Deadlines for Offerings and Statistics – Encouraging Word – January 2015

Deadlines for Offerings and Statistics

The turn of the year means deadlines for submitting congregational offerings and statistics to WELS:

  • Remittances of 2014 offerings are due by Jan. 8. Meanwhile you should receive in early January your coupons for remitting 2015 congregation mission offerings (CMO).
  • Your congregation’s CMO subscription for 2015 (the amount you pledge to give) is due Friday, Feb. 6.
  • In early January congregations will also receive a letter with instructions for submitting your 2014 statistics online for the latest WELS Statistical Report. The deadline for submitting statistics is also Friday, Feb. 6.

Thank you as always for your cooperation!

Helpful Hint – Encouraging Word – January 2015

Share WELS’ 2014 Annual Report

WELS recently published its 2014 annual report, which summarizes key developments across all areas of synod ministry. This report is a great way to inform WELS members of the Lord’s work we are doing together as a synod. It’s also a helpful reference as the congregation begins planning their support for worldwide gospel endeavors during the coming year.

There are several ways to access and share the report through WELS Communication Services’ Resource Center:
  • Download the report in PowerPoint format. Someone at your church may give the presentation or you can invite your local WELS Christian giving counselor to do it.
  • Share the link to the annual report in “flip book” format through your church’s e-newsletter or Web site.
  • Five copies of the report are being mailed to each congregation mid-January for distribution to leaders with the option to order additional copies (free besides shipping) through Northwestern Publishing House. (Note that an annual report is also going out with each giving statement to individuals who made direct gifts to WELS in 2014.)

Words of Wisdom – Encouraging Word – January 2015

Looking at Life as Jesus’ Redeemed Servants

We are Jesus’ hands and feet and mouth during this time of grace before he comes again. He served us and gave his all to redeem us for himself. So we live to move and act in his name and for the benefit of the rest of his mystical body on earth. That is a high honor indeed, to serve him in serving his mystical body for the short time that we have here. Looking at life that way is a mark of having found the middle road between excessive love for the world and ungrateful contempt for it. With such an attitude, we do not imagine that the goal of life is just to get more for my own indulgence; nor do we look at life with sour and grumpy ingratitude for God’s blessings to us in the world and the good reasons he has for being so generous to us.”

Deutschlander, Daniel M. The Narrow Lutheran Middle. Milwaukee: Northwestern Publishing House, 2011.