Dr. Shades wrote:charity wrote:Oh,yes, he says he has put on a little weight and is being fed very well by members. Not going hungry at all.
He must be serving in the U.S.A. Missionaries in other countries aren't nearly as lucky. There isn't always a member base that's willing (or able) to feed missionaries.
I served in Japan and would commonly go weeks without a dinner appointment. I lost about 10~15 pounds on my mission.
Besides, it's not the members' responsibility to feed missionaries anyway. It's the church's responsibility to ensure that its volunteers are able to adequately feed themselves sans outside help--a responsibility it's apparently willing to shirk even more than before.
It isn't a burden to share what you have with someone else. And why isn't it the responsibility to aid in the missionary work. When a family has the missionaries in for dinner, more happens than just eating. The members get acquainted with the misisonaries, the members get a little pep talk on doing missionary work, the missionaries give a challenge which some members actually take on, children in the family get the example of young men and women working for the Lord. And yes, they get a little food out of the deal.
Dr. Shades wrote:
Also, the church typically houses its missionaries in the cheapest places available. Japan was bad enough--no insulation, air conditioning, or central heating--but I can't begin to imagine what it must be like for missionaries in South America whose apartments have dirt floors and no running water.
My husband served in South America 50 years ago. They actually had it pretty good. A decent apartment and a maid. I think they don't allow maids anymore. And isn't it really rough on our affluent American boys to have to live without air conditioning and running water, which by the way 99% of the world puts up with. I think it is good for them to learn that maybe life isn't all aobut comfort and ease.
I know a missionary who lost a lot of weight on a mission in Korea. That was mainly because he hated the food. Not because it wasn't around.
Dr. Shades wrote:
Combined with the way that missionaries are all but denied access to adequate medical and dental care, the way the multi-billion dollar tax exempt corporate church empire treats its missionaries--especially when it has billions of dollars lying around to build a mall--is nothing short of deplorable.
I know of missionaries who have had serious medical problems and they have had good care. My son was run over by a car in Germany. (Fortunately it was a foreign car. He was on his bike, the car backed over him and then pulled forward running over his foot a second time.) His branch president was a captain in the Amry. An MD. He got good care.
Your characterization of the Church is both bitter and inaccurate. Do you really want us to believe that your posts have anything to do with sympathy for missionaries? How about trying to find a way to stick it to the Church?