Chicagoland

Archdiocese launches site for parish donations, emergency fund

By Michelle Martin | Staff writer
Tuesday, March 24, 2020

An usher collects donations during a Mass at Notre Dame de Chicago, 1334 W. Flournoy, on June 2, 2019. The Archdiocese of Chicago launched a site to collect donations for parishes during coronavirus shutdown. It also created a Coronavirus Emergency Fund to help those in need. (Karen Callaway/Chicago Catholic)

To read this article in Spanish, click here.

The COVID-19 pandemic has caused financial disruptions not only to households and businesses, but also to local parishes, which have suspended public Masses where they can take up offertory collections.

To help Catholics support their local parishes, the Archdiocese of Chicago has created a website that donors can use to make a one-time or recurring gift to any parish they choose.

The site, along with a donation page for the archdiocese’s Coronavirus Emergency Fund, can be accessed at archchicago.org/support. Both funds accept credit card payments or electronic payments directly from a bank account.

“About 70 percent of our parishes have an online giving program,” said Brendan Keating, chief development officer in the Office of Stewardship and Development. “Of course, that means 30 percent don’t.”

All parishes still have bills to pay even if they are not holding public Masses, Keating said.

“With the suspension of Masses, it’s critically important that parishioners support their parishes with online giving. The parishes absolutely need this income more than they ever have.”

The new site was announced March 20, and promoted during the archdiocese’s Sunday Masses, which are broadcast and available online. Sunday Masses are available beginning at 4 p.m. Saturdays on the archdiocese’s YouTube channel and are televised on ABC-TV Channel 7, Univision and Polvision (a local Polish language station). Daily Masses from St. James Chapel in the Archbishop Quigley Pastoral Center are also available starting at 10 a.m. each weekday on YouTube.

“The website is also really helpful for that, because we can send people to one site,” Keating said. “They don’t have to look up their parish’s own online giving site.”

However, once the crisis is over, parishes will likely encourage more of their parishioners to sign up for online giving, which provides parishes a predictable, steady stream of donations, even if parishioners don’t make it to Mass, whether because of a crisis like the COVID-19 pandemic or because they are on vacation.

St. Josaphat Parish, 2311 N. Southport Ave., has developed a culture of online giving over the past several years, said Father Francis Bitterman, St. Josaphat’s pastor.

A typical weekend collection at the parish is between $10,000 and $12,000, he said. Of that, $1,700 to $1,800 comes from in-pew collections.

Part of the reason is that the parish is very young, with more young adults and families with school-age children than senior citizens, Bitterman said.

“Giving online is very natural for this age group since that is how they operate for paying their own bills and doing businesses,” he said.

The parish also makes an effort to promote online giving at least twice a year.

“We push it (online giving) each October during the ‘season of stewardship’ and again in the spring before people start traveling over the summer,” Bitterman said. “And we have been able to grow the number of people giving online each time. We stress that online giving helps us to budget properly for the year as opposed to depending upon the in-pew collection basket.  A lot of families here have summer homes or travel a lot so they get the need to budget accordingly, especially when our Mass attendance drops significantly during the summer months.”

Text to Give is a newer option, he said, which provides convenience for people who don’t have a standing online donation.

“It’s mainly for the convenience of people in the pews because, as I am sure you know, a lot of people don’t carry much cash these days,” he said. 

Even though the lack of in-person donations has not hit St. Josaphat as hard as most other parishes, Bitterman is using the parish e-bulletin to remind people to support the parish, he said.

The Coronavirus Emergency Fund was created the same day as the parish offertory site, Keating said. Money donated to that fund will go to people or parishes who have been significantly affected by the pandemic, whether that means Catholic school families who cannot afford tuition after a parent loses a job or parishes that can’t pay their expenses with no Masses scheduled.

As of April 6, the two funds had raised a total of $234,791 in 1,961 separate gifts, with more donations arriving daily, Keating said. Donations were received for 300 parishes.

“We are off to a good start, but our parishes and schools will need significant support in the weeks ahead,” Keating said. “Now more than ever it is critically important for those who can to support their church.”

Topics:

  • coronavirus

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