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Stan Lim/The Press-Enterprise
Requests for help pose challenge for churches
By David Olson
Riverside (Calif.) Press-Enterprise
Monday, Dec. 01, 2008
RIVERSIDE, Calif. -- As the economic crisis deepens, California's Inland religious institutions are getting more requests for help, even as some of their own congregants face job losses and foreclosures.
Families are asking for help in buying Christmas gifts for their children. More people are knocking on church doors asking for food. Congregants need help paying utility bills.
At the Riverside stake of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which comprises 10 Mormon congregations, slightly fewer people are donating this year than previously, said stake President Dennis Ulicny.
But those who can afford to give are contributing more, he said. The dollar amount of donations is up 15 percent over last year. Most of the contributions help church members in need. Requests for help are up 27 percent in the Riverside stake, he said.
See the rest of this story at the Press-Enterprise's Web site
Families are asking for help in buying Christmas gifts for their children. More people are knocking on church doors asking for food. Congregants need help paying utility bills.
At the Riverside stake of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which comprises 10 Mormon congregations, slightly fewer people are donating this year than previously, said stake President Dennis Ulicny.
But those who can afford to give are contributing more, he said. The dollar amount of donations is up 15 percent over last year. Most of the contributions help church members in need. Requests for help are up 27 percent in the Riverside stake, he said.
See the rest of this story at the Press-Enterprise's Web site
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