Donors.
  • National Committee on Planned Giving. 2001.

48
Share
  • who are these others?
  • does justice extend beyond the family?
  • without a will, state law determines sharing
  • reflect on the needs and opportunities for
    sharing -- sharing not simply of resources but
    also of values

49
Returning with increase
  • legacies
  • what values will we pass on?
  • what causes will we support after we pass on?
  • what statement do I make for others to hear?
  • lifetime planning
  • Jewish term, ldor vdor -- from generation to
    generation

50
Legacies
  • our lives in the context of our faith are far
    richer
  • how can we pass on greater gifts than those given
    to us
  • creating a legacy at death is as important as
    during life

51
Overall
  • creating accountability and gratefulness for our
    wealth
  • not an accountability that mandates charitable
    giving
  • rather a mandate to use that wealth joyfully in a
    responsible manner
  • stewardship can make us better believers
  • make us more productive and caring members of
    civil society and our Church

52
One caution
  • distinction between duty/obligation and
    grateful response
  • shift away from pray, pay and obey
  • our Jewish colleagues have pointed out that
    giving out of obligation can clouds the joy of
    giving
  • Integrating both concepts is a difficult
    challenge for planned giving fundraisers

53
Philanthropy and Stewardship
  • giving to a need vs. needing to give gratefully

54
Traditional planned giving issues
  • dont forget traditional planned giving factors
  • elevate Church to the status of family member
  • tax and financial incentives still work
  • legacy issues help us perpetuate our giving

55
Obstacles for planned giving
56
To name a few
  • the nature of what we do
  • ultimately financial
  • about securing more financial resources
  • where our work is positioned within the Church
    structure
  • perception that our work is not in the spiritual
    business

57
Our temporal work
  • is our function a vocation or just a job?
  • theological critics that argue that stewardship
    and fundraising should not be linked
  • that stewardship belongs with evangelization and
    not with development

58
Relationship with the local Church
  • control diocesan management of funds of parish
    or other entity
  • distrust Is this just another way for the
    diocese to reach into parish pockets?
  • distinctions and competition between
    international, arch/diocesan and parish
    priorities
  • for example, the second collection

59
Pastor Relationships
60
The Supporters
  • in word -- preaching and talking about it with
    peers and parishioners
  • in deed -- giving themselves

61
The Adversaries
  • distrust is evident
  • proponents of us vs. them philosophy
  • this is just another way for the arch/diocese to
    exercise control over their resources, money
    will be diverted away from the parish

62
The To Be Convinced
  • dont talk about endowments God will provide
  • lack of interest
  • lack of familiarity
  • lack of confidence with the subject matter

63
Other obstacles
  • endowments not a priority church wide
  • over reliance on prospects self identifying --
    waiting for people to step forward
  • how to move annual fund major donors to planned
    givers

64
More obstacles
  • humility -- unique to religion
  • need to convince donors about testimonials
  • giving is a faith-driven and private matter
  • limited resources and staff
  • communicating
  • theological/practical aspects of sacrificial
    giving
  • giving proportionate to ones means

65
The Diocese of Providence
  • A Work in Process

66
The Catholic Foundation
  • founded in 1983
  • growing commitment to financially support
    personnel and programs
  • planned giving complements stewardship efforts
  • prioritizes endowment planning for parish
    communities

67
St. John Vianney ParishEndowment Formation and
Purpose Statement
68
Their history
  • steeped in stewardship
  • endowment approach is another way to live out
    their stewardship journey

69
In Their Own Words. . . .
  • Fifty years ago, a very special gift was
    bestowed upon the parishioners of St. John
    Vianney Church. This year we celebrate that
    giftour golden jubilee as a parishfifty years
    as a catholic community providing for the active
    spiritual life of its parishioners.

70
In Their Own Words. . . .
  •   When we look back in prayerful gratitude as
    todays caretakers of our parish, we ask, what
    will be our legacy, when St. John Vianney parish
    celebrates its 100th anniversary?

71
In Their Own Words. . . .
  •   The century fund is an endowment fund created
    to ensure the spiritual vitality of our parish
    for future generations. The principles of
    stewardship call each of us to receive gods
    gifts gratefully, cherish and tend to them in a
    responsible and accountable manner, share them in
    justice and love with others and return them with
    increase to the Lord.

72
In Their Own Words. . . .
  • By supporting the century fund we demonstrate
    our parishs strong commitment to stewardship and
    the desire to memorialize our golden jubilee as a
    parish community. The century fund will
    perpetuate its vitality and its future, and we
    will pass to those who follow us as parishioners
    an even greater gift than the one bestowed on us.

73
Encouraging Results
74
Increased clergy support
  • actively serving pastors
  • Building an endowment for my parish is the
    legacy I wish to leave.
  • retired priests
  • If I preach it I must live it. Lay up in heaven
    treasures where neither rust nor moths will
    destroy them--Matthew 6
  • clergy influencing each other

75
Other positive results
  • included lay parish advisors -- e.g., finance
    councils -- in marketing efforts
  • reached out to broader professional community
  • formulated a process to move annual fund donors
    up the ladder
  • expanded marketing efforts in print and other
    media
  • stayed on the job

76
The Process
  • marketing plan -- target audiences and then how
    to communicate with each
  • doing parish visits and seminars
  • retired priests
  • marketing gift annuities
  • building media coverage
  • tweaking the seminars

77
Current Emphasis
  • building personal relationships with donors
  • staff member now focused on face-to-face visits
    with top annual fund donors
  • important conduit to planned giving
  • expansion on previous direct marketing
  • continuing to refine and work the overall
    marketing plan

78
Personal Conversion
  • call upon the experiences that allow you to
    articulate your own discipleship
  • be a proclaimer of the good news through your
    vocation
  • transform and enrich the lives of others with an
    invitation to develop a closer relationship with
    God
  • consider sharing with donors

79
Stewardship and Volunteers
  • keep goals and actions centered on the principles
    of stewardship
  • the CFRI boards decision to offer donor advised
    funds, as stated in their own words

80
Letter from our Chair
  • The Catholic Foundation of Rhode Island is
    pleased to offer another unique opportunity to
    Catholics who actively engage in the spirit of
    Christian stewardship, caring and sharing their
    gifts with others in gratitude to God for their
    many blessings. A Donor Advised Fund or as we
    chose to call them, a Family Legacy Fund, enables
    individuals and families to remain actively
    involved in their charitable planning.

81
She goes on to say
  • These funds provide the necessary complement to
    engage the next generation with responsible
    stewardship of our God given gifts. In order to
    foster discipleship through perpetual giving, the
    foundation recognized that these funds could be a
    conduit to families who wish to pass on their
    values and faith commitments to their children
    and their heirs.

82
Why is this significant?
  • DAFs are popular
  • easier than setting up private foundation
  • lots of tax incentives
  • key concern is how do DAFs relate to discipleship

83
Plans for the Future
  • placing a greater emphasis on communicating the
    spirituality of planned giving
  • transition messages from the technical, tax
    aspects and leaving a legacy to being
    God-centered, being a steward is about
    discipleship
  • bring out greater enthusiasm for personal
    conversion

84
Practical advice
  • How can all of this be used to help secure more
    planned gifts?

85
Make the case for planned giving
  • to those who control your budget control and
    access to your prospects
  • create credibility for the planned giving
  • credibility is the key to securing the necessary
    resources to carry out a sound planned giving
    marketing program

86
Using the case
  • present this case on all the levels
  • Diocesan
  • parish
  • entities -- e.g., finance councils
  • to all your constituencies
  • not a document that is for internal use only.
  • use it with prospects

87
Whats in the case?
88
Traditional planned giving issues
  • wealth transfer
  • importance of bequests in charitable giving
  • how religion fares with bequests
  • how planned giving can help people take advantage
    of financial opportunities and work on estate and
    financial planning issues

89
Unique planned giving issues
  • evangelization aspects of planned giving
  • how planned giving can help support Churchs
    pastoral efforts
  • integrate planned giving as part of and not
    distinct from the proclamation of the Churchs
    distinctive message

90
Call to conversion and discipleship.
  • you are proclaiming appropriate religious
    messages
  • you provide opportunities for
  • reconciliation
  • conversion
  • enrichment of the religious experience your
    community has and will have

91
Also include in the case
  • the need to increase financial resources
  • identify and present planned givings specific
    contributions
  • show how planned giving is a valuable
    diversification of fundraising
  • demonstrate that planned giving is an important
    way to raise money for endowment beyond setting
    aside budget surpluses

92
Where do you start
  • the marketing plan
  • constituencies
  • methods of reaching them

93
Challenges we share
  • getting planned giving onto the agenda.
  • citing capital campaigns that have not included
    planned giving
  • a lack of resources to foster planned giving.

94
Identify key constituencies
  • thinking about the religious dimensions of your
    mission will allow you to identify other types of
    constituencies.
  • retired priests is an important example.

95
Ideas for constituencies
96
Steep yourself in stewardship
  • have an understanding of its Scriptural basis, as
    well as other documents like the Bishops
    statement cited earlier.

97
Include spirituality in marketing
  • use donor testimonials
  • realize that marketing in the Church is more than
    education about planned giving techniques
  • it is necessary to focus on
  • how planned giving can help people respond to
    Gods call
  • how planned giving can be part of their own faith
    journey.

98
TestimonialThe Archdiocese of Toronto
  • I have traveled many roads during my personal
    faith journey, filled with discovery, challenges
    and accomplishments. Along the way, Ive been
    entrusted as a disciple with many gifts and
    talents from God. As I begin to look at my
    financial planning, I think its important to
    consider ways in which I can give back in
    thanksgiving and allow the fruits of my labor to
    live on.

99
Put a face on opportunities for giving
  • make these opportunities relevant and motivating
    to donors
  • go beyond obligation
  • include the opportunity to express ones
    spirituality through planned giving.

100
Professionalism
  • your own professionalism expresses the
    spirituality you proclaim.
  • we cannot conduct our professional affairs in a
    way that marks us out as less than professional
    -- e.g. policies
  • our own willingness to be accountable
    demonstrates that the message we live and the
    message we proclaim are congruent.

101
Include spirituality with volunteers
  • engage volunteers, planned giving committees and
    boards not simply on the level of their own
    profession.
  • over time you can educate them on more and more
    sophisticated levels about your own traditions
    spirituality.

102
Include prayer
  • one of our colleagues talked about praying at the
    signing of planned gift documents.
  • he said that even if a primary motivation for the
    gift was tax or financial or estate planning,
    lifting up the gift in prayer at the close
    created a powerful experience for the donor and
    put the gift in its proper perspective.

103
Stay in your job a long time
  • we have become convinced that a key predictor of
    planned giving success is time on the job.
  • the longer you can stay in your job, the greater
    will your success be.
  • note AFPs findings that average tenure of
    development people is about 18 months!

104
Dont forget God
  • get straight in your own mind
  • your own role in fundraising and in planned
    giving
  • your understanding of stewardship
  • your sense of discipleship and vocation
  • making it your ministry to assist people in
    carrying out their individual response to Gods
    action in their lives.

105
Conclusion
106
Our goal
  • to initiate a dialogue at ICSC about planned
    giving in the Church.
  • we welcome comments or praise or criticism.

107
Peace be with you!Shalom!
108
Contact Information
  • Karen R. Cooper
  • Associate Director
  • Stewardship Development
  • Diocese of Providence
  • 1 Cathedral Square
  • Providence, RI 02903
  • kcooper_at_dioceseofprovidence.org
  • 401.277.2121 (voice)
  • 401.277.2120 (fax)
  • Richard Ely
  • Strategic Fundraising Consultants
  • 86 Lorraine Ave.
  • Providence, RI 02906
  • rely_at_planned-giving.com
  • www.planned-giving.com
  • 401.274.3863 (voice)
  • 401.274.3194 (fax)

109
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