Here is a barter ministry idea for churches. Your church would create
its own barter system based upon a service provided by a member with no
value placed on the service or the time spent, just a credit. Here some
examples:
I give you a piano lesson.
You dog sit for someone.
That person bakes cookies for a shut in.
A person drives someone to a doctor's appointment.
Someone else baby sits for a few hours.
Someone repairs a leaky faucet.
A woman offers a dance class twice a week.
A glazier replaces a window.
Someone changes oil.
Someone donates an hour of house cleaning.
A farmer offers a day of horseback riding.
All
those services, regardless of time or skill, are worth a single point
and don't cost the recipient anything unless there are materials needed
such as plumbing or carpentry. Each church would have to tweak or limit
time intensive events like building a deck.
Everyone banks their
points and is able to redeem them from anyone who enrolls in the
program. This may or may not be applicable to regular liturgical,
church or service to the church activities such as coffee hour,
ushering, cleaning, donating flowers, etcetera. It would work best
between people rather than "the church" unless you want to include
service to the church as a service to the community. YMMV.
A
program such as this would greatly serve the poor but could tax the
handyman (who would gain mega points, though) and everyone could list
what they are willing to offer in services and limitations. There are
two ways to promote service. A church can have its members make a list
of services they are willing to offer and someone with a need can check
the list and contact that person. The other way is to allow people to
list their wants and a provider can contact them to offer that service.
Both lists would work very well simultaneously.
Each individual
church would need to tweak their own by-laws and perform a few months
of dry runs followed by circadian by-law updates to fix bugs,
disadvantages and services offered. It could be maintained online, in a
book or by an individual. The organizer could create a formal receipt
which will be turned in to them who then updates the points. This is
not a barter from person to person but to the community.
If I
only offer piano lessons and nobody takes me up on that, I will bank no
points so it would behoove me to offer other services such as house
sitting, shoveling snow or dog walking. And of course, I can't offer
plumbing services if there is no proof that I know anything about
plumbing (although I do do my own).
So If I give you a piano
lesson and earn a credit, I don't have to barter specifically with you
in return for a service. I can use that credit to take a dance lesson
or have someone clean my house and they in return don't have to barter
with me. The bylaws can be tweaked in a myriad of ways such as, one is
able to give their credits to another person or a certain service is
worth two credits. Maybe there would be a limit on how many credits you
may give or receive each week.
Ultimately this program would
work best if nobody puts a value on their service and looks simply to
serve. It would be a great opportunity for a congregation to build
community, serve one another and be Christ for one another.
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