Dr. Shades wrote:Pahoran wrote:Dr. Shades wrote:After George P. Lee was excommunicated, a story was done about it in one of Salt Lake City's newspapers. It mentioned, in passing, Lee's comment about how tough it was to have to give up his church-issued credit card with its unlimited spending account.
So it came out that GAs receive, at the church's dime, an unlimited spending account. How sweet would that be?
And more importantly, how believeable is it?
Answer: it isn't.
Call for references, please. Bluntly, I don't believe it.
It's been a long time, and the Salt Lake Tribune archives only go back to 1998. The best I could come up with was a partial quote preserved at this site.
And here's the quote:
Sandra Tanner wrote:Another puzzling aspect of Mormonism is that there is no accounting to the membership of church funds. They are never informed as to the amount of the "modest living allowance" given to their top leaders. In the Wall Street Journal, Nov. 9, 1983, the salary given to a Seventy (second tier of LDS General Authorities, lower than an Apostle) was reported to be $40,000. Obviously, with inflation this salary would be much higher today. If housing is factored in (as in the case of the president of the church) the salary would be quite substantial. When George P. Lee, former Seventy, was terminated in 1989, the LDS Church immediately confiscated his church credit card (Salt Lake Tribune, Sept. 10, 1989). We are left to wonder about what other benefits go with "full-time Church service." For more information on LDS wealth see Mormon America: The Power and the Promise, by Richard and Joan Ostling.
Funny there's no mention of the "unlimited" credit it allowed. I wonder why, given the premise of the page in question, if that's what really was under discussion?
And what is a "church credit card?" That would seem to be a credit card used to buy stuff on behalf of the Church. A lady recently joined the Church in my ward, who had been an officer in another church. They had likewise entrusted her with a church credit card, to buy stuff on behalf of that church. She was likewise expected to return it. (Why wouldn't she be? She's no longer an officer in that church, just as Mr. Lee was no longer an officer in ours.) How is this different?
Notice how you have improved the story in the retelling: a "church credit card" becomes a personal perquisite of limitless scope. Do you really believe this?
The notion that anyone would have a credit card, for their own personal use, with "an unlimited spending account" is simply absurd. Why would they then need a measly $70k? This assertion requires a serious amount of gullibility to accept. The sort of gullibility that needs to be set alongside all the anti-Mormon/ex-Mormon claims of "critical thinking" and such.
Regards,
Pahoran