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Churches Rely On Their Faith

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  • Churches Rely On Their Faith

    CHURCHES RELY ON THEIR FAITH
    By Jason Wells

    Glendale News Press
    October 24, 2008 10:52 PM PDT
    CA

    >From investments to parishioners in need, places of worship find they
    also need help.

    GLENDALE -- When the economy turns south, belts tighten, and for many
    Glendale churches that rely almost entirely on their congregants for
    financial support, the debilitating effects have begun.

    Churches receive no government funding, so what happens to the
    congregation happens to the institution. There are no bailouts, no
    interventions from City Hall to boost subsidies -- just faith-driven
    donations from church-goers who, given recent economic events, may
    have seen their 401(k)s evaporate, lost a job or experienced the
    effects of inflation.

    As a result, churches large and small are grappling with anemic
    donation levels against increased demand for help. Many are simply
    treading water, hoping the down economy will turn. Others are already
    making plans to restructure and make budget cuts. And some have been
    caught completely off guard, finding themselves ill-prepared to help
    a deluge of distressed parishioners.

    "We're trying to survive, day by day," said the Rev. Vazken Atmajian,
    senior pastor at St. Mary's Armenian Apostolic Church, one of the
    largest Armenian churches in Glendale.

    Strain on the church has come mostly in the form of its parishioners,
    many of whom have suffered heavy losses in the stock market or
    are unable to get a financial foothold in the depressed economy,
    Atmajian said.

    "We hear stories on a daily basis; it's heartbreaking," he said.

    In better times, St. Mary's would have been able to offer comprehensive
    support, but not now, Atmajian said. Some congregants are being
    referred to the Armenian Relief Society or other nonprofits for
    assistance.

    "We didn't have any plans," he said. "Everything was rosy and fine. No
    one could have known."

    Some churches are experiencing the effects of the recent market
    turmoil in ways that will require a total reorganization.

    First United Methodist Church of Glendale has seen a significant
    decline in the value of its investment portfolio, forcing the church to
    undergo a painful round of budget cuts, the Rev. Richard Garner said.

    A $17-million market investment made in 2006 after a property sell-off
    is now down 16%, choking a valuable revenue stream, Garner said.

    As the church prepares to adopt a new budget for Jan. 1, administrators
    will likely have to cut back 12% to 15%, he said.

    Although he declined to say what form those cutbacks would take,
    Garner said the economic pressures come as the congregation was already
    planning to reposition its ministry to focus more on holistic healing
    and community outreach.

    "We will work through this and find our way into the future doing
    ministry that is just as significant for the people who do it as it
    is for the people who receive it," he said.

    Even for churches that have so far managed to escape any major
    financial hit, long-term forecasts are looking darker.

    Glendale Presbyterian Church shares its campus with two other
    congregations that contribute to help offset maintenance and operations
    costs. The church even has an endowment fund that acts as a "little
    bit of a financial cushion," said the church's senior pastor, the
    Rev. Craig Hall.

    Still, there's a desire among church officials to look at next fiscal
    year "more realistically," instead of assuming tithing levels will
    remain at current levels, he added.

    "We're really looking the other way and coming up with contingency
    plans based on the fact that we don't know," Hall said.

    Smaller churches, like the 100-member Light on the Corner Church in
    Montrose, may have less to worry about in terms of asset management
    and declining investment returns, but they are nonetheless vulnerable,
    said the church's pastor, Jon Karn.

    The church encourages a "holy boldness" about giving and has so far not
    seen tithing or donations drop among a relatively modest congregation,
    he said.

    "And we are rejoicing in the Lord about that," Karn said.

    It is that religious commitment, the power of faith, that puts the
    long-term viability of churches and their ministries in a unique
    position during economic downturns, religious leaders said. Despite
    the current economic worries, pastors said more and more congregations
    no longer see tithing as a discretionary expense due to their faith
    in a church's ministry.

    The days of religious consumerism or people dropping in for Sunday
    sermons when times get tough "are long, long past," Hall said. "It's
    an important part of their lives, so they'll do whatever they can to
    keep it going."
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