^^Was that sarcastic? Because those descriptors do a pretty good job.[Edited on November 7, 2013 at 12:43 PM. Reason : .]
11/7/2013 12:43:02 PM
I understand that not all Christians are Catholic, but I'm having a hard time seeing how the Pope's points are true for non-Catholic Christians too. Pope attacks 'tyranny' of markets in manifesto for papacy
12/1/2013 7:23:46 PM
12/1/2013 9:19:05 PM
wat?Rampant abuse of workers came first, regulations and unionizing came after.Actually, rampant abuse of slaves came first, some regulation to define a "worker" came next and then rampant abuse of said workers, then actual regulation and unionizing came after.
12/1/2013 10:23:27 PM
hey, lets critique a gross simplification and entirely miss the point!
12/1/2013 10:46:13 PM
12/2/2013 11:08:12 AM
woosh
12/2/2013 11:51:41 AM
http://thegospelcoalition.org/blogs/tgc/2013/12/04/the-radical-christian-approach-to-poverty-and-riches/
12/4/2013 10:03:16 AM
So basically:1) the system we have is the system Luther wanted (its not, and why would that matter anyways?)2) hard work is good for you, social services make you lazy and laziness makes you sin (don't wash anyone's feet, don't want to make them lazy!)3) even though inequality is bad, scripture doesn't support redistribution of wealth (it does)
12/4/2013 10:27:55 AM
1) no2) no3) and nomeh, sorry for the sarcasm. maybe his position is so nuanced, that it doesn't fit our current constructions of what christianity is (from jerry fallwell and fox news), so i see how you might take what he says and interpret it that way. but i'd encourage you not to make those strawmen and to read what he says at face value. i thought what he said was pretty self-explanatory.[Edited on December 4, 2013 at 10:48 AM. Reason : ]
12/4/2013 10:44:56 AM
it is self-explanatory, and those are the problems it describes. it's all about paternalism = bad
12/4/2013 11:08:22 AM
You obviously didn't read it.
12/4/2013 12:43:55 PM
You obviously didn't read it
12/4/2013 12:49:26 PM
12/4/2013 1:40:05 PM
There is scriptural support for both of those things
12/4/2013 1:44:18 PM
Post it, then? I'm obviously not a bible scholar and I'm not bound by it, but you're the one that is making the claim that Christ supports redistribution through the use of state violence.New Testament, of course.[Edited on December 4, 2013 at 1:47 PM. Reason : ]
12/4/2013 1:46:17 PM
Romans 13:1-7Let every person be subject to the governing authorities. For there is no authority except from God, and those that exist have been instituted by God. Therefore whoever resists the authorities resists what God has appointed, and those who resist will incur judgment. For rulers are not a terror to good conduct, but to bad. Would you have no fear of the one who is in authority? Then do what is good, and you will receive his approval, for he is God's servant for your good. But if you do wrong, be afraid, for he does not bear the sword in vain. For he is the servant of God, an avenger who carries out God's wrath on the wrongdoer. Therefore one must be in subjection, not only to avoid God's wrath but also for the sake of conscience. ...
12/4/2013 1:58:46 PM
12/4/2013 2:09:07 PM
I attended a service at my parents' church during the Bush years, and the pastor did an entire sermon on that passage. He concluded that running a stop sign is a sin against god.[Edited on December 4, 2013 at 2:17 PM. Reason : ]
12/4/2013 2:14:51 PM
^^God works in mysterious ways!
12/4/2013 2:17:09 PM
Oh, scripture definitely tells us to obey authority:To answer your question about the government, we are commanded to obey the government and pay taxes so they can do god's work. And providing to the poor is God's work.
12/4/2013 2:31:42 PM
^ and you wonder why people at you when you try to make such an argument. By your logic, if the gov't passed a law that said "kill all black people", "good Christians" would have no choice but to follow it. I know you REEEEEEAAAAAAALLY want it to be the case that the Bible says "pay taxes to help poor people," but it doesn't. It says, in two separate and wholly unrelated passages, follow your gov't's laws, and help the poor. So stop suggesting that two separate passages are in the same context and apply to each other, because they don't. Unless and until you can find a single scriptural passage that says "pay taxes to help the poor" or "vote for gov't programs that help the poor," then please stop showing your ignorance.
12/8/2013 3:57:56 PM
The local NPR affiliate in Charlotte discusses local megachurch, Elevation:http://wfae.org/post/elevation-church-reporters-roundtableReporter Stuart Watson raises the point I've raised with others and yet to receive a satisfactory response to, do we want to continue to grant non-profit status and the tax exemptions that follow to organizations that raise millions of dollars and create millionaire pastors? And further, how do we distinguish these new megachurches from the church I grew up in that was over a hundred years old and had 150 or so in the congregation on a good Sunday? Or should we?
3/18/2014 12:25:29 PM
don't try to make a distinction, don't allow tax exemptions to any churches
3/18/2014 12:33:15 PM
yeah, there's no good reason any of them should be exempted over any other business.
3/18/2014 12:40:12 PM
Can you imagine the cries of "persecution" if they were no longer exempt?
3/18/2014 2:27:52 PM
I am going to dabble in the realm of false equivalency for a moment.How much money is not collected annually by granting tax exemption to churches?Once that number is known, how does that amount compare to the amount allocated for NSF and other scientific endeavors? Feel free to get bogged down in the weeds as to what is defined as a "scientific endeavor".Also, this clown in Charlotte sounds like the kinda person Jesus expressly preached against.
3/18/2014 8:05:36 PM
3/18/2014 8:49:16 PM
This link/amount is dated, but it's what I found on the fly:https://sunlightfoundation.com/blog/2012/09/13/nsf-funding/$7 billion to NSFNASA's budget: $17.5 (http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/federal-eye/wp/2014/03/04/white-house-budget-would-ask-for-17-5-billion-for-nasa/)Looks like we have quite a gap to close...
3/18/2014 9:51:40 PM
I'm fine with religious tax exemptions, as long as my new church - the church of I don't want to pay a single cent to the government - is considered legitimate.
3/18/2014 9:52:57 PM
I mean if we started taxing all charities I'm sure the government could get a bunch of money it didn't have before.
3/18/2014 11:33:46 PM
And that would be a totally relevant point if churches were charities.
3/18/2014 11:48:11 PM
Many churches are. I know a bunch of churches that most of their money goes to community charity.Other churches are huge ponzi schemes and most of the money goes to the administration.But many charities are like that also. Some are good and some are bad, but rarely do the bad ones lose their tax exemption.
3/19/2014 12:07:12 AM
Hey, I'm all for not taxing anybody, I dont think the government should be taxing every dollar a half dozen times.However, if we are going to have some kind of charitable exemption it should be a lot stricter to get classified as such and require frequent review to maintain it. I think there should be some maximum allowable administrative expense percentage, some non-political clause, etc.There are a lot of good churches that really do spend a ton of money on community outreach, soup kitchens, women's shelters, and all kind of god stuff, but I suspect that they're probably in the minority. Most churches are in the business of growing membership and evangelizing.
3/19/2014 12:34:30 AM
I don't have a problem with churches being able to get non-profit status for their secular charity as long as they meet the same guidelines az everyone else (but the rules need to be more strict for all secular charities), they just shouldn't get special privileges just because they teach a popular fairy tale
3/19/2014 7:22:55 AM
preacher at my parent's church makes more than the average professional. and he probably works half the hours, maybe less. same with the rest of the administration. it's ridiculous.
3/19/2014 1:26:19 PM
What Jesus knew about income inequalityhttp://www.cnn.com/2014/08/21/opinion/parini-are-rich-happier/index.html
8/21/2014 3:01:26 PM
Does Creflo Dollar count as a capitalist Christian?He wants you to donate to help him get his jet that Jesus told him he needs.http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/03/14/jesus-wants-me-to-have-this-jet.html[Edited on March 16, 2015 at 9:38 PM. Reason : as]
3/16/2015 9:38:32 PM