1 / 24

Commission on Stewardship

Commission on Stewardship. GENERATIONAL CONSIDERATIONS AND CHILDREN’S STEWARDSHIP. GENERATIONAL CONSIDERATIONS AND COMMITMENT PROGRAMS. Objectives Acknowledge generation differences Remember the kids Learn the key elements of all successful commitment programs

Télécharger la présentation

Commission on Stewardship

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Commission on Stewardship GENERATIONAL CONSIDERATIONS AND CHILDREN’S STEWARDSHIP

  2. GENERATIONAL CONSIDERATIONS AND COMMITMENT PROGRAMS Objectives • Acknowledge generation differences • Remember the kids • Learn the key elements of all successful commitment programs • Become familiar with five commitment programs

  3. GENERATIONAL CONSIDERATIONS AND COMMITMENT PROGRAMS Objectives • Learn how to select the right program for your parish • Learn where you can get resources

  4. Generational Considerations GenerationBirth YearsEventGiving WW II 1901–1924 WW II 72% SILENTS 1925–1942 A Bomb/ 91% Korea BOOMERS 1943–1960 Vietnam 79% GEN X 1961–1981 Cold War 60% GEN Y 1982–2003 Sept 11 ???

  5. How they played… What, no Gameboy, Playstation, Gamecube, DVD’s, Computers..?

  6. Your parents probably did this… And they called this fun!

  7. And they danced like this…

  8. Your dads wanted to look like this… and if you did, you wouldn’t admit it!

  9. A lot has happened in the last forty years!

  10. Now we’re beginning to feel like this!

  11. Or this…

  12. What we’re called to do…make sense of the world!

  13. My daughter’s boyfriend!!!

  14. Children and Stewardship Will our Children be Stewards? Earliest Recollections of Money -- Response “When I was a child…”

  15. Children and Stewardship Key Facts • Kids see an average 20,000 commercials a year. • Kids as young as 18 months recognize corporate logos and mascots. • Brand loyalty may begin as early as two-years old. • Nearly all spending by or influenced by children is for wants. Needs are taken care of by their parents.

  16. Children and Stewardship Key Facts (Cont.) • More than $15 billion per year is spent on advertising to kids. Source:Carolyn Bigda, “5 Ways to Protect Kids”, Money Magazine March 2005 • Kids age 4 to 12 spent $40 billion in 2002.Source: New American Dream, “Facts About Marketing to Children.” accessed 3/2/2005 • Kids under 12 influenced $500 billion of their parents purchases in 2000. Source: New American Dream, “Facts About Marketing to Children.” accessed 3/2/2005

  17. Children and Stewardship Key Facts • Older kids, 12-19, spent $155 billion in 2001.Source: New American Dream, “Facts About Marketing to Children.” accessed 3/2/2005 • There are 2,350 verses in the Bible about money and possessions.Source: Larry Burkett, The Word on Finances, 1994 • Nag factor: In 2000 children under 12 influenced $500 million in purchases.

  18. On the Top Shelf at My Eye Level

  19. On the Next to Bottom Shelf -- My Five-year Old Grandson’s Eye Level

  20. Children and Stewardship Who Should do the Teaching? • What lessons do our children learn from our culture? advertising? peers? • Where are our children taught about God’s economy? stewardship? • What kind of example do we provide to our kids?

  21. Children and Stewardship Key Facts • Approximately 40% of American families spend more than they earn. • Average credit card debt $2,627 in 2004 • Bankruptcy filings increased from 1.2 to 1.9 per 100,000 between 2000 and 2004. • “...shopaholism stems from an “inner poverty” that can’t be remedied with money and possessions.” Source:AJC 2/27/2005 Business, Christine Van Dusen, “Hooked on Shopping”

  22. Children and Stewardship • Make Sure • Opportunity to make offering each week • Offering envelopes to kids who want them • Honor every gift • Make stewardship a topic in confirmation classes • Provide opportunities for charitable giving • Include Christian Education volunteers in stewardship committee

  23. Children and Stewardship Resources • www.kidsmoney.org • www.livingthegoodnews.com • “Growing A Grateful, Generous Hear”

  24. Children and Stewardship

More Related