How Experience Influenced My Views On Charitable Giving

Sticker-BlogMy name is Brian Hemel and I am a Co-Founder of Pass the Plate. I grew up in New Orleans, Louisiana and was fortunate to attend a Catholic church and school. Like most kids growing up in the southeast, I attended a weekly Sunday service, really not wanting to go.  During those services I would go through the motions and could not wait for the service to be over.

A few times a year however, a service or two would catch my attention. A visiting priest or missionary would speak to us about their community, the supplies they needed and how our community could help. These visitors usually spoke in choppy English so I had to pay special attention in order to understand them. Afterward, the community would rally together to send various types of donations based on the need.

Similar to donations collected in the church, in my elementary school we would be given a cardboard bank to help raise money during mission week. As a second grader my goal was not always to raise money for the mission but to beat the other classes so my class could be rewarded. Each year, donations were raised for a specific group, usually in a foreign country, and we would never hear about fundraising efforts until the following year. Whether it was through school or the church, I really did not understand what the whole giving thing was about or really how “my” donation was going to help.

As I got older my views on giving started to change. Specifically, I remember in 6th grade, my class collected toys and delivered them to the children’s ward at a local hospital. Each student brought in a toy, geared towards a specific patient, and we were able to hand deliver the present to that patient. To most of these patients, this was the only gift they would receive that year. To see the smiles on their faces was something I will never forget. This was the first time that I actually saw what giving to others could accomplish first hand. I learned that giving is not always financial, not always a competition, and can be just as rewarding for the giver as the recipient.

The high school I attended stressed being a “Man for Others”. We continued the tradition of collecting money during mission week but what really stood out to me was being a “Man for Others”, especially during the Thanksgiving Week. Before high school I took it for granted that food was going to be on the table, and selfishly thought that everyone else enjoyed the same type of celebration. Each homeroom adopted several families to deliver food to over the holiday. We collected food and the money collected was used to purchase enough food to feed each adopted family for a week. The Wednesday before Thanksgiving, members of each homeroom would fill boxes with all of the food collected and purchased. After a quick mass, we would deliver each basket to the adopted family. The families that received the baskets were often speechless and could not thank us enough. This showed me how lucky I am and that I should not take anything that I have for granted.

After high school, I attended a college whose motto was “Learn in Order to Serve”. As a college student, raising money was not as easy, but community service was something everyone could participate in. As a new student, one way the college greeted new students was to participate in Move a Mountain Day. Student groups would perform community service off campus by painting, working with the elderly, trail maintenance, picking up trash, etc. This not only let new students learn about the place they would be spending the next four years, but also serve the community that would support and surround them during their stay.

In closing, there are many ways in which you can donate. You can donate through Pass the Plate or directly to countless non-profits that are helping support the disaster stricken communities around the world. Remember, donations do not always need to be financial, look around your community and ask yourself – What can I do to help?

Do you have a personal story or experience that has shaped your giving? Please share with us on Facebook or Twitter!

 

Thoughts on Giving

What started out as an ordinary Friday morning turned out to be exactly what I needed…

Fridays typically start for me at NCS Winston Salem (New Canaan Society) at 7:00 AM bright and early. For the Winston Salem chapter, this means that 150-200 men get together on Friday mornings to have coffee and biscuits and share and to grow in Christ. For us its “Its not church, its not bible study, and if you don’t have fun don’t come back.” Simple as that…

This past Friday, we heard a story about ORGAN DONATION.

Specifically the story of how one man silently suffered with a degenerating kidney. Going through the process of dialysis and getting on the kidney transplant list. Then at a chance meeting this gentleman spoke to a counterpart who had a husband who had a kidney disease. She happened to be going to get tested the following Monday to see if she could donate one of her kidneys to her husband. Ok… I know that was a lot…

Then to the man’s surprise, when sharing his fear of the situation to his friend/coworker go the response “If I am not a match for my husband then you can have one of my kidneys.”

Wow.

What I learned on this past Friday was that there are many ways to give and none are more important than the gift of love.  For me, witnessing a living example of the love of a fellow man was truly an amazing experience.

Did you know that we only need one of our two kidneys?

Do you know how may people in your own community that need a kidney?

For more information about how you can help visit The National Kidney Foundation

 

For God so loved the world he “gave”

For God so loved the world he “gave”.

We serve a giving God. We reflect his glory when we ourselves participate in giving. Sacrificial, heartfelt and genuine giving will make everyone around you better and bring great honor to God. In fact as a Christian broadcaster, I’ve thought about starting a Christmas radio format to run all 12 months of the year. Not just November and December, but all year round-to highlight the greatness and Godliness of giving.

Do you know anyone that doesn’t want to receive a gift?

Furthermore, everyone always says it’s the ‘giving’ that brings more enjoyment then the ‘getting’ – especially at Christmas time. But one may ask, what about motives? Do you give to get? The Bible says clearly, ‘The Lord loves a cheerful giver’. A true giver gives unconditionally from the heart and expects nothing in return.

Take a moment and think about giving from the perspective of the Divine. What do we have to offer God in return for is amazing gift of salvation to us? How can we ever repay Him? In His giving to us we have the essence of the Gospel. What a beautiful picture: A holy God pouring out lavish grace on undeserving, guilty sinners-Romans 5:8. Now that’s the gift that keeps on giving! Ultimately we’re compelled to be givers to experience God’s grace, to reflect His giving to our selfish, ‘taking’, self-serving world to our great and giving God & His wondrous gift of salvation.

So this year, 2015 & beyond let us be consumed with giving actively,proactively randomly. Remember, God gives to you so He can give through you.  Let us Pour everything we have and everything we are into the kingdom of God and the lives of other. Let us demonstrate and model the very God who loved us so much that he “gave”.

– Stuart Epperson Jr.