conversationpc wrote:Rip Rokken wrote:I don't believe there was any precedent in the New Testament for believers to make a professional living in the ministry. They all had their own careers.
Early on, they certainly did but that doesn't mean it's wrong to devote yourself full time to a ministry. I know very few pastors who would be able to make any kind of a living at all if they had to hold a profession outside their ministry. The believers in the Bible who headed up churches had their own unique set of circumstances to deal with and, that being said, there's no prohibition against it in the Bible, either.
I kind of think of it (very loosely) like politicians who are supported by taxpayer money. Sure, the government is empowered to levy a tax sufficient to maintain the government, but I doubt the founding fathers intended on giving politicians carte blanche to live as wastefully and extravagantly as they do. Ya know? I could argue that morally, they have an obligation to take as little as they can for themselves so that more could be used for the good of the taxpayers. Of course it's debatable where to draw that line, but safe to say that when you read that Michelle Obama is taking heat for taking extravagant vacations while the country is in general recession, they probably don't need to be drawing that line themselves.
With ministers, the Apostles traveled around and received hospitality, but even Paul wrote that when they came among the churches, they worked with their own hands to support themselves. This whole notion of paid professional ministry came about with the clergy-laity system, which really effectively killed the equal functioning of members and made them dependent on guys at the top. It was never supposed to be the practice, but it's now traditional. Back to the money, if someone wants to accept paid clergy, then that line comes back into play, and who draws it? The Bible indicates that the Christian life is one of rejection and suffering to an extent, but lots of these guys these days are all for becoming well-known and esteemed in the community, then living a lifestyle to match. 6-figure salaries, big homes, all that good stuff. Probably not much suffering or rejection, and definitely lots of money wasted on making the flock comfortable as well rather than feeding the poor, supporting missions, etc. Most of that stuff is a drop in the bucket compared to what it costs to support the staff and the huge structures they build, complete with built-in Starbucks, extremely expensive A/V systems, etc. Not to mention the bookstores where the church sells their own products from t-shirts to books to recorded sermons. Lot of money to be made in ministry these days.
Here's a kicker for ya... I do contract work for a well-known local denominational church who expanded quite a bit in the last few years to get that megachurch thing going on. I came by one day and noticed two of the new buildings were named after 2 of the
sitting senior pastors (e.g., "The Rev. Joe A. Blow Discipleship Center"). I made a joke to one of the staffers and asked, "Did something happen to them?" She replied with kind of an embarrassed smile, "No... they're still alive and well." Most of their staff aren't even members so it's easy to get their opinions, lol. I mean, WTH?!? How can someone seriously pass themselves off as a model for Biblical Christian living when they erect large monuments to themselves basically, for their own legacy I guess? The Bible paints a totally different picture of what a Christian should be.
conversationpc wrote:Rip Rokken wrote:Nobody seems to pay much attention to example of Jesus whipping the money changers in the temple anymore.
I think most Christians think any display of public anger is wrong. Jesus did it on more than one occasion and, in this case, it was somewhat violent anger in the temple against those who were supposed to be doing God's business. Anyway, today's money changers are the aforementioned televangelists (not all of them, but most) and those commercializing the church for sure.
Commercialization in Christianity is the order of the day anymore, at least here in America. Jesus would have a field day. I remember when it really hit me the most. It was when I saw "LEFT BEHIND" emergency post-rapture survival kits being sold in Christian bookstores. I'd already thought those authors were probably raking it in by dragging the Left Behind series out much longer than it needed to be, but to sell kits supposedly for anyone who finds themselves missing the rapture was tasteless and exploitative of the whole idea.