cellio: (mandelbrot-2)
Monica ([personal profile] cellio) wrote2012-03-18 02:22 pm
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how does your congregation raise money?

I'm interested in answers from all religions/denominations. (Please identify which you're talking about.)

I grew up going to a Roman Catholic church. Collection baskets were passed at Sunday services -- once for the church and, often, a second time for a special purpose (ranging from helping $disaster victims to buying a pipe organ). Members of the congregation were issued envelopes with an identifying number (not name) on the outside, so you could put cash in and still get a tax receipt at the end of the year. Children in religious school were also issued (small) envelopes; they were also numbered and I assume our coins were tallied with our parents' envelopes, but I never asked. Of course, some people (like visitors) just put cash directly into the basket, too.

This always struck me as dicey; how could an organization with regular expenses like heat and salaries and a building manage finances that way, other than by assuming that this year will be like last year? It occurs to me now that there might have also been a pledge system that I, as a child, never saw, but I'm just guessing here.

One of the things I found really refreshing about synagogues is that they have dues. When I found out about this I did a little happy-dance. Yay, no more guesswork! Join the congregation, get a bill, pay it, and everything's good. Right? (Aside: we couldn't pass a basket at Shabbat services even if we wanted to, because doing business and handling money are forbidden on Shabbat.)

Now that I've been part of congregational life for a while, though, I've realized that that's not the end of it by far. There are still special appeals, of course (we help $disaster victims too, after all), but there are also endowment campaigns, special appeals to supplement dues, fancy fund-raising dinners (with ad books, to draw contributions from non-members/businesses), and a myriad of other fund-raising activities. (I know that some congregations have a building fund with its own rules for member payments; we don't, so I don't really know how this works.) There are also fees for certain activities; the biggie here is religious school, which is a separate payment on top of dues.

My congregation -- and I assume this is true pretty much everywhere -- never turns anybody away for lack of ability to pay dues. We'll negotiate a reduced rate, sometimes quite nominal. Some of the other fund-raising is specifically to offset that. A draw from the endowment each year also offsets some expenses. I don't know if the proportion of our expenses paid for by dues is public information so I won't say, but we try to reduce that proportion by building the endowment -- through fund-raising, of course.

All of this makes me wonder when we risk hitting the point of "fund-raising fatigue" for members (I didn't grow up with this as normal so my perspective is unreliable), and what the mix of dues to fund-raising tends to be like elsewhere, and what other (fiscally-responsible) approaches are out there. What do others do? Are synagogues unique in having dues, or do churches have that too (perhaps packaged differently)? If you're a member of a church, does someone sit down with you and say "we expect you to donate $X this year"?

So, readers who belong to congregations of any sort, how do your congregations pay for expenses?

goljerp: Photo of the moon Callisto (Default)

[personal profile] goljerp 2012-03-20 12:28 pm (UTC)(link)
At least in New York City, *most* synagogues require tickets for seats at Rosh Hashannah/Yom Kippur. For my (Conservative) shul, those tickets are included in the membership dues (which vary somewhat based on income, with an option to pay less due to extraordinary circumstances -- and based on the honor system). The tickets at my shul by themselves cost less than the membership, so if you want to just do that, it's fine.

At my shul, in addition to the dues there are several other fundraisers over the course of a typical year. We're lucky that we're able to raise some additional money by renting space in the building during the week, but I think the budget assumes that there will be money raised from fundraisers to cover everything during the course of the year. Occasionally (every 10-25 years?) there are "building fund" campaigns to raise money for more major work on the shul. I'm not sure, but I don't think we have a significant endowment -- but I have missed the last couple of annual meetings where the overall finances were described.

My impression is that this is fairly typical for shuls in the US, but thinking about it I really don't have a wide range of experience.