maklelan wrote:harmony wrote: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
You don't know this, Pahoran. No one does. The books AREN'T OPEN! What we know is that in 1959, the GA's were such poor stewards of the tithes and offerings, THEY CLOSED THE BOOKS! And they haven't been open since. Our ancestors would likely be very upset, but we're so gullible, we take their word for it.
Uh, actually, I do. My mission president (who sealed my wife and me) was over all of tithing and over the church welfare system for nine years, and while I was financial secretary he trained me on everything, including how the church keeps track of spending records of everyone. I had to fix a big problem one time and he told me one of the fastest ways to get a church disciplinary council brought against you is to mess with the church's funds. He told me what everyone is and isn't allowed to spend money on, and a bunch of other cool things. You guys can speculate all you want and throw all kinds of numbers all over the place, but you're all just entertaining yourselves. There's actually nothing strange or dramatic about anything that goes on behind those doors you speculate so much about.
The church does not operate straight from tithe to payee. They do it the "old money" way: Borrowing against assets.