Category: Worldview

  • Financial Integrity for YWAM Leaders

    Financial Integrity for YWAM Leaders

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

     

    In the summer of 1973, I found myself in a most uncomfortable position—in more ways than one.  I was lying on my face in the gravel of the garden of a Japanese youth hostel, wondering what passers by were thinking.  I was not alone.  There were about 60 other YWAMers with me who comprised most of the YWAM leaders at the time. Loren Cunningham and Joy Dawson were leading the session in which God had spoken to us about “robbing Him.”  The scripture that had been burned into our hearts was Malachi 3:9:

    “You are under a curse, the whole nation of you, because you are robbing me.”  

    God was specifically dealing with us about misusing designated funds.  He saw it as robbery, and we knew we were in big trouble! 

    Every person there repented of at least one specific financial transgression and we spent several uncomfortable hours in deep conviction.  At the end of the afternoon the heaviness of conviction was replaced with the joy of forgiveness and cleansing.  We had all learned a lesson we would never forget.

    In my case, I had to repent of sloppy accounting that led to wrong decisions.  A few months earlier an anonymous donor gave us a gift designated for buying a mini-bus.  The gift was generous, but not enough to buy the vehicle so we put it in our bank account and prayed that God would provide further so we could make the purchase.  The weeks had rolled by and we ran out of money for food and rent and, because we had not set that money aside, it was spent.  I was vaguely aware that we were in danger of doing that, but our accounts were not up-to-date, and I did not know when we began to spend the money that should have been set aside.  Though I was not the accountant, as the leader I was responsible for our financial decisions.

    That was a long time ago and there have been many other lessons learned since then.  Sometimes I forget that God had to use hard and dramatic circumstances to teach me this and other lessons.  I can begin to assume that every YWAMer who makes financial decisions will somehow understand the important principles of integrity in money matters.  But in recent months, God has sent us a clear word of conviction that we have fallen short of what we perceive to be God’s standard for financial integrity.

    Much could be written on this subject, but I want to concentrate in this article on a few of the most important subjects for YWAM leaders.

    The first one is related to my opening story – keeping good, clear accounts. When Loren and Darlene first sent my wife, Marti, and me out to lead a team they only gave us a few instructions, but one was, “Keep clear, thorough accounts! Marti [who had been Loren’s secretary] can do that, but as soon as possible you should put someone else in charge of accounting. You need to keep yourself from any accusations and if your wife oversees the accounts, you won’t be safe enough.” We were careful to do that.

    GOOD ACCOUNTS

    Keeping a good, up-to-date set of accounts in YWAM is a walk of faith. You have to ask God and believe that He will send you people who can do that. This is the responsibility of the leader and of high priority.

    I know the consequences of not having a bookkeeper. Likewise, I know what happens when the bookkeeper you do have is not competent. Under either of these circumstances you don’t have the information you need to make good decisions and that leads to poor stewardship and even “robbing God” by misusing money.

    Sometimes YWAM bases do not have an accountant and so they hire someone to keep the books for them. In my opinion this is an acceptable course of action and often necessary when the base/campus is large and the accounts are complex. 

    PROTECTION FOR LEADERS

    Many of the best financial practices are designed to provide protection against accusation and temptation. Both are issues worthy of serious thought.

    For example, it is wise for a leader to set in place procedures that prevent him or her from making solo financial decisions. I make it a point to a have a person of good character and strong personality present for any non-routine financial decisions I make. That person has access to all accounts and is familiar with the overall picture, so they are able to be a check and balance for me. It is sometimes frustrating to be convinced that some expenditure is important only to find that you cannot convince the person to approve of it with you. If this situation arises you might even need someone else to act as a third decision maker in this process. Even if it is inconvenient to include others, we still need to avoid making major financial decisions on our own.

    When I first joined YWAM in the late 60s and early 70s if I had to attend a leadership team meeting or had to travel with an outreach team the cost of that came from my own support. After the first few years, as the costs were steadily rising, and the need for travel increased, all of us in a leadership role were struggling financially. We talked and prayed together and decided with much caution that, where possible, “obligatory travel” would be met by the bases we had established, usually through tithes or other giving.

    However, once you start that procedure it becomes very difficult to know where to draw the line. If I, as the senior leader, have those expenses met what happens when there are three or four – or even 15 or 20 – people on the base who have “obligatory travel” expenses. There are no easy answers, and any policy about this will need to be reviewed and changed on occasion. That process of review will need to be open and transparent.

    TRANSPARENCY

    Transparency is an important guiding value when it comes to financial stewardship. I find it useful from time-to-time to ask myself the following question: “Have I made any financial decisions that I would not want staff, students [or supporters where applicable] to know about?” I should always be able to answer that question with a resounding NO. That means I have no “special accounts” that I benefit from or that are used solely at my discretion.

    It is also wise for a leader or team of leaders to have regular meetings where the finances of the base or team are explained to the staff, where questions and discussion are encouraged. If this doesn’t seem like a good idea to you, I suggest you ask yourself why.

    PUBLIC AND LEGAL ACCOUNTABILITY

    In most countries YWAM has to be registered as a non-profit or a charitable non-governmental organisation. Those countries that provide for such registration will have regulations that require independent, annual audits for any such organization with substantial income. Even if you are not able to incorporate in that way [because of being in a restrictive country for example] or if your income is below the amount where an audit us required it is still wise to have an independent review done by someone with financial abilities. Every YWAM operating location should be able to point to someone of good reputation and financial skill and reasonable independence to vouch for the truthfulness and accuracy of the accounts.

    RESPONDING TO ACCUSATION

    Finally, if anyone does happen to accuse a YWAM leader of mishandling money, that leader should not have to defend themselves. He or she should be supported by their leader and the person or company that performed the audit or review. Of course, a leader can only appeal to others to defend them if they have been open about the finances and made the accounts available to others’ input. YWAM leaders should never find themselves in a position where they are under accusation over financial matters and have no one to defend them.

    If, after an accusation has been examined, that process confirms that a leader has misused finances, it must be taken very seriously.  The leaders of that leader must immediately act to right that which is wrong, make restitution where necessary and restore that leader to full fellowship with the body of Christ. 

    In a recent prophetic word given to us, lack of financial integrity was listed as one of the main reasons that God has not kept His full anointing on Youth with a Mission. If we are going to come back to a place of authority and powerful anointing then we must realign ourselves to His ways in every part of YWAM, especially among leadership.

    I would urge you to give careful thought to the principles I’ve outlined above, evaluate how your base or team is doing and if you are responsible to other leaders sit down and talk this through with them.  Let us all come back to a place of financial transparency and integrity.

    Thank you for reading.

    In His Peace,

    Lynn Green.

  • Keep on Growing – Day 3

    Keep on Growing – Day 3

    Photo by Fares Hamouche on Unsplash

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

    A few years ago, I had the opportunity to have a quiet retreat in a very special place:  The Western Desert of Egypt.  You might have heard some places described as a “thin place”.  It might be a particular church or property or even a region.  There is no doubt that the Western Desert is a thin place.

    That is, it is a place where the “veil” that separates us from the spiritual realm is very thin.  Another way to say it is that the Western Desert is a great place to seek God’s presence because He seems to be particularly near.

    That is because women and men have sought God in this region, sometimes in isolation and often in monasteries, for centuries.  They have lived lives totally dedicated to God and many have been martyred over the centuries as a result of the ebb and flow of anti-Christian sentiment.

    During my short retreat, I wrote three brief devotionals which will be posted over the next few days.

    DAY THREE

    The motivation of self (we might also call it ego) is to seek glory and honour.  Jesus made it very clear that if we succeed in our hunt for glory, then we have had our reward and none awaits us in eternity.  It is quite possible to live an apparently godly life with many good works, fasting, prayer and much sacrifice—all to no lasting benefit.

    Mat 6:1  “Be careful not to do your ‘acts of righteousness’ before men, to be seen by them. If you do, you will have no reward from your Father in heaven.

    Mat 6:2  “So when you give to the needy, do not announce it with trumpets, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and on the streets, to be honored by men. I tell you the truth, they have received their reward in full.

    Mat 6:5  “And when you pray, do not be like the hypocrites, for they love to pray standing in the synagogues and on the street corners to be seen by men. I tell you the truth, they have received their reward in full.”

    It is essential that we realize that our egos are in direct competition with the work of the Holy Spirit in our lives.  He wants us to live a life that brings honor and glory to Jesus Christ.  But our egos demand and are offended if we don’t get glory.  When we do get honor and praise for our righteous acts, then the spiritual and eternal reward to which we should have been entitled is squandered; spiritual growth comes to a halt and our good works can easily become worthless religion.

    “Lord, I get so easily offended when my acts of service are not recognized by others.   I confess that this is the voice of the easily offended ego and that my ego works against your purposes in my life.  Help me today to deny my selfish interests, take up my cross and follow you.”

    Lynn Green.

  • Keep on Growing – Day 2

    Keep on Growing – Day 2

    Photo by Denis Oliveira on Unsplash

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

    A few years ago, I had the opportunity to have a quiet retreat in a very special place:  The Western Desert of Egypt.  You might have heard some places described as a “thin place”.  It might be a particular church or property or even a region.  There is no doubt that the Western Desert is a thin place.

    That is, it is a place where the “veil” that separates us from the spiritual realm is very thin.  Another way to say it is that the Western Desert is a great place to seek God’s presence because He seems to be particularly near.

    That is because women and men have sought God in this region, sometimes in isolation and often in monasteries, for centuries.  They have lived lives totally dedicated to God and many have been martyred over the centuries as a result of the ebb and flow of anti-Christian sentiment.

    During my short retreat, I wrote three brief devotionals which will be posted over the next few days.

    DAY TWO

    Jesus said, “If any man would come after me, let him deny himself…”
    (Mark 8:34).

    Self-denial is the cornerstone of spiritual growth. Jesus emphasized it again and again:

    Luke 9:24: For whoever wants to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for me will save it.

    Mat 18:9: If your eye causes you to sin, gouge it out and throw it away.

    Luke 14:26,27: If anyone comes to me and does not hate his father and mother, his wife and children, his brothers and sisters–yes, even his own life–he cannot be my disciple. And anyone who does not carry his cross and follow me cannot be my disciple.

    There is no doubt that our brothers and sisters who live lives of deprivation and persecution have an “advantage”. Each and every day presents them with the contrast of following Jesus or choosing a life of greater ease and freedom from threat. The choice before them is often stark and obvious. As a result, they cannot and do not escape Jesus’ demand that they should deny themselves daily, take up their cross and follow Him.

    We, who were born into more comfortable circumstances, where our faith does not make us vulnerable to persecution, battle with a mortal enemy who attacks us with stealth and subtlety. The Apostle Paul refers to this enemy as the ‘old self’. “For we know that our old self was crucified with him so that the body of sin might be done away with, that we should no longer be slaves to sin—“ (Romans 6:6)

    The power and subtlety of our self is such that we can succumb to its demands again and again, choking our new life in Christ—unless the Holy Spirit comes to our aid, exposing self and enabling us to put it to death. Pray for the Spirit of Jesus to shine His light into your life, revealing the old self where ever it is at work.

    Lynn Green.

  • Keep on Growing

    Keep on Growing

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

     

    A few years ago, I had the opportunity to have a quiet retreat in a very special place:  The Western Desert of Egypt.  You might have heard some places described as a “thin place”.  It might be a particular church or property or even a region.  There is no doubt that the Western Desert is a thin place.

    That is, it is a place where the “veil” that separates us from the spiritual realm is very thin.  Another way to say it is that the Western Desert is a great place to seek God’s presence because He seems to be particularly near.

    That is because women and men have sought God in this region, sometimes in isolation and often in monasteries, for centuries.  They have lived lives totally dedicated to God and many have been martyred over the centuries as a result of the ebb and flow of anti-Christian sentiment.

    During my short retreat, I wrote three brief devotionals which will be posted over the next few days.

    DAY ONE

    From time to time I meet someone whose Christ-like character shines like a lighthouse from deep within.  Perhaps you also have met such a person.  I have found that I am drawn like a magnet to their presence that seems to exude love and warmth and sometimes, in spite of most difficult circumstances, a deep sense of contentment and shalom.  Along with being drawn to them, I feel a paradoxical sense of discomfort.  I fear that they can see right through my relatively shallow character and that I am in constant danger of being unmasked.

    More often than not, these godly individuals are not from our Western world, but are from a part of the world that is thought of as undeveloped.   They often come from a nation or region where the Church has been persecuted and they have suffered their share of pain.

    I think of a little Korean woman I met in China.  Jesus himself seemed to shine from her face and everything she said and did was flavored with godliness and grace.  She had spent about one third of her life in prison in both China and North Korea and yet she continued to fearlessly preach Christ in all circumstances.  In her presence, I felt like a spiritual pigmy.    

    Such an experience—and I’ve had several—provokes fundamental questions: is great spiritual maturity reserved only for those whose circumstances produce suffering?  Is it possible to experience sustained spiritual growth in a comfortable Western environment?  Is persecution and privation required for spiritual maturity? 

    Surely God does not discriminate between races or nationalities and has not abandoned us to a spiritual fate that is determined by where we happened to be born.  Rather, the scriptures are clear that he shows himself and draws near to those who seek him whole-heartedly.

    (Jer 29:13 You will seek me and find me when you seek me with all your heart.) 

    So, there must be hope for those of us who were born into a more comfortable life-style.  There must be a way for us to grow in Christ continuously.  That is my desire and I hope it is yours.

    Take some time to pray and tell God that you want spiritual growth and maturity.  Tell him that you long to have more intimate fellowship with him and that you will not shrink back, even if the price is very high.

    Lynn Green.