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Generosity
Women Would Give More If You Followed This 5-Step Approach

Women Would Give More If You Followed This 5-Step Approach

Women compose the majority of churches and manage the majority of checkbooks. But we often fail to think about how to help them give. Here's a proven 5-step approach.

CHURCH TECH PODCAST
Tithely media icon
TV
Modern Church leader
Category
Generosity
Publish date
April 2, 2019
Author
Paul Maxwell

In over half of families, women control the checkbook.

Kadi Cole notes in her recent book Developing Female Leaders:

  • 61% of church members are female
  • 54% of female leaders do not feel supported by other male leaders in the church
  • Female leaders carry 75% of home life tasks
  • 54% of women believe that church leadership opportunities help women who are also mothers

According to a recent Glassdoor report, women are out-earning men in male-dominated jobs such as military officer, merchandiser, research specialist, and communications.

Practically speaking, for your church, this means that women are earning a lot and making many financial decisions in the family.

One of the most important decisions Christian women in the church will make is how much to give to the church.

Tithing is a core element of Christian discipleship.

If you are a church carrying out God’s mission, you will be developing generous female givers.

Every church that pastors women is obligated to help them learn to be financially wise and generous with their time, money, and resources.

Below are five proven strategies that help women become more generous in the church.

1. Put women in leadership positions in your church

This doesn’t mean that you put every single female in your church into a leadership position.

But you should be actively putting women in as many leadership positions as possible.

This means that you ought to be proactively providing women with opportunities to discover what their gifts are.

This also means that you should be cultivating the gifts that women in your church have by providing training opportunities to hone and optimize their gifts to be maximally effective in your church.

Even if your church theologically reserves the office of ordained pastor for men, take this principle into consideration:

A non-ordained woman can do everything a non-ordained man can do — even if you are complementarian.

As every pastor knows, leadership and ordination are not the same thing.

This has two important implications.

In churches that do ordain women, you should cultivate a culture that celebrates women and men alike.

1. In churches that do not ordain women, you should create every opportunity possible to invest in making women more skillful contributors to the church.

If women feel valued, they will want to give.

Generosity isn’t just about obligation.

Generosity at its best grows naturally from participation.

A soccer player who is needed by his team will give more on the field than the water boy who wishes he was able to play.

Begin by valuing women as leads  to help them discover their strengths, and then train them to become contributors.

When women feel like they belong and are valued, they will want to give.

2. Ask women what church programs they care about

If you want women to give, you need to understand what the women in your church want to give to.

Don’t try to reverse engineer generous female givers by guessing what might get them excited about giving and creating it. Create a special breakfast just for women in your church and ask them this sequence of questions:

  • What would make you excited to give?
  • What do you wish existed in our church?
  • What would you be excited to create and support?
  • How can we optimize the current programs we offer to meet those same needs?
  • Will you give to them if we create/optimize in these ways?

Even if this meeting merely begins a conversation, women will feel appreciated and heard.

When you have meetings like this, you elevate tithing from a burden to women into an opportunity for women.

3. Theologically educate women in your church

Tithing is an essential part of belonging to the church.

The more women understand the character of God, the mission of the church, and the kind of family God wants to create, they will be compelled to partner with you.

4. Focus your church programming on missions and family

Single women tend to want missions-oriented programs.

Married women tend to want family-oriented programs.

Having both kinds of programs in place will give each population of women in your church an opportunity to give toward something that God has placed on their hearts.

5. Women who feel like they are valued will give value

Don’t keep women silent in the church.

It is every Christian’s duty to be generous, and it is the church’s duty to help women be excellent generous.

It’s odd when churches expect women to bear all the responsibilities of a church, but receive none of the opportunities.

Making women feel valuable shouldn’t be hard, because women in the church are extremely valuable.

Women are very often taken for granted.

Don’t try to guilt women into giving by strong-arming them with a theological argument.

Women who feel valued will want to give back.

It’s not their job to give first.

Pro tip: Use Kadi’s evaluation criteria on pp. 134-139 to evaluate how your unique church can best advance women into leadership positions.

It’s the church’s job to invest in women, cherish their value, and give them opportunities to connect and serve to their full capacity. Churches who do this will develop generous female givers more than any church that kicks their efforts to a women’s Bible study on generosity or great women of the Bible.

Over to you

If you want a sure-fire way to suppress female giving, be really stingy with leadership, investment, or training.

Generosity is an outflow of connectedness.

This is how you develop generous female givers.

People want to invest in places where they belong and feel valued.

If you do can achieve this, you will have so many women who want to give that you will have the beautiful problem of having more money than you know how to manage and more church volunteers than you know how to administrate.

You will need a church management solution to deal with these complexities that come with more money and more volunteers.

The best solution for your church is Tithe.ly’s Church Management.

It enables you to organize groups, send push notifications with updates and changes, automate digital giving in your church, and give women the opportunities they long for which compel them to give to a mission they believe in.

This is the key to cultivating generous female leaders in the church:

  • Value them
  • Invest in them
  • Trust them
  • Support them
  • Get Tithe.ly ChMS

For more on this topic, check out this interview with Kadi Cole, author of Deveoloping Female Leaders:


AUTHOR

Paul Maxwell, Ph.D., is the Content Strategist at Tithe.ly. Find him at paulmaxwell.co.

In over half of families, women control the checkbook.

Kadi Cole notes in her recent book Developing Female Leaders:

  • 61% of church members are female
  • 54% of female leaders do not feel supported by other male leaders in the church
  • Female leaders carry 75% of home life tasks
  • 54% of women believe that church leadership opportunities help women who are also mothers

According to a recent Glassdoor report, women are out-earning men in male-dominated jobs such as military officer, merchandiser, research specialist, and communications.

Practically speaking, for your church, this means that women are earning a lot and making many financial decisions in the family.

One of the most important decisions Christian women in the church will make is how much to give to the church.

Tithing is a core element of Christian discipleship.

If you are a church carrying out God’s mission, you will be developing generous female givers.

Every church that pastors women is obligated to help them learn to be financially wise and generous with their time, money, and resources.

Below are five proven strategies that help women become more generous in the church.

1. Put women in leadership positions in your church

This doesn’t mean that you put every single female in your church into a leadership position.

But you should be actively putting women in as many leadership positions as possible.

This means that you ought to be proactively providing women with opportunities to discover what their gifts are.

This also means that you should be cultivating the gifts that women in your church have by providing training opportunities to hone and optimize their gifts to be maximally effective in your church.

Even if your church theologically reserves the office of ordained pastor for men, take this principle into consideration:

A non-ordained woman can do everything a non-ordained man can do — even if you are complementarian.

As every pastor knows, leadership and ordination are not the same thing.

This has two important implications.

In churches that do ordain women, you should cultivate a culture that celebrates women and men alike.

1. In churches that do not ordain women, you should create every opportunity possible to invest in making women more skillful contributors to the church.

If women feel valued, they will want to give.

Generosity isn’t just about obligation.

Generosity at its best grows naturally from participation.

A soccer player who is needed by his team will give more on the field than the water boy who wishes he was able to play.

Begin by valuing women as leads  to help them discover their strengths, and then train them to become contributors.

When women feel like they belong and are valued, they will want to give.

2. Ask women what church programs they care about

If you want women to give, you need to understand what the women in your church want to give to.

Don’t try to reverse engineer generous female givers by guessing what might get them excited about giving and creating it. Create a special breakfast just for women in your church and ask them this sequence of questions:

  • What would make you excited to give?
  • What do you wish existed in our church?
  • What would you be excited to create and support?
  • How can we optimize the current programs we offer to meet those same needs?
  • Will you give to them if we create/optimize in these ways?

Even if this meeting merely begins a conversation, women will feel appreciated and heard.

When you have meetings like this, you elevate tithing from a burden to women into an opportunity for women.

3. Theologically educate women in your church

Tithing is an essential part of belonging to the church.

The more women understand the character of God, the mission of the church, and the kind of family God wants to create, they will be compelled to partner with you.

4. Focus your church programming on missions and family

Single women tend to want missions-oriented programs.

Married women tend to want family-oriented programs.

Having both kinds of programs in place will give each population of women in your church an opportunity to give toward something that God has placed on their hearts.

5. Women who feel like they are valued will give value

Don’t keep women silent in the church.

It is every Christian’s duty to be generous, and it is the church’s duty to help women be excellent generous.

It’s odd when churches expect women to bear all the responsibilities of a church, but receive none of the opportunities.

Making women feel valuable shouldn’t be hard, because women in the church are extremely valuable.

Women are very often taken for granted.

Don’t try to guilt women into giving by strong-arming them with a theological argument.

Women who feel valued will want to give back.

It’s not their job to give first.

Pro tip: Use Kadi’s evaluation criteria on pp. 134-139 to evaluate how your unique church can best advance women into leadership positions.

It’s the church’s job to invest in women, cherish their value, and give them opportunities to connect and serve to their full capacity. Churches who do this will develop generous female givers more than any church that kicks their efforts to a women’s Bible study on generosity or great women of the Bible.

Over to you

If you want a sure-fire way to suppress female giving, be really stingy with leadership, investment, or training.

Generosity is an outflow of connectedness.

This is how you develop generous female givers.

People want to invest in places where they belong and feel valued.

If you do can achieve this, you will have so many women who want to give that you will have the beautiful problem of having more money than you know how to manage and more church volunteers than you know how to administrate.

You will need a church management solution to deal with these complexities that come with more money and more volunteers.

The best solution for your church is Tithe.ly’s Church Management.

It enables you to organize groups, send push notifications with updates and changes, automate digital giving in your church, and give women the opportunities they long for which compel them to give to a mission they believe in.

This is the key to cultivating generous female leaders in the church:

  • Value them
  • Invest in them
  • Trust them
  • Support them
  • Get Tithe.ly ChMS

For more on this topic, check out this interview with Kadi Cole, author of Deveoloping Female Leaders:


podcast transcript

(Scroll for more)
AUTHOR

Paul Maxwell, Ph.D., is the Content Strategist at Tithe.ly. Find him at paulmaxwell.co.

In over half of families, women control the checkbook.

Kadi Cole notes in her recent book Developing Female Leaders:

  • 61% of church members are female
  • 54% of female leaders do not feel supported by other male leaders in the church
  • Female leaders carry 75% of home life tasks
  • 54% of women believe that church leadership opportunities help women who are also mothers

According to a recent Glassdoor report, women are out-earning men in male-dominated jobs such as military officer, merchandiser, research specialist, and communications.

Practically speaking, for your church, this means that women are earning a lot and making many financial decisions in the family.

One of the most important decisions Christian women in the church will make is how much to give to the church.

Tithing is a core element of Christian discipleship.

If you are a church carrying out God’s mission, you will be developing generous female givers.

Every church that pastors women is obligated to help them learn to be financially wise and generous with their time, money, and resources.

Below are five proven strategies that help women become more generous in the church.

1. Put women in leadership positions in your church

This doesn’t mean that you put every single female in your church into a leadership position.

But you should be actively putting women in as many leadership positions as possible.

This means that you ought to be proactively providing women with opportunities to discover what their gifts are.

This also means that you should be cultivating the gifts that women in your church have by providing training opportunities to hone and optimize their gifts to be maximally effective in your church.

Even if your church theologically reserves the office of ordained pastor for men, take this principle into consideration:

A non-ordained woman can do everything a non-ordained man can do — even if you are complementarian.

As every pastor knows, leadership and ordination are not the same thing.

This has two important implications.

In churches that do ordain women, you should cultivate a culture that celebrates women and men alike.

1. In churches that do not ordain women, you should create every opportunity possible to invest in making women more skillful contributors to the church.

If women feel valued, they will want to give.

Generosity isn’t just about obligation.

Generosity at its best grows naturally from participation.

A soccer player who is needed by his team will give more on the field than the water boy who wishes he was able to play.

Begin by valuing women as leads  to help them discover their strengths, and then train them to become contributors.

When women feel like they belong and are valued, they will want to give.

2. Ask women what church programs they care about

If you want women to give, you need to understand what the women in your church want to give to.

Don’t try to reverse engineer generous female givers by guessing what might get them excited about giving and creating it. Create a special breakfast just for women in your church and ask them this sequence of questions:

  • What would make you excited to give?
  • What do you wish existed in our church?
  • What would you be excited to create and support?
  • How can we optimize the current programs we offer to meet those same needs?
  • Will you give to them if we create/optimize in these ways?

Even if this meeting merely begins a conversation, women will feel appreciated and heard.

When you have meetings like this, you elevate tithing from a burden to women into an opportunity for women.

3. Theologically educate women in your church

Tithing is an essential part of belonging to the church.

The more women understand the character of God, the mission of the church, and the kind of family God wants to create, they will be compelled to partner with you.

4. Focus your church programming on missions and family

Single women tend to want missions-oriented programs.

Married women tend to want family-oriented programs.

Having both kinds of programs in place will give each population of women in your church an opportunity to give toward something that God has placed on their hearts.

5. Women who feel like they are valued will give value

Don’t keep women silent in the church.

It is every Christian’s duty to be generous, and it is the church’s duty to help women be excellent generous.

It’s odd when churches expect women to bear all the responsibilities of a church, but receive none of the opportunities.

Making women feel valuable shouldn’t be hard, because women in the church are extremely valuable.

Women are very often taken for granted.

Don’t try to guilt women into giving by strong-arming them with a theological argument.

Women who feel valued will want to give back.

It’s not their job to give first.

Pro tip: Use Kadi’s evaluation criteria on pp. 134-139 to evaluate how your unique church can best advance women into leadership positions.

It’s the church’s job to invest in women, cherish their value, and give them opportunities to connect and serve to their full capacity. Churches who do this will develop generous female givers more than any church that kicks their efforts to a women’s Bible study on generosity or great women of the Bible.

Over to you

If you want a sure-fire way to suppress female giving, be really stingy with leadership, investment, or training.

Generosity is an outflow of connectedness.

This is how you develop generous female givers.

People want to invest in places where they belong and feel valued.

If you do can achieve this, you will have so many women who want to give that you will have the beautiful problem of having more money than you know how to manage and more church volunteers than you know how to administrate.

You will need a church management solution to deal with these complexities that come with more money and more volunteers.

The best solution for your church is Tithe.ly’s Church Management.

It enables you to organize groups, send push notifications with updates and changes, automate digital giving in your church, and give women the opportunities they long for which compel them to give to a mission they believe in.

This is the key to cultivating generous female leaders in the church:

  • Value them
  • Invest in them
  • Trust them
  • Support them
  • Get Tithe.ly ChMS

For more on this topic, check out this interview with Kadi Cole, author of Deveoloping Female Leaders:


VIDEO transcript

(Scroll for more)

In over half of families, women control the checkbook.

Kadi Cole notes in her recent book Developing Female Leaders:

  • 61% of church members are female
  • 54% of female leaders do not feel supported by other male leaders in the church
  • Female leaders carry 75% of home life tasks
  • 54% of women believe that church leadership opportunities help women who are also mothers

According to a recent Glassdoor report, women are out-earning men in male-dominated jobs such as military officer, merchandiser, research specialist, and communications.

Practically speaking, for your church, this means that women are earning a lot and making many financial decisions in the family.

One of the most important decisions Christian women in the church will make is how much to give to the church.

Tithing is a core element of Christian discipleship.

If you are a church carrying out God’s mission, you will be developing generous female givers.

Every church that pastors women is obligated to help them learn to be financially wise and generous with their time, money, and resources.

Below are five proven strategies that help women become more generous in the church.

1. Put women in leadership positions in your church

This doesn’t mean that you put every single female in your church into a leadership position.

But you should be actively putting women in as many leadership positions as possible.

This means that you ought to be proactively providing women with opportunities to discover what their gifts are.

This also means that you should be cultivating the gifts that women in your church have by providing training opportunities to hone and optimize their gifts to be maximally effective in your church.

Even if your church theologically reserves the office of ordained pastor for men, take this principle into consideration:

A non-ordained woman can do everything a non-ordained man can do — even if you are complementarian.

As every pastor knows, leadership and ordination are not the same thing.

This has two important implications.

In churches that do ordain women, you should cultivate a culture that celebrates women and men alike.

1. In churches that do not ordain women, you should create every opportunity possible to invest in making women more skillful contributors to the church.

If women feel valued, they will want to give.

Generosity isn’t just about obligation.

Generosity at its best grows naturally from participation.

A soccer player who is needed by his team will give more on the field than the water boy who wishes he was able to play.

Begin by valuing women as leads  to help them discover their strengths, and then train them to become contributors.

When women feel like they belong and are valued, they will want to give.

2. Ask women what church programs they care about

If you want women to give, you need to understand what the women in your church want to give to.

Don’t try to reverse engineer generous female givers by guessing what might get them excited about giving and creating it. Create a special breakfast just for women in your church and ask them this sequence of questions:

  • What would make you excited to give?
  • What do you wish existed in our church?
  • What would you be excited to create and support?
  • How can we optimize the current programs we offer to meet those same needs?
  • Will you give to them if we create/optimize in these ways?

Even if this meeting merely begins a conversation, women will feel appreciated and heard.

When you have meetings like this, you elevate tithing from a burden to women into an opportunity for women.

3. Theologically educate women in your church

Tithing is an essential part of belonging to the church.

The more women understand the character of God, the mission of the church, and the kind of family God wants to create, they will be compelled to partner with you.

4. Focus your church programming on missions and family

Single women tend to want missions-oriented programs.

Married women tend to want family-oriented programs.

Having both kinds of programs in place will give each population of women in your church an opportunity to give toward something that God has placed on their hearts.

5. Women who feel like they are valued will give value

Don’t keep women silent in the church.

It is every Christian’s duty to be generous, and it is the church’s duty to help women be excellent generous.

It’s odd when churches expect women to bear all the responsibilities of a church, but receive none of the opportunities.

Making women feel valuable shouldn’t be hard, because women in the church are extremely valuable.

Women are very often taken for granted.

Don’t try to guilt women into giving by strong-arming them with a theological argument.

Women who feel valued will want to give back.

It’s not their job to give first.

Pro tip: Use Kadi’s evaluation criteria on pp. 134-139 to evaluate how your unique church can best advance women into leadership positions.

It’s the church’s job to invest in women, cherish their value, and give them opportunities to connect and serve to their full capacity. Churches who do this will develop generous female givers more than any church that kicks their efforts to a women’s Bible study on generosity or great women of the Bible.

Over to you

If you want a sure-fire way to suppress female giving, be really stingy with leadership, investment, or training.

Generosity is an outflow of connectedness.

This is how you develop generous female givers.

People want to invest in places where they belong and feel valued.

If you do can achieve this, you will have so many women who want to give that you will have the beautiful problem of having more money than you know how to manage and more church volunteers than you know how to administrate.

You will need a church management solution to deal with these complexities that come with more money and more volunteers.

The best solution for your church is Tithe.ly’s Church Management.

It enables you to organize groups, send push notifications with updates and changes, automate digital giving in your church, and give women the opportunities they long for which compel them to give to a mission they believe in.

This is the key to cultivating generous female leaders in the church:

  • Value them
  • Invest in them
  • Trust them
  • Support them
  • Get Tithe.ly ChMS

For more on this topic, check out this interview with Kadi Cole, author of Deveoloping Female Leaders:


AUTHOR

Paul Maxwell, Ph.D., is the Content Strategist at Tithe.ly. Find him at paulmaxwell.co.

Category
Generosity
Publish date
April 2, 2019
Author
Paul Maxwell
Category

Women Would Give More If You Followed This 5-Step Approach

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