Budgeting for a Healthy Church: Aligning Finances with Biblical Priorities for Ministry (9Marks)

by Jamie Dunlop

Other authorsTim Challies (Foreword)
Paperback, 2019

Status

Available

Call number

254.8

Publication

Zondervan (2019), 176 pages

Description

Many pastors conceive of the church budget as primarily a financial tool, but in fact it is primarily a pastoral tool. A church's philosophy of ministry is locked into its budget, and so the budget will either stifle or accelerate any attempts to move a congregation toward a biblical model of church health. As such, the church budget is a far more potent pastoral tool than many church leaders realize. Budgeting for a Healthy Church examines each section of the budget in light of Biblical principles to show how a church budget can lock in healthy approaches to ministry. Whereas most books on church budgeting are "how" books, explaining how the budgeting process should work, this is a "what" book, helping church leaders determine the pastoral implications of what they choose to fund in their budgets.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member emabbott
Jamie is a baptist minister in a church with elders and deacons so the adjustments are fairly minor to a presbyterian setting. In our church the congregation doesn’t approve the budget, the elders do. That’s part of the reason congregation elects elders. But we have been seeking how we can
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communicate more with the congregation so they can be informed. Jamie’s book is chock full of helpful information on just how to do that.

There is a lot of confusion about how church budgets work and what they should look like. There is also troubling history with giving and budgets. I know of a woman who told a pastor at her church, “This church belongs to Jesus and me.” She said this because she gave a lot of money specifically to cover the monthly mortgage. But as Jamie points out faithfulness, godly giving, is not about how much you give as it is about how you give. Similarly, a budget is not more spiritual because it is big or because giving is up that year. The truth is not in digits but in the hearts of the people.

Jamie’s fundamental point is that the church budget is spiritual. It reveals what the church believes and is committed to. Jamie argues that a budget is a tool for effecting the Great Commission. Further, the budget itself is like a spiritual mutual fund. It is the local church’s plan for investing in the work of making disciples.

I was challenged to take more leadership in teaching about giving in the church. I have taught on it in the past, but I am pressed to consider ways in which I can continue to teach on the place of giving in the Christian life.
The chapter on income was a great corrective as it puts the focus not on how much is given or even if we are meeting the budget. Rather the focus on giving is faithfulness. Jamie offers a lot of wisdom in the chapter on hiring staff and the chapter on operations is pure gold.

My favorite part of the book was in chapter 8 and learning to use the budget as a pastoral tool for discipleship. It is an opportunity to help Christians grow in their faithfulness to Christ.

Bottom Line

If you serve as a church officer, on a church finance committee or the like you should read this book. It will bring the budget out of the shadows of obscurity and clarify how exactly it fits within the mission of the church. I highly recommend this book and will likely be using it in officer training in the future.
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Language

Original language

English

Physical description

176 p.; 5.39 inches

ISBN

0310093864 / 9780310093862

UPC

025986093860

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