Thursday, November 5, 2009

Hey--Church and Change Convention--
Some New Ideas That Work

Church's money giveaway: Alsip pastor's cash prizes fill pews

Minister's focus is to help congregation pay bills and begin a debt-free life

 



In Alsip, the Rev. Dan Willis holds a box with cash that he gives to lucky worshipers at his services. (Tribune photo by Zbigniew Bzdak / October 28, 2009)




At Lighthouse Church of All Nations in Alsip, the congregation can get more than just prayer at the Sunday worship services.

If a lucky -- or "blessed and highly favored" -- churchgoer is in the right seat, they can also receive a cash prize.

At each of the three Sunday services, the Rev. Dan Willis pulls a number of one seat from a bag and the worshiper in that seat wins a cash prize. Two of the churchgoers win $250 and the third gets $500. The church gives away $1,000 each Sunday, Willis said.

The cash prize is part of Willis' recent focus on helping his congregation pay bills and begin a debt-free life, he said.

"We've had soooo many of our people displaced from jobs, facing foreclosure," he said. "When people's faith was high, their debt was down. When their faith was down, their debt was high. I realized the two are connected."

Willis concedes the cash prize is a gimmick to fill the pews. But he's unapologetic about the plan, because it's working. On a typical Sunday, his church draws about 1,600 people to its three Sunday services. But since the money giveaway started, about five weeks ago, the congregation has grown to about 2,500 each week, he said. The money for the giveaway comes from the church offering. Lighthouse is a non-denominational church.

"If I can get someone in here and teach them and give them money, that's what I'm going to do," he said.

As part of the lessons, Willis set up a shredder near the pulpit to encourage church members to shred their credit cards and commit to stop spending. He talks about budgeting, tackling past-due bills and saving. He encourages the prize winners to use the money to pay down their bills, rather than splurge on new items. One Sunday, he gave away 15 savings accounts with $25 already in them. And he had bank representatives at the service so church members could set up accounts.

"The Bible says even an ant stores up in the summer so it can live in the winter," Willis said. "Even an ant can teach us. Even an ant knows how to save. We, with intellect, don't know how to do it. When people see that in Scripture, it takes on a whole different level."

lbowean@tribune.com




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White Horse Inn

Those Wacky Presbyterians

Covenant Presbyterian Church in uber-hip Los Angeles has started a pet-centric worship service.  The linked article says this is something of a mini-trend, crossing denominational boundaries and showing up as “pet blessing” services or “Woof and Worship” services.




It’s easy to write this off as just another bad idea that emanates from a failing evangelicalism, but I wonder if we should pay closer attention to the crying need for community that is expressed by some of the “worshippers” at the Covenant service.  They have traded in family connections for pet connections. As important as those are, they cannot be life-sustaining, no matter what sort of piety we dress them with.

If the pastor and church in question recognized this, the possibilities for true outreach would be significant. Instead, doggie treats are served and the congregation sings a hymn titled, “GoD and DoG.” Sigh.


10 comments:

Anonymous said...

You are a crazy fool.

Anonymous said...

Where does it state that pets are justified? I would become a C&C member before resorting to this major apostasy. What can be the method of baptism, sprinkling or dunking? How orderly is the distribution of communion? Do all the dogs bark when the pastor says "Your sins are forgiven, go in peace". Boy, and I thought that my children made a mess in the pews. I would rather clean Ski's popcorn and Hunter's latte's.

from WELS church lady

Anonymous said...

Imagine how much Church and Change leaders could rake in running their own seating pools at $100 per seat. Problems solved until they decide to build a mega-church. Then they may need to run some mid-week lotteries.

SceleratissimusLutheranus said...

The Papists caught onto the pet services long ago: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rFJ9zK3RdOY

Anonymous said...

Should pastors also study as croupiers? Then they can work in the casinos during hard times.

Anonymous said...

Do NOT give Jeske and Ski any more fool ideas!

Anonymous said...

At my church (WELS), we are issuing prizes -- cash and merchandise -- to whoever brings the most people to church. Our Board of Evangelism chairman gets his company to donate TVs as prizes. He usually wins. I'm not sure what happens to the TVs he wins, though. Not sure what a person would do with a bunch of TVs. Maybe he sells them?? But that's ok, they need the money.

Anonymous said...

Hold the phone! Cash! Merchandise! It is not ok, or anonymous would not have felt the need to share this information. There is only one gift,and one gift only, and that is Faith. "Jesus Priceless Treasure" costs nothing. Second, this is "work righteous" by saying, "If you bring this we will give you this". Someone who cannot measure up to the winner may feel that he can never be good enough in his bringings. It is true that none of us, not even one, is without sin. In the proper context it is fine to invite friends to church. We all need money, but such monies as that will only go to the Devil's work and not the Lord's. I would only advise this WELS member to speak with a pastor at another nearby WELS church.

In Christ
from WELS church lady

Anonymous said...

Nice try WELS church lady, but you do not stand a chance against Boss Satan. He knows that many a member blindly follows their pastor. Too many pastors will throw over the Word of God for more power over their members. While these pastors cannot perform miracles, they can run lotteries for the benefit of those who say, “Show us the money.”

In final analysis, it is like offering candy to an innocent child.

Anonymous said...

Not so wacky, watch C&C introduce "Woof and Worship" services as something original, and an inspiration of theirs.