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Thursday, September 19, 2024

Charity that facilitates Christian giving passes £100m mark

“ACTIVE generosity” explains why the Christian organisation Stewardship broke the £100-million mark for charitable grant-giving in 2023, its recent chief executive suggests.

In 2023, £109.6 million of grant payments were made through Stewardship — a jump of 12 per cent on the previous 12 months — and donations were up by two per cent, says its annual report for 2023, published on Tuesday.

The organisation manages charitable donations from churches, charities, and individuals, with the aim of advancing “the evangelical Christian faith”. It traces its history to the founding by members of the Open Brethren of the East of England Evangelisation Trust in 1906. In its current form, the trust represents the merger of several enterprises, including Sovereign Giving (originally the North Staffordshire Evangelical Trust), which had provided covenanted and Gift Aid giving services, Credit Action, and Maxco.

Donors using its services include about 4000 churches and 6000 charities, in addition to 1000’s of people. It has helped organisations including the refugee charity the Sanctuary Foundation, and a gospel-music festival in Liverpool (Features, 29 September).

As well as grants, Stewardship makes loans to churches and charities towards projects. In 2023, 19 loans, price a complete of £9.6 million, were made.

Sixty per cent of grant giving went to charities, 26 per cent to churches, and 14 per cent to individual partners

Stewardship’s chief executive, Janie Oliver, said: “In the context of a difficult 12 months for a lot of, we were once more humbled by the generosity of those we serve.”

The rise of grant payments to almost £110 million was “a robust reflection of the energetic generosity that we’re privileged to support”, she said.

“With a powerful, motivated team in place that’s fully aligned behind a refreshed strategy, we stay up for continuing to grow and develop our offering for donors, churches, charities, and Christian staff, helping Christians steward their resources correctly and generously.”

Ms Oliver attributed a part of the rise in grants to the expansion of Stewardship’s Donor Advisory Board service, which allows philanthropists to incorporate family, friends, and advisers of their grant-making decisions. One young adult was quoted as saying that the service had enabled her to present to multiple small charities.

Ms Oliver was appointed in January to interchange Stewart McCulloch, who left to grow to be chief executive of Christians Against Poverty (Podcast, 13 June).

The two-per-cent increase in donations countered the national trend in charitable giving within the midst of the cost-of-living crisis.

Stewardship’s ambitions are set out within the report. It estimates that about £2 billion is currently given by Christians within the UK, but that the potential is £7 billion. “Closing this gap is essential in achieving a thriving Kingdom economy,” the report says. It recommends “discipleship programmes to integrate faith with finance” and transform the “giving experience”.

The full report will be read here.

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