It’s time to cash in on Catholic guilt.

At least that’s what some parishioners think is happening at St. Luke’s Church in Whitestone, Queens, where detailed breakdowns of members’ weekly donations have begun appearing in the weekly bulletin.

“I don’t like it,” said Pat McGlinckey, 56. “It’s like they’re hitting below the belt to get us to give more.”

“It just left a bad taste in my mouth,” said a 20-year churchgoer who didn’t want to be named. “What someone gives is their personal business. They shouldn’t be made to feel bad that they’re on the lower end of the spectrum.”

Without naming names, the church leaflet two weeks ago began revealing exactly how many parishioners tossed their church-supplied donation envelopes into the collection basket at Sunday Mass – and how much cash was in each envelope.

Last week there were 661 donations totaling $8,527. One person stuffed an envelope with $175, while 21 parishioners gave only a single buck.

The most popular denomination offered was $5, with 196 donations. In second place were the $10 offerings, at 142.

The church’s pastor, the Rev. Monsignor John Tosi, told The Post the new feature was to ensure financial transparency and not to shame parishioners into bigger offerings.

“The idea was to let them know where our money comes from and where it’s going, which is important,” Tosi said.

“We’re not embarrassing anybody, we’re not judging anybody,” he added. And if the efforts causes a parishioner to reach deeper into his pockets, “That’s not such a bad reaction, is it?”

But it’s other reactions that have some parishioners nervous.

“I think it will embarrass some people a bit,” said Fred Peterson, 82, a parish member since 1951. “Their names aren’t on there, which would be really bad. But privately, people may be embarrassed.”

The Brooklyn Diocese could not say if any other churches are using St. Luke’s public-accounting methods. A spokesman, Father Kieran Harrington, said many parishes print less detailed financial breakdowns and added that fiscal transparency is encouraged.

At. St. Luke’s, where monthly church expenses top $20,000, not all parishioners are up in arms.

“The church has needs,” said Claudia Morelli, a longtime parishioner. “People may have given $1 for years and years. These days, what does a dollar buy you?”

angela.montefinise@nypost.com