By Paula Schlueter Ross
“Fan Into Flame” — the Synodwide campaign to raise $100 million by 2010 to support the worldwide evangelism effort known as Ablaze! — is officially off and running.
Rolled out early this year as a pilot in
It is, according to Campaign Coordinator Tom Ries, the largest direct-gift campaign ever conducted in The Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod.
It also is “unique,” says Ries, president of the LCMS Foundation, which is overseeing the campaign’s fundraising activities.
What makes it different from other LCMS campaigns?
- Districts and congregations that contribute to “Fan Into Flame” receive back a portion of the funds they collect. These 15 percent “distributions” — received four times a year by each congregation and each district office — are to be used for local Ablaze!-related outreach projects.
Congregations are encouraged to use these funds for such things as equipping their members to share their faith with others, conducting demographic studies to identify mission opportunities, or starting “daughter” congregations.
District projects may include “planting” new ministries or enhancing the outreach ministries of existing congregations — anything that helps the Synod meet its North American Ablaze! goals of reaching 50 million people with the Gospel and starting 2,000 new ministries in the United States by 2017, the 500th anniversary of the Reformation.
The worldwide Ablaze! initiative — which has been shared with LCMS partner-church bodies in nearly 30 countries and includes the North American goals above — seeks to reach a total of 100 million people with the Gospel by 2017. Both Ablaze! and its fundraising counterpart, “Fan Into Flame,” were authorized by LCMS convention delegates in 2004.
- The “congregational phase” is being introduced gradually, within a few districts at a time, rather than all at once Synodwide.
Texas and South Wisconsin — the only two LCMS districts as yet involved in “Fan Into Flame” — are in the midst of their campaigns, which means that some of their congregations have finished, some are still involved, and others have not yet started.
Next year, eight more districts are expected to launch their campaigns. They will be followed by another 10 to 14 districts in 2008, and, in 2009, districts that have not yet participated will be encouraged to get involved, according to Ries, who expects all 35 LCMS districts to take part.
“That’s our intent, and it’s our belief that they will,” he said.
Ries describes “Fan Into Flame” as “an opportunity to strengthen outreach projects in every corner of the Synod.” It’s designed, he said, to encourage congregations, districts, and mission partners worldwide “to think through, ‘If we had some extra dollars, what would we do with those?’ ”
And, lest anyone discount “Fan Into Flame” as “just another fundraising campaign,” Ries says he’s amazed at how the Synod’s major donors and congregation members are responding so far.
“They’re excited about the fact that it represents outreach from our Synod, and it is funding outreach-related projects,” Ries said. “That’s a very exciting thing.”
Among major donors, several have made large contributions to “Fan Into Flame,” including a pledged gift of property worth approximately $2 million and a cash gift of $500,000.
Congregations that have conducted the campaigns also are seeing big results, he said.
St. John Lutheran Church in Lincoln, Texas, raised more than 300 percent of its $25,000 goal — a total of $77,300!
“God worked through the St. John members and opened their hearts to give generously,” St. John Pastor Dale Bohm told Reporter. The 135-family congregation “saw the opportunity to spread the Gospel not only locally, but also in the Texas District, The Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod, and to the ends of the earth,” said Bohm.
The St. John congregation used its “Fan Into Flame” distribution to purchase additional materials and expand its vacation Bible school program to the community. As a result, 61 non-members joined 25 member children “for a great VBS,” he said.
The congregation also is training its members in personal evangelism, and each member — adults and children alike — has been challenged to share his or her faith with at least four others.
In Sullivan, Wis., St. John Lutheran Church doubled its “Fan Into Flame” goal three weeks before it completed its 12-week campaign and also saw an increase in regular giving.
The congregation recruited a committee of six people with “a heart for missions and the gift of giving,” according to St. John Pastor Dean Zemple. “These individuals served as our leaders who set the tone within our congregation with their enthusiasm for ‘Fan Into Flame.’ “
Zemple said the congregation used the campaign material “to inform our members over and over again about our Synod’s mission work.” The message was repeated in worship services, newsletters, special mailings, and small-group gatherings, he said, “to help our members grasp the importance of ‘Fan Into Flame.’”
Each member family received a pledge card and was encouraged to:
- Pray that God’s Word would reach the lost.
- Take part in small-group Ablaze! gatherings.
- Provide a portion of their financial resources above their regular offerings.
“As our members’ hearts were moved by God’s Word, they saw the need for our church to reach lost people for Christ,” Zemple said.
“By God’s grace, we were amazed to see our people respond. Not only did we double our original goal set for ‘Fan Into Flame,’ but we also saw our regular weekly giving increase. By the end of the campaign … our weekly offerings were ahead of our weekly needs for our ministry plan.”
Rev. Ken Hennings, Texas District president and a spokesman for the “Fan Into Flame” effort there, says the district also has the potential for exceeding its $4.5 million goal. More than $2 million has been received from congregations so far, as well as another $1.5 million in major gifts, and a fourth of the district’s congregations won’t even begin their campaigns until next year.
The district’s first campaign distribution of $5,470.