malaise wrote:Daniel Peterson wrote:As I said above, no amount of evidence or reasoning will separate harmony from her consuming contempt for the leaders of the Church. It's perhaps her single least attractive public trait, but she clings to it with grim tenacity.
It's already been pointed out that the house wasn't paid for by tithing funds, that it's an old and relatively modest one, that it's the oldest in its neighborhood (which should suggest, to anybody who knows real estate, that the value of the land on which it sits rose markedly after it was built), and so on and so forth.
But none of that makes any difference to harmony, who, when she hates, hates passionately and irrationally.
All the money the Church has comes from tithings and other donations. The fact that the money used to pay for his home came from some investment the church made using money from tithes does not make it morally distinct in some relevant way. It all comes from the same source.
This is true. The entire Church is built on donations and tithes. Simply because these monies have been divied into separate buckets based on investments, etc., it all grew from one source...tithes and offerings.
Again, I have no problem with GA's being compensated for what they do, but I think we have to look at things with a "big picture" perspective.
The Church owns and has interest and investments in many cooperations. Those companies that are Church owned would not exist if member tithes did not happen. Member tithes is where ALL of the Church's assets originally generated from. BYU is a prime example of that. As a professor of BYU, you, Dan, are paid by the Church. The Church owns BYU. A portion of my tithing goes to support BYU. Do I begrudge this? No, not at all...
But, again, I think we need to call a spade a spade when it comes to some of this.
President Packer has been an employee of the Church for most of his life. He was employed by the Church Education System, and then, was called as a General Authority.
So, yes, my tithing did, in part, go toward paying for President Packer's house. My tithing also, in part, went to BYU. It went to pay for some of my father-in-law's expenses as both a Mission President and a Temple President. A portion of my tithing also went to pay for items in the Bishop's storehouse, which my Dad, who is elderly and needy, partakes of. My tithing also has gone toward the charitable acts that the Church has contributed to, such as Tsunami relief, etc.
Do I regret any of this? Absolutely not!
I don't think that any Church member should regret these investments. However, I think it is important that all Church members are blatantly aware of where this money is going.
I don't think that the Church is being dishonest about where this money is going...and I would submit to Harmony that it is likely that her mother-in-law cheerfully contributed her 10% knowing where her money was going.
However, I do think it is disingenuous for the Church, or anyone associated with the Church, to make a statement that we are a 100% volunteer organization. We are not. It is more complicated than that.