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Looking for something in particular? Search through the blog posts below. N.B. Use “Letter” to search for thank you letters, I’ve used both “thank-you” and “thank you” which confuses the search engine!
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Eleven ways a church can send thank you cards
Generosity starts with a grateful heart.
How can churches say thank you? Sending a thank you card is an easy starting point. Here are eleven ways to use thank you cards.
Thank-you letters for people who didn’t give
If you give a wedding gift, you expect to receive a thank-you note. It’s common courtesy. If you don’t give a gift, you generally don’t get a thank-you note. Obvious, right? However, in church giving often nobody gets a thank-you note. Nobody gets thanked. Really. In many churches, donors get an annual receipt with no thank-you letter. But I’m proposing here that everybody gets a thank-you note. Here’s why: gratitude generally and thank-you letters in particular make a good springboard into generosity.
Dying well for congregations
I help congregations with generosity assessments - looking at giving trends and congregational values. It's joyful, challenging and sometimes vulnerable work (for both me and the congregation!)
One of the big questions I ask churches is: "Are you two or three funerals away from disaster?"
This is a great article on ending well for congregations. Denial seldom helps congregations move forward; facing these questions guides future direction.
One final act of kindness
“We had so much fun giving that money away” What if a bequest policy at church was a joyful discussion of one final act of kindness?
Single mom's $20 energizes church building project
Is $20 enough to launch a capital campaign? Yes, yes it is, when the gift is given with eagerness and excitement. My devotional reading today told the story of a single mom's enthusiastic $20 gift to a church building project, a gift given as soon as she heard about it