Hades wrote:The question is, what the hell do they have to hide?
Organizations like the LDS Church, the Roman Catholic Church, or your local Evangelical Church, are pretty complicated objects. There are a lot more to these organizations than just their finances. Why single out a financial report and leave out other things?
I have in the past few weeks been corresponding with an acquaintance of a friend of mine who I think is an Evangelical pastor, who happens to believe both that God has the power to cause souls to cease to exist, and also that God will not use that power to put the (large number of the) unsaved out of their misery, but will rather let them suffer unbearable agony every single moment for the rest of eternity. I have kept asking this pastor why I should believe a good God would do such a thing, to the point that this pastor has apparently chosen not to correspond with me any more.
Now nobody in her/his right mind would assert that this pastor is trying to
hide anything, by failing to produce a report to the members of his congregation as to how many people have asked him questions he can't answer. And yet his belief that God will let the unsaved suffer unbearable agony
endlessly is
incredibly more relevant to the question of whether God has actually
inspired his faith than how his congregation has chosen to spend its money. A finite amount of money spent over a finite space of time can only do a finite amount of damage, or, alternately, can only do a finite amount of good. On the other hand, we're talking about a God who is allowing an
infinite amount of damage, that He has the power to stop, but won't.
Hades wrote:Why would you give money to a church or charity that won't tell you where your money is going?
I'm not a Latter-day Saint because my charitable goals mesh with the charitable policies of the LDS Church; I'm a Latter-day Saint because I firmly believe that
God directs the LDS Church. If it's
God who's inspiring the financial decisions, then what does it
matter what He spends it on? I happen to
trust God; he can spend the money on whatever He wants to.