Why Your Church Must Move to Both Digital AND Automated Giving Immediately (Interview with Jess Rainer)

Podcast Episode #634

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In a time when most churches are holding virtual services, Thom and Sam speak with Jess Rainer regarding best practices and benefits in moving to both digital and automated giving immediately.

  • What are the definitions of automated giving and digital giving?
  • Talk about how these methods of giving have been a blessing for your church.
  • Help us to understand why these methods of giving are important not only for the pandemic. but for the future.
  • How would you recommend a church leader encourage a senior adult to automated giving? Why might this path be easier than the typical digital giving channels?

Resources mentioned in today’s podcast:


Episode Sponsors

The mission at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary is to glorify the Lord Jesus Christ by equipping students to serve the church and fulfill the Great Commission. The school offers more than 40 different degree programs, including the new Master of Arts in Church Revitalization in partnership with Church Answers and the Revitalization Network. This 37-hour degree is designed to help students move established churches from flatlining to flourishing.

Learn about this program and more by visiting sebts.edu. Where are you going? Southeastern will help you get there.


Feedback

If you have a question you would like answered on the show, fill out the form on the podcast page here at ThomRainer.com. If we use your question,…

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Transgender Activist Sues Masterpiece Cakeshop Owner for Refusing to Bake Gender Transition Cake … Again

Transgender Activist Sues Masterpiece Cakeshop Owner for Refusing to Bake Gender Transition Cake … Again


Baker Jack Phillips finds himself back in court over refusing to sacrifice his sincerely held religious beliefs.

Phillips, who owns Masterpiece CakeShop in Denver, has been sued by Autumn Scardina for refusing to bake a gender-transition cake, CBN News reports.

On the day that the Supreme Court announced that it was going to hear the Phillip’s case against the Colorado Civil Rights Commission, Scardina came into Phillips’ shop and requested a blue and pink gender-transition cake. Phillips refused to bake the cake because he believes that God created humans as male and female. A few months later, Phillips also turned down Scardina’s request for a cake which featured Satan smoking marijuana.

Scardina filed a complaint with the Colorado Civil Rights Commission. Weeks after Phillips’s win at the Supreme Court, the Civil Rights Commission found that he had violated state law. Phillips sued the Civil Rights Commission and eventually many of the state’s charges against him were dismissed.

Now Scardina, who is an attorney, is filing another lawsuit against Phillips over the incident. Instead of appealing the Commission’s decision to dismiss the charges, Scardina is asking for over $100,000 in damages, fines, and attorney’s fees.

Maureen Collins, who is the web writer for the Alliance Defending Freedom, reasserted Phillips’s rights to conduct…

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Click here to read the rest of the story from our content source/partners – Christian Headlines.

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I Still Believe Is Changing Lives in a ‘Radical Way’ amid Pandemic, Jeremy Camp Says

I Still Believe Is Changing Lives in a ‘Radical Way’ amid Pandemic, Jeremy Camp Says


It’s safe to say Jeremy Camp was invested in the new faith-based movie I Still Believe.

In his words, he had given his “blood, sweat and tears” to the project for the previous 18-24 months, re-living a time in his life – the death of his first wife – that was full of bittersweet and tragic emotions.

But he believed it was “all worth it” because of what “God’s gonna do” through the film. 

And then the COVID-19 pandemic hit. I Still Believe (PG) was released in theaters the weekend after President Trump addressed the nation about the coronavirus from the Oval Office. In fact, its first full day in theaters, March 13, was the same day Trump declared a national emergency. 

The film finished No. 1 on opening night and No. 3 for the weekend, yet many moviegoers stayed home. By the next weekend, theaters were closed.   

“I broke down the day it came out, to be quite honest,” Camp told Christian Headlines. “… I kind of walked in a fog [and was] kind of numb for a little while. And I got to the point, honestly, where I just said, ‘OK, Lord, you knew this was going to happen.’”

Camp then began sensing God’s purpose: With the nation in a de-facto lockdown, millions of Americans suddenly needed to be entertained – and they were looking for something new to watch.  

Lionsgate released I Still Believe on premium on-demand March 27, giving those…

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China Shuts Down Zoom Easter Church Service, Detains Church Members

China Shuts Down Zoom Easter Church Service, Detains Church Members


Chinese officials detained multiple members of a congregation on Easter for participating in an online Zoom worship service and even shut off the electricity of one of the church members, according to a new report.

The members of Early Rain Covenant Church were gathering on Zoom on Easter morning when Chinese security officials blocked the meeting on the Internet and took six members into custody from their homes, according to International Christian Concern.

Early Rain is an illegal unregistered church that was shut down by Chinese officials in 2018. Its members have stopped gathering in-person.

Early Rain’s pastor, Wang Yi, last year was sentenced to nine years in prison for “inciting subversion of state power” and “illegal business operations,” although his only crime was to preach the gospel in an unregistered church, supporters say.

A church member told ICC of the Easter meeting, “At that time I was also in the Zoom call, but there was a long period of time where I did not hear a thing. I thought it’s the network connection issue at first, but I soon heard a quarrel erupt. Our coworker Wang Jun was questioning some people, [saying], ‘Who are you to do this [to us]?’”

Church members Wang, Guo Haigang, Wu Wuqing, Jia Xuewei, Zhang Jianqing and Zhang Xudong were detained and later released, ICC reported.

Zhang Jiangqing reportedly was warned by police, “Don’t…

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Click here to read the rest of the story from our content source/partners – Christian Headlines.

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Young Christian Woman and Pregnant Convert Seriously Injured in Eastern Uganda

Young Christian Woman and Pregnant Convert Seriously Injured in Eastern Uganda


NAIROBI, Kenya, April 20, 2020 (Morning Star News) – A young woman who told a Muslim about Christ and a pregnant, formerly Muslim woman beaten for her new faith suffered serious injuries in eastern Uganda, sources said.

Radical Muslims assaulted Lydia Nabirye, the 23-year-old daughter of a Church of God evangelist, on April 7 at about 1 p.m. near Luwooko village, Buwunga Sub-County, Bugiri District, she said.

Nabirye said she shared her faith with a young Muslim woman in early March who subsequently became a Christian. The former Muslim woman, unnamed for security reasons, received threats from her Muslim family due to her new faith, so Nabirye’s family gave her refuge in their home, where six other former Muslims are staying due to threats, she said.

“Her mother knows that her daughter is with me, because we have been close friends with her for more than four years,” Nabirye told Morning Star News by phone. “The family knows about our relationship with her.”

On April 7 Nabirye’s father, Paul Kaikiya, sent her to Bukolwa village to visit another former Muslim who was mourning the loss of a son who had died, and Muslims saw her entering their property, she said.

On her way back, Nabirye was about six miles from the bereaved mother’s home and close to the home of the woman she had recently led to faith in Christ when she was attacked by a group of radical Muslims,…

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Click here to read the rest of the story from our content source/partners – Christian Headlines.

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The quarterback I hope the Cowboys draft: How to trust God’s faithfulness today

North Texas quarterback Mason Fine throws a pass against Rice during an NCAA college football game on Saturday, Nov 23, 2019, in Houston, TX.

I have
now discovered the college quarterback I am hoping the Dallas Cowboys draft
next week.

Even
though my hometown team is set with Dak Prescott, if he is injured, the entire
season could be wrecked if a capable backup is not ready.

My pick would not be Heisman winner Joe Burrow, the phenomenally talented Tua Tagovailoa, or the highly regarded Justin Herbert. I would pick Mason Fine from the University of North Texas.

Why would I sign a quarterback who may not even be drafted and who stands 5’10”?

Because what he has done is such a good predictor of what he will do. And what he has done is nothing short of amazing.

Fine
started studying the position in elementary school. A quarterback camp the
summer before he began the sixth grade taught him the basics of throwing a
football. His family didn’t have the money to hire a quarterback coach or personal
trainer, so his father, who had never played football, worked out with him
incessantly.

He set
all kinds of records in high school, then became Conference USA’s offensive
player of the year twice in college. Now he’s ready to take his game to the pros.

He explains: “My height was a concern in high school and in college. Obviously it’s now a different level with better competition but, humbly, it hasn’t stopped me yet.”

Why remembering the past empowers the present

We are
watching retired doctors and nurses return to the healthcare frontlines to
fight the coronavirus pandemic. Thousands of military retirees who served in
healthcare and related fields are also joining the battle.

Remembering
the past is a powerful way to find hope and strength for the present, a fact
that extends to our spiritual lives as well.

In a recent First15 devotional, Craig Denison asked: “Why is trust so difficult? Why do we have a hard…

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Up to 30 Bishops, Pastors Have Died from COVID-19 in Largest Black Pentecostal Denomination

Up to 30 Bishops, Pastors Have Died from COVID-19 in Largest Black Pentecostal Denomination


The deaths of multiple leaders from COVID-19 have taken a massive toll on the Church of God in Christ (COGIC), the largest black Pentecostal denomination in America.

In an article by The Washington Post, various reports of at least a dozen to up to 30 bishops and prominent clergy have died from COVID-19 in COGIC prominent states including Michigan, New York, and Mississippi.

Prominent COGIC leaders who died include First Assistant Presiding Bishop Phillip A. Brooks of Detroit, who was No. 2 in the COGIC; Mississippi Bishop Timothy Scott, who served the denomination for almost 50 years; and two Michigan bishops, Robert E. Smith Sr. and Robert L. Harris.

Health officials report that possible causes of the outbreak in the COGIC were from conferences and funerals in the denomination.

For instance, large annual gatherings in February and March are held with COGIC representatives from more than 200 jurisdictions —or —regions, while Worker’s Meetings consist of clergy, lay leaders and church staff.

Some of the meetings include the Historical Louisiana First Jurisdiction meeting in Shreveport, La., and the Kansas East Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction Ministers and Workers Conference in Kansas City, both held in mid-March.

The outbreaks have scarred the black community and the COGIC as they are more susceptible to the virus.

“This is a moment of real crisis for them,” said…

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Click here to read the rest of the story from our content source/partners – Christian Headlines.

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Jesus Is the ‘Support You Can Lean On,’ Texas Governor Says in Interview with Pastor Jack Graham

Jesus Is the ‘Support You Can Lean On,’ Texas Governor Says in Interview with Pastor Jack Graham


Texas Gov. Greg Abbott told Pastor Jack Graham, of Prestonwood Baptist Church, that amid the coronavirus pandemic, Jesus is the “support you can lean on that will always be there for you.”

According to The Christian Post, Abbott met with Graham during the church’s online weekend services. He talked about how Jesus has been instrumental in his own life and how he’s learned how to rely on him.

“When I was just 26 years old, I suffered, literally, a back-breaking injury,” Abbott said, of the accident that left him paralyzed.

“It’s a test of your faith,” the governor said. “Why would God allow something like this to happen?”

“But,” he added, “very importantly, I found in the aftermath, that I continued to reach out to God. I found God reach back out to me. And my relationship with God and Jesus Christ grew even closer after that accident.”

Abbott announced last week that he will begin to reopen Texas in phases in the next few weeks. He said he would work with experts on how best to handle the reopening. As part of the announcement, Abbott also said students in Texas would not be returning to school this semester.

“One thing we know is that people really want to get engaged in the world again … it could be going to church, going to work, play activities,” Abbott said. “People are tired of being stuck at home and they want to get back…

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Click here to read the rest of the story from our content source/partners – Christian Headlines.

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Kirk Cameron, Candace Cameron Bure Host ‘Hope Rising’ Virtual Benefit Concert to Fight COVID-19

Kirk Cameron, Candace Cameron Bure Host ‘Hope Rising’ Virtual Benefit Concert to Fight COVID-19


Candace Cameron Bure and her brother, Kirk Cameron, teamed up to host the Hope Rising COVID-19 Benefit Concert on Sunday.

“Our circumstances have pulled us all together as families across the nation,” Kirk Cameron said during the concert. “Right now we are treasuring the people who have the center of our hearts.”

The concert featured Casting Crowns, Mercy Me, Natalie Grant, Matthew West, the Newsboys and others. The speaker lineup included Bishop T.D. Jakes, Kristen Chenoweth, Franklin Graham and Lysa TerKeurst.

“Hope Rising will uplift and inspire by uniting the audience through music and inspirational messages,” Bure said in an interview before the concert. “Plus, despite the challenge of each artist recording this from home, the end result is mind-blowing. There is an amazing energy behind it, and it needs to be seen everywhere.”

The concert will also benefit Samaritan’s Purse, the organization that most recently set up a field hospital in New York City to help with the response to the coronavirus pandemic.

“They are on the front lines helping those affected by COVID-19 but also doing it in Jesus’ name,” she said. “That was important to us as people of faith, to know the good work they are doing also has a purpose to share God’s love.”

Bure says she has been spending the quarantine with her family.

“My husband Val and I had…

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Click here to read the rest of the story from our content source/partners – Christian Headlines.

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Candy Land was created during a crisis: Three ways to change a life today

Candy Land is one of the most popular children’s board games of all time, selling an average of one million units a year. I played it for hours with our kids and have begun doing the same with my grandkids.

But I did not know the story behind the game, a narrative that is remarkably relevant to our time. 

Michelle Hastings plays Candy Land with her daughters in 2007.

In 1948, retired schoolteacher Eleanor Abbott invented the game in a San Diego hospital. She had been diagnosed with polio. During her convalescence, she was surrounded by children suffering from the same horrible disease. She wanted to create a game that would entertain them during their painful and lonely days. 

Candy Land became so popular among the young hospital patients that Abbott decided to pitch it to Milton Bradley, one of the leading toy-manufacturing companies. It quickly became their best-selling board game. 

The game was especially helpful during polio outbreaks. Children left alone in hospitals without their parents would often be overcome with feelings of abandonment and homesickness. But even those as young as three years old could play the game since it requires no reading or writing, only the ability to identify colors. 

During the height of the polio epidemic in the 1950s, children were prohibited from congregating at public pools, lakes, or parks to prevent the spread of the disease. Most board games were designed for all-family play, but Candy Land could be played by children who were confined indoors alone. 

What did Eleanor Abbott do with her royalty income from her best-selling game? 

She donated it entirely to charities dedicated to serving children in need. 

Three ways to change a life (including your own) 

As we wait for social distancing restrictions to ease, we should not waste the days until they do.

As I noted in this morning’s Daily Article (“John Krasinski hosts a national prom”), God knew about this…

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Click Read More to read the rest of the story from our content source/partners – Denison Forum.

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