brendalisa wrote:Just easier for us than trying to find a member of the bishopric at church all the time
And if you don't like having to "find a member of the bishopric" you can then mail your donation from home direct to the bishop.
Just be sure to let your bank know when your bishop changes. We got a new bishop earlier this year, and after four polite reminders to one family, our previous bishop is still receiving autopay tithing checks in the mail...davesudweeks wrote:brendalisa wrote:Just easier for us than trying to find a member of the bishopric at church all the time
And if you don't like having to "find a member of the bishopric" you can then mail your donation from home direct to the bishop.
Maybe the previous bishop should give the check back to the member and not to the new bishopric. I guess it is a good thing he did not move.travishayes wrote:We got a new bishop earlier this year, and after four polite reminders to one family, our previous bishop is still receiving autopay tithing checks in the mail...
Yes, if you read the earlier posts in this topic (and other related topics), you'll see that we're well aware that some other countries have had this capability for some time. This discussion is primarily related to US and Canada.TuiotiTM wrote:They've had online tithing in Australia since 2006, and its been in New Zealand for about 2-3 years now, and most all members pay their tithing that way.
It's not a matter of LDS Account rather than national bank systems.How does a member pay their tithing online once they have an lds.org member account?
Is there some change that causes you to think everything is done electronically? As far as I am aware, this is still a manual process at Church Headquarters. I would like to think they are working on making it possible, but there has been no announcement to my knowledge that anything has changed.milojury wrote:I think everything is done electronically, so I think there is no more manpower costs for CH. How would I be able to tell if this is the case?