Why is the lifestyle gap between Jesus and His early apostles automatically discrediting? You seem to be saying that the correct standard for any modern religious leader is to mirror the exact socioeconomic conditions that were present during ancient times. Even if the apostles at the time of Jesus were materially poor does it follow that any religious leader who is not equally poor is illegitimate or hypocritical?drumdude wrote: ↑Mon Dec 01, 2025 1:11 amHe makes far less than most of the LDS leaders. Lets not pretend the LDS leaders take a vow of poverty. They're shuttled around in fancy cars and jets, much like Jesus and his real apostles wouldn't be.MG 2.0 wrote: ↑Sun Nov 30, 2025 9:26 pmThe visibility and audience size give Mormon Stories significant cultural influence, so the power imbalance is not as simple as a lone, powerless individual against a faceless corporation. Remember, the church is a voluntary religious association that members can freely support or leave. Many here have done just that. The fact that Dehlin is profiting monetarily and at the same time leading people out of the church seems like good reason for the church to challenge him within the legal spectrum/arena of influence.
I don't think anyone here would argue that the LDS Church wouldn't like to see Mormon Stories disappear.![]()
Regards,
MG
Have you considered that the compensation and/or institutional 'perks' might be justified because of organizational size, responsibilities, and security concerns? If there is a 'moral problem' wouldn't it lie in the fact of whether or not there was exploitation and/or neglect of the poor that were at the core of the modern day church?
Oh yeah, the critics kinda' see it that way don't they?
So if Dehlin makes less ($236,000 in 2019) than the compensation that General Authority (estimated $170,000-180,000 in today's dollars) receives...oh wait, it looks like he us making significantly more...does that make his profiting morally acceptable? Apparently he makes more than the compensation rate of a General Authority and while doing so, leading more than a few out of the church. Using "Mormon" as his brand.
I can see why after all this time the church might be getting a bit pissed off.
Regards,
MG