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Church Invests $67,000 and Receives $117,000

August 25, 2008


Back in April, Reynoldsburg United Methodist enacted the parable of the talents in a creative way. They gave a total of $67,000 in $50 bills to the congregation, for them to invest and return the profits. Like the parable of the talents, the investees were required to put the money to work and return the whole sum to the church - who then would give all the profits to 4 designated charities. Ultimately, the church received $117,000 back - a profit of $50,000!

ChurchMarketingSucks.com shares the whole story.

Here's the best part (from Columbus Dispatch):

So many congregants came up with so many products that the church held a bazaar every Wednesday night.

There, services including financial consulting, golf caddying and calligraphy were up for sale. So were products such as homemade chicken pot pies, hand-knit baby hats and painted birdhouses.

A churchwide yard sale brought in thousands of dollars more, as church members sold clothes, toys and housewares, said Dave Stoffel, who organized it.

For Stoffel, who has belonged to the church for 12 years, the fun and rewarding part of the pastor's challenge was watching people dream up ways to raise money and learning the congregation's talents.

The best part is that it brought the congregation together and everyone got to use their gift and learn each others' gifts! Hundreds of people who usually sit docile in the pew were challenged to go out and do something and they worked together as a body, probably purchasing each others' wares, using each others' services, creating community in the body. And the church goers felt like they were truly a part of the larger group, doing something tangible together.

This idea so beautifully embodies the "TOGETHER" concept of this year's Catalyst Conference.

Could this work at your church? What other projects/ideas get the body working together like this?

Catalyst Social Experiment

Social Experiment : when lightning strikes

August 22, 2008


The Social Experiment: the distribution of 30 Moleskine journals to 30 Catalyst leaders that include 30 service projects and 30 names on a list. We challenged the Catalyst community to complete one project within 24 hours of receiving the package and send it on to the next person on the list.  As the Social Experiment moleskine journals begin landing in the hands of various Catalysts around the country, people are becoming victims of these random acts of kindness.  Here is another story of Christ's love from Jeff Sawyer in Houston, TX...

Hello. My name is jeff sawyer. I'm the children's pastor at Cy-fair Christian Church in Houston, TX. I just passed the journal sent to me on to the next person.

I looked through the suggestions in the journal. . .so many good ideas. We decided to do our own project. There is a family in our community that just recently lost their home in a fire after lightning struck it. The family made it out okay, but lost all their belongings. They left town this week on vacation. One of our team wanted to do something to be a blessing to this family, so we organized a crew to come in to do some clean-up and landscaping, while they are gone. Our group is gathering in the morning.

What a privilege to be used by God to bless others.

Thanks for the challenge to impact our world in this way,

Jeff

Catalyst Vanagon

Catalyst Road Trip Flashback - Perry Noble


Perry Noble shares about the leadership culture at New Spring Church, how members of their church are given ownership of all that happens, AND the importance of "Being Yourself!" 

Perry is a fresh voice in the church; take a minute and hear from the heart of a man who wants nothing more than to walk with Jesus and help others to do the same.

What helps you "be yourself?"

 


Catalyst Voices - Perry Noble from Catalyst on Vimeo.

Friday Links of the Week


Passion's online effort to change the world : ONE MILLION CAN

Does anyone know what this is?

Art inspired by the sermon on the mount : here, here and here

Most awesome design gallery collective ever : behance.net

Cool furniture from : the Style Files

Amazing art and architecture : thecoolhunter.net

Magnificent

Superb graphic inspiration

Small Is the Future?

August 21, 2008


“The church of the future will be a bungalow on Maple Street, not a megastructure in a sea of parking spaces.  It’s intimacy of experience people long for, not production values.” — The Way We’ll Be, p. 215.

"Zogby quotes one house church enthusiast, 'What is so exciting about doing small-group house church is just the chance to be real.'  Authenticity, not high production values, is what First Globals are seeking."

Chuck Warnock posted these quotes from John Zogby's latest book.

In a culture innundated with false advertising, that's disillusioned with "religion" and easy answers, some say there's a higher and higher value being placed on humility, authenticity and "reality" - which seems to be found in deep community.

Do you see this trend happening? Why or why not?

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