Church Giving Down More due to COVID-19 Than During Recession, Survey Shows
(RNS) — Sixty-five percent of churches have seen
a decline in giving since mid-March as congregations have halted in-person
services due to the coronavirus, according to a new survey.
The “State of the Plate” survey released
Wednesday (April 22) by the National Association of Evangelicals found that a
third of churches — 34 percent — reported that giving had dropped between 10
percent and 20 percent. About 1 in 5 churches (22 percent) said the decline was
between 30 percent and 50 percent. Almost a tenth of churches (9 percent)
reported a drop of 75 percent or more in giving to their congregations.
Just 8 percent of churches said giving had
increased, and 27 percent reported steady offerings.
The survey conducted between April 8 and April 20
of 1,091 mostly Protestant churches in the U.S. asked church leaders how
COVID-19 shutdowns affected their church’s giving. The research involved
participants such as Christianity Today’s Church Law & Tax and the NAE
Financial Health initiative.
Brian Kluth, who started the State of the Plate
research after the 2008 financial crisis, predicted that the findings could
lead to tighter budgets for congregations and their staff members.
“What’s surprising is they’re much deeper and
far-reaching than what happened in the recession,” he said in an interview,
referring to the Great Recession in the late 2000s. “This is a major shift, a
short-term shift in the financing of churches right now in America.”
In the 2010 State of the Plate survey, 38 percent
of churches reported that general church giving in 2009 was down compared with
the previous year. Thirty-five percent said giving was up and 27 percent said
contributions were flat.
While the new research found greater declines in
giving, almost half (48 percent) of churches that responded to a question about
online viewing of their worship services said it had grown to double or more of
their regular in-person attendance.
“There’s more online viewing that is going on
than ever before,” Kluth said.
Kluth, who also is the national spokesman for the
NAE’s Bless Your Pastor movement, has encouraged churches to find practical
ways to show appreciation to pastors and church staffers. Bless Your Pastor
features a list of 50 ways to do that and is offering church participants steps
— including taking an appreciation offering for their pastor — that could lead
to a grant-funded gift card of $250 for their senior pastors.
In-kind offers of help to clergy and church staffers
will now be Key as congregations work to recover from the financial effects of
COVID-19, he said.
“That’s going to be really important this year
because a lot of churches are going to see their budgets affected and their
payroll,” Kluth said. “So if you’re a barber, cut their hair; if you’re a
mechanic, fix their car; if you grow vegetables, share your vegetables.”
Other research has shown that church closures due
to the coronavirus have affected the bottom line of many churches.
A Billy Graham Center/Exponential/Leadership
Network survey released Tuesday found that 60 percent of pastors have seen a
decrease in giving.
“Most concerning is the 11 percent of pastors and
leaders who replied that giving was down by at least 50 percent,” the report
reads. Nevertheless, that research also showed that a majority of church
leaders reported optimism about their financial situations.
Barna surveyed pastors in late March and found
that almost 8 in 10 (79 percent) reported financial giving had decreased, with
close to half (47 percent) saying it had dropped “significantly.”
Barna also found that a bit more than half of
pastors (54 percent) said online attendance on March 29 was higher than regular
in-person attendance, with a quarter of them describing it as “much higher.”
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