To Contribute to World Church Ministries Visit www.CofChrist.org/worldministries/

(l. to r.) Becky Savage, Dave Schaal, Steve Veazey, Steve Jones, Dave Brown
By the Numbers
A sampling of statistics from the 2010 fiscal budget that went into effect July 1:
  • Of the roughly $ 4 million budget reduction, about $3.3 came from field operations, a 23-percent reduction.
  • Investment returns for fiscal 2009 on the World Church’s marketable securities were down 23.3 percent through April. That compares with 35 to 40 percent in many other sectors.
  • In terms of downsizing, eleven employees opted for early retirement, seven took voluntary separation, and forty lost their jobs.
  • Local jurisdictions picked up funding for thirteen employees.
  • International travel fell from $97,588 to $50,000, a 48.8-percent drop.
  • The budget for the First Presidency slid from $30,326 to $20,326, a 33-percent decrease.
World Church Finance Board
Six Mission Priorities
Indentified collaboratively with the World Church staff in 2005
  1. Clarify church identity, mission, and messages
  2. Support Council of Twelve field-mission plans
  3. Implement holistic leadership formation
  4. Design and implement lifelong-disciple formation
  5. Disciples Generous Response and funding for mission
  6. International Headquarters centralized services (professional, administrative and support services)
(l. to r.) Steve Veazey, Paul Davis, Dave Brown

World Church Finance Board

Hopeful.

That one feeling permeated the World Church Finance Board recently as it met over a weekend to consider a new budget clouded by the economic recession.

To arrive at that optimistic state, the board looked to the past and gazed into the future before supporting a $24.73 million World Ministries budget for the 2010 fiscal year, which will begin July 1. Approval by the fifty-plus members—a group from nine countries with some spots filled by position, such as apostles, and others by election—came June 14, just one day before the World Church trimmed staff members at International Headquarters and in the field because of the economic downturn. The board mourned the losses, but members also found encouragement.

In his opening remarks, President Steve Veazey quickly acknowledged the difficulties and then explained his hopeful attitude. “This year our actions and discussions take on an added seriousness as we attempt to navigate through the challenges of a serious global recession. Even in the midst of challenges we can find the capacity to praise the Lord…and move forward with the assurance that Christ is with us.”

Lest gloom pervade the weekend, he then lightened the mood by teasing President David Schaal, whose beloved Detroit Red Wings had lost the previous night in the National Hockey League finals.

President Schaal responded by feigning pain and clutching his chest. But make no mistake: Neither President Schaal, nor the World Church, is mortally wounded. Despite the hardships—the budget is down more than $4 million from the previous year—many expressed optimism at new working models that lean heavily on bi-vocational and self-sustaining ministers. Leaders said mission remains a priority.

Getting to that state of optimism wasn’t easy. Today’s Presiding Bishopric members even jumped back to the Great Depression to see how a counterpart from the 1930s, G. Leslie DeLapp, coped with declines. They found that many of his principles remain sound today.

And in a series of meetings that covered months, the Expanded World Ministries Coordinating Team gathered eight to ten times, looking at every option and every scenario from every viewpoint. Meanwhile, the recession became an ongoing headache for the Presiding Bishopric, which sought a baseline model to determine a sustainable budget.

“In a typical year,” Bishop Dave Brown explained, “we’ll go through five to eight versions as we change assumptions, go through the process, and see results from investment returns and contributions. This year we ended up with twenty-seven versions because we went through so many scenarios, mostly related to the fact we knew we would need a significant reduction in the budget. We wanted to limit the amount of the reduction as much as possible….”

Brown said this was one of the two most-difficult budgets from the last decade. The other big challenge came in 2006, when the World Church underwent a redesign. “At that time we acknowledged the budget had grown during the Transformation 2000 expansion to a point that it wasn’t sustainable. This time, no one could foresee a 35- to 40-percent drop in the investment markets. It’s the effect of that…on the endowments and reserve funds.”

In 2006 International Headquarters absorbed most of the cutbacks; this time the heaviest reductions came in the field.

Compounding the drop in investments for 2010, donations to World Ministries Mission Tithes lagged roughly $600,000 behind projections. Yet, Paul Davis of the Presiding Bishopric noted that local congregational giving has been up, as have donations to the Oblation and World Hunger funds.

“They have more than kept up with inflation,” Davis said of congregations, “while obviously World Ministries has not. The strength in World Mission Tithes is coming from people over fifty. The heroes of this story are the seventy-, eighty-, and ninety-year old people who are carrying the load.”

That doesn’t mean the younger set isn’t generous. Davis suggested that perhaps those members give for a sense of fulfillment rather than sacrifice. They want to see more clearly where their money goes. “What makes young adults give? Their hearts are moved.”

He pointed out that World Ministries has a base of about eighteen thousand contributors from the USA, Canada, and Australia.

“In the ’60s because the church went into other places it was challenged to broaden its view. We haven’t done that with our thinking of how people all over the world fund the ministries of the church.”

That dialog certainly is taking place now. Ministers will emphasize the principles of A Disciple’s Generous Response to young adults and members in other countries. And the Presiding Bishopric continues to anticipate trends, changes, and obstacles.

Presiding Bishop Steve Jones“Every month we set aside an entire Tuesday to come together for strategic thinking about the contribution base and funding of the church,” Presiding Bishop Steve Jones said.

In the meantime, the World Church plans to cope with the downsizing by shifting increasingly to bi-vocational and self-sustaining ministers. Several leaders addressed that issue at the Finance Board meeting:

Several apostles offered stories of generosity by mission centers. Len Young, apostle for the North Atlantic Mission Field, told of three mission centers that are picking up the World Church share of the costs for positions. “So ministry on the East Coast largely is being borne by full-time ministers paid locally.”

And Susan Skoor, Pacific Mission Field apostle, told of one mission center fully funding two positions and then offering to help another area. “You had to have been there to experience the spirit of generosity. I think they would have funded the whole World Church if they could.”

That doesn’t mean the apostles don’t realize how deeply the downsizing will hurt.

“We will be left with nine employees in a field of ten countries,” said Carlos Enrique Mejias, apostle for the Central and South America Field. “But through all of this we continue to see a future with much faith and hope. We’re working to strengthen congregations that already exist. Stronger congregations will help the weaker.”

Apostle Bunda Chibwe said that growth in the Africa and Haiti Mission Field has not been a challenge. “Our challenge is to make them disciples who will share their treasures. We want to move each mission center toward a goal of self-funding.”

Then he summed up what many on the board felt: “Though it’s not easy to be here and talk…about how we’re going to accomplish our mission…I’m still a prisoner of hope. We will continue, no matter the obstructions in front of us.”

—Greg Clark reporting