Clergy Support Fund
The Clergy Support Fund is a Missouri specific apportioned fund. It covers three main things: moving expenses for pastors, clergy pensions, and equitable compensation. The first two are pretty easy to understand, but the “equitable compensation” needs some explanation. This portion goes into a pot for churches in financial straits. Congregations may apply for financial assistance if specific eligibility criteria is met: type of community served, ability to pay 65% of the minimum salary requirement, and evidence of “a clear desire to meet the missional needs of their communities”, as well as the missional desires of the Annual Conference, including the payment of the Conference and District apportionments. Congregations experiencing an increase in attendance that requires a move from a part-time to a full-time pastorate, but are still struggling financially are given a higher priority consideration.
The amount that we still owe for this apportioned fund in 2019 is $1,663.
Congregational Excellence
We’ve recently been the recipient of this apportioned giving with our New Places for New People grant. The money covers other things as well though. New church starts and a growing Hispanic ministry are covered by this fund. In addition to new churches, the fund also helps with church transformation. This includes whole church planning processes, laity training, and coaching trainings.
The amount that we still owe for this apportioned fund in 2019 is $1,803.
World Service
The World Service Fund serves as the financial lifeline to a long list of Christ’s mission and ministry throughout the denomination. There’s an impressive story about this funding helping in ministry with Deaf individuals in Zimbabwe though that is very inspiring.
The United Methodist Church’s St. John’s Circuit in the Mutare District of Zimbabwe is helping members of the Deaf community earn a living by assembling bicycles and rearing rabbits.
The projects assist church members with disabilities learn new skills so that they can become self-sufficient and participate in the country’s struggling economy, said the Rev. Togara Bobo, pastor at St. John’s. The church has more than 1,500 members with more than 20 from the Deaf community.
The Holy Bike Sales project, a brainchild of Bobo and church partners in Switzerland, seeks to develop systems that ensure inclusivity and sustainability through empowerment of people living with disabilities.
The initial capital invested to start the project remains a revolving fund for the purchase of required materials, said Bobo, while members equally share the profits.
The Ministry with Women, Youth and Children assisted the group with capital to start the rabbit-rearing project. The project chairperson, Benjamin Dhliwayo, expressed gratitude for the donation. He said the skills he and the others have learned allow them to adapt to rapid change in the economy, which could be an important factor in determining whether the future is full of promise or peril.
Dhliwayo, who is deaf, said that thanks to the bike sales, the young men no longer have to ask their parents for money for their upkeep or telephone calling cards, and they even contribute to the family’s budget. “We sometimes help our parents pay school fees for siblings and buy grocery items,” he said.
“It is our hope that the skills we have acquired so far in running the bicycle-assembling project will not only transform our lives as youths but also determine our future.”
He said despite the struggling economy, the group has managed to sustain a living from the sale of bicycles. At least four bicycles are assembled and sold to locals monthly, fetching between $260 to $320 U.S. per bike.
“We are satisfied with what we are getting as proceeds, considering the state of the economy in our country,” Dhliwayo said.
The assembling of the bicycles takes place in a two-room house built for the project on church grounds, but the management is the responsibility of the five project members.
“As a church, we believe that the support we give to the able-bodied people should also be the same as those living with conditions,” she said.
One of seven apportioned giving opportunities of The United Methodist Church, the World Service Fund is the financial lifeline to a long list of Christian mission and ministry throughout the denomination. Through the Four Areas of Focus churches are Engaging in ministry with the poor with their communities in ways that are transformative. Our remaining balance for this apportioned fund is $2,093.