Church leaders need to pay attention to their own personal finances. If
we can be thoughtful about personal money management, it will help our
leadership in stewardship and church finances. You can't lead others
where you haven't gone yourself. Does this mean that you have to get
yourself together completely before you can lead people to
work on their own financial issues? No. But you have to be honestly working on your own life with money.
These matters are not just financial: they are emotional and spiritual.
We can make anxious choices about money, whether we are spending with a
credit card, postponing investment decisions, or never asking for a
raise because people might get upset. Or we can make thoughtful choices
and take responsibility for our own financial future-which can be hard.
I know this myself: I've taken years to make certain financial
decisions.
Here are some ways I have found to work on these issues: I've learned
more about the history of how my family has dealt with money through the
generations. I've joined a financial accountability group where I make
commitments every month on actions I will take about financial matters.
And I'm cultivating the spiritual practice of tracking my own anxiety
about money daily, recognizing that the fear I can feel is not from God.
One of my spiritual mentors talks about the way money has us, rather
than us having money. When money has us, we are emotionally fused with
it. We are dependent on it in ways beyond the material. This is true
whether we have a lot or a little, whether we are right on top of all
our records, bills and investments or we have piles of unopened
statements on the dining room table. It's true of congregations, too:
does your church have money, or does money have your church? When money
has us, it's hard for God to have us. Our fear about money gets in the
way of our relationship with God and our leadership in the congregation.
How might your own financial situation be influencing your role in the
church's finances?
Have the goal of being less anxious. I'm never going to be non-anxious
about money, but I'm less anxious about it than I used to be. I'm better
able to manage my money, plan about it and make decisions about it -
and trust that God is caring for me, now and into the future. Money "has
me" less than it used to. I am freer. And I can testify that a little
lower anxiety goes a long way, both at church and in personal life.
Here are some questions to consider as you work on your own personal finances:
- How do you make decisions about money?
- What are your patterns of saving? Spending? Giving?
- What resources do you have to help you make decisions?
(Denominational resources, fee-based financial advisers, books or
periodicals or online resources you like.)
- If you struggle in this area, what would be one very small step you could take to help yourself?
- If you are strong financially, what is the next thing you need to do?
Rev. Margaret Marcuson works with churches that
want to create a ministry that lasts and clergy who want more impact on
the people they serve best. She is the author of
Leaders
Who Last: Sustaining Yourself and Your Ministry
(Seabury, 2009). She served as pastor of the First Baptist Church of
Gardner, Massachusetts for thirteen years. Get the free mini-course,
"Five Ways to Avoid Burnout in Ministry" at
http://margaretmarcuson.com/.