Project and content management for Contemporary Authors volumes
WORK TITLE: Love Let Go
WORK NOTES: with Laura Sumner Truax
PSEUDONYM(S):
BIRTHDATE:
WEBSITE:
CITY: Wilmette
STATE: IL
COUNTRY:
NATIONALITY:
http://loveletgobook.com/ * http://loveletgobook.com/amalya-campbell/
RESEARCHER NOTES:
PERSONAL
Married; children: two.
EDUCATION:Harvard Business School, M.B.A., 1997.
ADDRESS
CAREER
Marketing consultant; author. Conducts stewardship classes, LaSalle Street Church, Chicago, IL.
WRITINGS
SIDELIGHTS
Amalya Campbell works as a marketing consultant (she has a masters of business administration degree from Harvard Business School) and as a stewardship seminar leader for LaSalle Street Church. She is also the coauthor with Laura Sumner Truax, the church’s senior pastor, of Love Let Go: Radical Generosity for the Real World. Love Let Go tells the story of how the northside Chicago church took $1.6 million from a real estate sale and dispersed it to its congregation. “The leaders of LaSalle Street Church had decided to put a portion–ten percent, or a tithe–of that unanticipated sum in the hands of its congregants,” explained Barbara Mahany in the Chicago Tribune. “Checks for $500, made out to each congregant, could be picked up at the end of the service.” “Calling themselves ‘peddlers of grace,’ LaSalle’s $500 giveaway allowed their congregation to understand abundance anew,” stated a contributor to the Oregon-Idaho Annual Conference Center Website. “With $1.44 million in the bank, they faced a key decision: Should the church’s mortgage be paid off?” “Wouldn’t paying off the mortgage be a good use of the money?” Campbell and Truax asked in Love Let Go. “And isn’t Scripture filled with verses advising us to live debt-free? Paying off the mortgage started to look like not only a fiscallyt responsible decision, but a righteous decision as well. (Conversations can get complicated when we believe righteousness is not the line.)” “Part story of LaSalle’s decision of how to handle their investment, part testament to the powers of generosity,” wrote a Publishers Weekly reviewer, Campbell and Truax’s work celebrates the positive impact philanthropy has on donors and recipients alike.
For the LaSalle Street Church congregation, the windfall profit offered a chance to perform a radical experiment in Christian giving. “Their decision on the mortgage–moving from a position of scarcity to one of abundance–is well told,” said the Oregon-Idaho Annual Conference Center Website contributor. “In the end, LaSalle chose not to pay off the mortgage. They were being true to themselves.” It was a question that Campbell herself had faced with her own family. “Fiscal prudence wasn’t the only option that had a halo of holiness,” Truax and Campbell wrote. “We recognized that our windfall was a by-product from a gentrifying neighborhood.” “One of the questions that my husband and I constantly have to ask ourselves,” Campbell stated in Harvard Business School Alumni Stories, “is, ‘What if we’ve reached the point where we have enough, and everything can be given away—everything?’ For those of us who are upwardly mobile, that’s where the rubber meets the road.”
Instead, the members of LaSalle Street Church decided to disburse the money in small gifts. “While we would give the gift of ‘free money’ and ask individuals to do something good with it,” said Campbell and Truax, “we would also be pointing to the reality that everyone of us has something far more valuable than free money. And that daily we are being asked to do something good with it. We are given a window of time and energy and passion and asked to live to our potential.” “What follows, an exercise in giving that caught worldwide attention and grew into a still-expanding movement, is the story that’s powerfully told here,” Mahany said. “It’s a soul stirring work that squarely illuminates the compound interest of giving. When love is let go, the world can’t help but open its heart.” The authors “show how this radical generosity shaped their community,” said a contributor to the Eerdmans web site, “exploring the reverberating impact of each act of generosity, and ultimately revealing how LaSalle’s faith-filled risk snowballed into a movement beyond itself.” Love Let Go “shares insights into the practice of generosity,” declared Sonya VanderVeen Feddema in the Banner, “and shows how, when we live generous lives, we … benefit others but also ourselves.”
BIOCRIT
BOOKS
Campbell, Amalys, and Laura Sumner Truax, Love Let Go: Radical Generosity for the Real World, Eerdmans (Grand Rapids, MI), 2017.
PERIODICALS
Chicago Tribune, April 10, 2017, Barbara Maheny, review of Love Let Go: Radical Generosity for the Real World.
Publishers Weekly, January 9 2017, review of Love Let Go, p. 61.
ONLINE
Banner, https://thebanner.org/ (August 4, 2017), Sonya VanderVeen Feddema, review of Love Let Go.
Eerdmans Website, https://www.eerdmans.com/ (October 18, 2017), review of Love Let Go.
Harvard Business School Alumni Stories, https://www.alumni.hbs.edu/ (September 1, 2017), Amalya Campbell, “Turning Point: Getting to Giving.”
Love Let Go Website, http://loveletgobook.com/ (October 18, 2017), author profile.
Oregon-Idaho Annual Conference Center Website, http://www.umoi.org/ (May 3, 2017), review of Love Let Go.
Philanthrophy Daily, https://www.philanthropydaily.com/ (October 18, 2017), author profile.*
Amalya Campbell champions generosity and helps people rediscover their giving selves. For more than a dozen years she has led stewardship classes at LaSalle Street Church. She served on the church's leadership council throughout the #LoveLetGo campaign described in the book Love Let Go: Radical Generosity for the Real World.
Professionally, Amalya is a marketing consultant with an MBA from Harvard Business School. She lives in Wilmette, Illinois, with her husband and two children.
Amalya (Ami) Campbell is a marketing consultant with an MBA from Harvard Business School. She has led stewardship classes at LaSalle Street Church for more than a dozen years. She serves on several boards in her local community of Wilmette, Illinois, where she lives with her husband and two children.
Amalya Campbell
Amalya (Ami) Campbell is the Co-Author of Love Let Go: Radical Generosity for the Real World and a marketing consultant with an MBA from Harvard Business School. She has led stewardship classes at LaSalle Street Church for more than a dozen years. She serves on several boards in her local community of Wilmette, Illinois, where she lives with her husband and two children.
Love Let Go: Radical Generosity for the Real World
264.2 (Jan. 9, 2017): p61.
Copyright: COPYRIGHT 2017 PWxyz, LLC
http://www.publishersweekly.com/
Love Let Go: Radical Generosity for the Real World
Laura Truax and Amalya Campbell. Eerdmans,
$21.99 (208p) ISBN 978-0-8028-7447-4
In 2014, LaSalle Street Church on the near north side of Chicago received money from the sale of investment property and, at the time, many asked "What did the church do with the $1.6 million?" Truax and Campbell, senior pastor at LaSalle and member of the church's leadership council, respectively, answer that question as a jumping-off point, but also address much more in this well-wrought book. At the time of the sale, LaSalle had budgetary needs of its own; however, the church also has a reputation for generosity amid the scarcity of its poor neighborhood. "Generosity frees us to be our truest selves," the authors write. First, not without dissension, the church gave $500 to each member "to do good in the world"; the spending included paying for an African woman's surgery and simply passing out $20 bills. Along with the modern stories of LaSalle, the authors effectively interlace ancient stories from the Bible and advice from outside resources, financial and religious. They write as much about the grinding, rewarding process of discernment--praying, meeting, listening inside and out--as about dispersal of funds. Part story of LaSalle's decision of how to handle their investment, part testament to the powers of generosity, this book will be of interest to anyone interested in community building or philanthropy. (Mar.)
Source Citation (MLA 8th Edition)
"Love Let Go: Radical Generosity for the Real World." Publishers Weekly, 9 Jan. 2017, p. 61. General OneFile, go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?p=ITOF&sw=w&u=schlager&v=2.1&id=GALE%7CA477339357&it=r&asid=3ca3f82b7f05653d00914299858e37ed. Accessed 25 Sept. 2017.
Gale Document Number: GALE|A477339357
Inspiring Generosity
5/3/2017
A $1,600,000 Gift. What Would You Do?
Let’s say you receive a surprise windfall of $1.6 million dollars. After you are picked up off the floor, what will you do? Well I know what I’d do. I’d put most of it in the bank. Yep. That’s what my mom and dad told me to do, because you know, you can never have too much money. OK, maybe I’d go buy myself something new at Goodwill – excuse me, I mean GW Designers – but for the most part, I’d be banking it. That is, until I read this book.
Getting an unexpected gift is the premise of the newly released, Love Let Go: Radical Generosity in the Real World by Laura Sumner Truax and Amalya Campbell. In 2014, LaSalle Street Church in Chicago learned that land they owned with four other churches was being sold. Their share of the profits would be a whopping $1.6 million dollars – all of it undesignated.
After much discussion – some of it contentious – the church leadership voted to tithe its first ten percent. The way they decided to do it brought them international attention. In September of 2014, over 300 members and regular attenders of LaSalle Street Church were each handed a check for $500. Their only instruction:
Do good in the world.
I thought when I purchased this book that it would tell stories of how people spent their $500. It does do that, a little. But the primary focus of Love Let Go is revealing how this church decided to spend their remaining $1.44 million. The two key things that helped guide them in spending this unbelievable gift were:
1. Recalling their identity and
2. Moving from a scarcity mentality to one of abundance.
Those two things alone transformed not only the individuals within the church but their Chicago neighborhood as well. And, it will ultimately do the same for those who read this book.
Sprinkled throughout with relevant biblical references, Truax and Campbell lay out a compelling case for generosity. Acknowledging that coming to such a place is a process, they nonetheless are clear that the Lion King’s Mufasa had something important to say:
“Remember who you are.”
“…we intentionally rooted ourselves in identity. We listened closely for ideas aligned with LaSalle’s DNA…: sharing the gospel, meeting immediate needs, advocating for others and for Jesus, addressing racial and economic disparity, and reducing violence…Our attempt to root ourselves reflected our desire to stay true to our core identity as a church. Whether or not the press found it newsworthy.”
Calling themselves “peddlers of grace,” LaSalle’s $500 giveaway allowed their congregation to understand abundance anew. With $1.44 million in the bank, they faced a key decision: Should the church’s mortgage be paid off? Their decision on the mortgage – moving from a position of scarcity to one of abundance – is well told.
“We had just received an enormous windfall. More money than the church could ever have imagined. And here we sat, afraid. Afraid of how we’d make budget by the end of the year. Afraid of what we would have to give up if we didn’t. Afraid of tomorrow’s trouble. The immediate fear made our collective memory short. We saw scarcity ahead and forgot the abundance right behind us.”
In the end, LaSalle chose not to pay off the mortgage. They were being true to themselves and to their mission. They ultimately did set aside $100,000 for the property and finance committee to assess and come up with a way to finance their future needs. Their example certainly challenges us all.
With discussion questions offered, Love Let Go is designed to be read and grappled with in community. As the authors say, “The sweet spot of generosity comes at the congruence of identity and unmet needs.” Love Let Go will push you to think about where your church has been and where it should be going as it practices the fine art of generosity.
Having a $1,600,000 undesignated gift dropped in your lap can force you to discover who you are, whose you are, and what you are called to do. But you don’t need to wait – here’s a book to help you think about it now as you celebrate the abundant resources you already have.
Cesie Delve Scheuermann (pronounced “CC Delv Sherman,” yes, really) is a consultant in stewardship, development, and grant writing. Over the past fifteen years, while working as a volunteer and part-time consultant, she helped raise over three million dollars for numerous non-profit organizations. It’s half-off day. GW Designers is calling her to visit. She was the Oregon-Idaho Annual Conference Lay Leader from 2008-2012. Her position with the Conference is funded through a generous grant from the Collins Foundation. She is available to consult with churches. You can reach her at inspiringgenerosity@gmail.com or on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/inspiringgenerosity.
If someone has forwarded this to you and you would like to subscribe to "Inspiring Generosity," click here. Miss an issue? Click here.
Love Let Go
Radical Generosity for the Real World
Laura Truax
Amalya Campbell
HARDCOVER; Published: 3/28/2017
ISBN: 978-0-8028-7447-4
215 Pages
Trim Size, in inches: 5.5 x 8.5
In Stock
Ships within 3 business days
Price: $ 21.99
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DESCRIPTION
Displays the amazing power of generosity to transform people and communities
When LaSalle Street Church in Chicago received an unexpected windfall, its leaders made the wild, counterintuitive decision to give it away. Each church member received a check for $500 with the instruction to go out and do good in God's world.
In Love Let Go readers witness how a church community was transformed by the startling truth that money can buy happiness—when we give it away. Laura Sumner Truax and Amalya Campbell show how this radical generosity shaped their community, exploring the reverberating impact of each act of generosity, and ultimately revealing how LaSalle's faith-filled risk snowballed into a movement beyond itself.
Throughout the book Truax and Campbell probe the connection of human flourishing to generosity and offer tools to help us reclaim our giver identities and live generously—to love and let go.
REVIEWS
Brian D. McLaren
—author of The Great Spiritual Migration
"Our culture brainwashes us to think that greed is the motivation that drives us, but this book offers a powerful alternative message—the transformative power of generosity. This message could literally change the world, beginning with your life and mine."
Soong-Chan Rah
—author of The Next Evangelicalism and Prophetic Lament
"More and more churches understand that in order to effectively preach the gospel, we must also live the gospel. In contrast to the societal value of gaining and collecting power, privilege, and wealth, this book documents the story of a church that opted to give away their possessions. Their example reminds us that the New Testament church is alive and well and that there could be the possibility of a movement of generous churches."
Publishers Weekly
"Along with the modern stories of LaSalle, the authors effectively interlace ancient stories from the Bible and advice from outside resources, financial and religious. They write as much about the grinding, rewarding process of discernment—praying, meeting, listening inside and out—as about dispersal of funds. Part story of LaSalle's decision of how to handle their investment, part testament to the powers of generosity, this book will be of interest to anyone interested in community building or philanthropy."
Chicago Tribune
"Inserts itself into our culture of consumption as a no-holds-barred call for grace-filled giving. . . . At once a meditation on generosity and a spur to action, it stands a mighty chance of shaking loose your acquisitive grip and beckoning your most generous self. . . . A soul stirring work that squarely illuminates the compound interest of giving. When love is let go, the world can't help but open its heart."
Martin E. Marty on Sightings
"Cheering and practical. . . . I could profane the plot by writing a true but merely practical summary: 'radical generosity works.' But Truax and Campbell sacralize the story by rooting it in the trust and faith they demonstrate, as did their members."
Christian Market
"The story of the La Salle Street Church holds to potential to become a modern-era In His Steps."
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"Love Let Go" by Laura Sumner Truax and Amalya Campbell, Eerdmans, 215 pages, $21.99
Call it the iconoclast's manifesto. "Love Let Go: Radical Generosity for the Real World" inserts itself into our culture of consumption as a no-holds-barred call for grace-filled giving. It's radical, all right. At once a meditation on generosity and a spur to action, it stands a mighty chance of shaking loose your acquisitive grip and beckoning your most generous self.
It pivots on the unlikeliest story: LaSalle Street Church, founded in the 1960s in the shadow of Cabrini-Green, Chicago's infamous high-rise public housing, dared to do the unthinkable. At a Sunday morning service in September 2014, the senior pastor announced that, through the sale of a mixed-income housing complex partially owned by LaSalle and three neighboring North Side churches, they'd found themselves flush with $1.6 million in proceeds. The leaders of LaSalle Street Church had decided to put a portion — 10 percent, or a tithe — of that unanticipated sum in the hands of its congregants. Checks for $500, made out to each congregant, could be picked up at the end of the service.
The message: "God expects you to do something good in the world." And it was up to each congregant to decide what that good would look like and how to spend the money.
What follows, an exercise in giving that caught worldwide attention and grew into a still-expanding movement, is the story that's powerfully told here. Co-written by Laura Sumner Truax, the church's senior pastor, and Amalya Campbell, a Harvard MBA who's long taught stewardship classes at the church, it's a soul stirring work that squarely illuminates the compound interest of giving. When love is let go, the world can't help but open its heart.
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Love Let Go: Radical Generosity for the Real World
by
Laura Truax and Amalya Campbell
reviewed by Sonya VanderVeen Feddema
August 4, 2017
When LaSalle Street Church in Chicago unexpectedly received approximately 1.5 million dollars from the sale of a low-income housing initiative that members of their church had helped to found, the church’s board entered a time of prayer and discernment, asking God to show them how to use the money wisely.
The board decided to begin by giving each member of the congregation a check for $500 with the simple instruction to “do good in the world.”
This exercise of “tithing to the people” was a metaphor for God’s work in our daily lives. The authors write, “While we would give the gift of ‘free money’ and ask individuals to do something good with it, we would also be pointing to the reality that every one of us has something far more valuable than free money. And that daily we are being asked to do something good with it.”
Love Let Go is more than an account of how the members of LaSalle Street Church were stewards of grace through God’s gift to them. The book shares insights into the practice of generosity and shows how, when we live generous lives, we not only benefit others but also ourselves.
Questions for reflection and discussion at the end of the book make it an excellent resource for personal devotions or small group study. (Eerdmans)
About the Author
Sonya VanderVeen Feddema is a freelance writer and a member of Covenant CRC in St. Catharines, Ontario.
01 Sep 2017
235
Turning Point: Getting to Giving
by Amalya “Ami” Campbell (MBA 1997)
Illustration by Chris Gash
I grew up in a mostly single-parent household outside Chicago with my dad and sister; my relationship with money as a child was that it felt scarce, for sure, but we didn’t talk about it. Maybe that’s why I’ve gone so much in the other direction with the stewardship classes I teach at our church. Now I talk to people about money all the time.
At HBS, Professor Malcolm Salter gave us this advice in our last class together: “Live beneath your means.” At the time it struck me as an almost countercultural thing for a business school professor to say. But, in my case, it was also very practical: After I graduated, my husband and I would be living on one salary while he went to business school. When he graduated, we decided to continue to manage our money as if only one of us was working. I didn’t realize it then, but that decision gave us the space to give.
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• Campbell describes what happened when her church received $1.6 million on the Skydeck podcast
We became consistent givers, but something changed on a trip I took with our church to meet a child I’d sponsored in Tanzania. What struck me in the moment that I met Nganashe and her mother, Nasaru, is that there was no logical reason why I wasn’t in their shoes. We’re all familiar with the concept of the birth lottery—that where you are born is pure luck. That realization hit me even harder because I was born in Vietnam. My mother is Vietnamese and was 20 years old when she had me; my father was a military contractor. It’s still unexplainable why he decided to marry my mother and bring us back to the United States, because tens of thousands didn’t. That gave me an even more powerful reason to give with abundance. I felt I had to pay back this phenomenal, invaluable gift I’d received.
Even though I truly believe we were made to give, it is still a conscious choice, and the message you get from all around is that it’s not logical or rational. One of the questions that my husband and I constantly have to ask ourselves is, “What if we’ve reached the point where we have enough, and everything can be given away—everything?” For those of us who are upwardly mobile, that’s where the rubber meets the road—that’s where growth happens. It’s easy to say, “Yes, I’ll start giving when I get the next promotion or when I’m done paying for college.” But what if “when” is right now?
That’s why I feel like I have to practice generosity all the time, so when the windfall comes, I’m not tempted otherwise. It’s where I have room to grow, and where I hope I will always have room to grow.
Amalya Campbell is the coauthor of Love Let Go: Radical Generosity for the Real World.
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Featured Alumni
Ami Campbell
Class of MBA 1997, Section E
Featured Faculty
Malcolm Salter
Emeritus Professor
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