Sounds like the whistleblower, David Nielsen, may get A LOT of money (IRS gives up to 30% of collected taxes to whistleblowers). If the Church lost tax exempt status it would be very significant, but it doesn't seem like much of a moral scandal.
I guess that depends on your perspective. One of my least favorite things about organized religion is their proclivity to amass obscene amounts of wealth. To most believers its probably not a big deal, but this sort of thing has always irked me.Sounds like the whistleblower, David Nielsen, may get A LOT of money (IRS gives up to 30% of collected taxes to whistleblowers). If the Church lost tax exempt status it would be very significant, but it doesn't seem like much of a moral scandal.
I personally don't get bothered by the amassing of wealth, but how it gets spent can really upset me. I would be upset if the extra offerings had been spent frivolously every year rather than set aside for future expenditures. It would be sad if a church that teaches financial self reliance didn't have a rainy day fund. Again, I don't really see much of a scandal here (nor care much if others do).I guess that depends on your perspective. One of my least favorite things about organized religion is their proclivity to amass obscene amounts of wealth. To most believers its probably not a big deal, but this sort of thing has always irked me.
I think the issue is that you can choose to amass wealth rather than undertake charitable endeavors - but you're required to pay taxes if you take the "amass wealth" path.
How sure are your about what the line is between gaining wealth and normal religious tax exempt spending? Is the line 50%?
If we're to take the whistleblower's claims at face value, he's saying they amassed a 100 Billion dollar fortune, funded in part by church donations, and didn't disburse any of those funds towards charity.I personally don't get bothered by the amassing of wealth, but how it gets spent can really upset me. I would be upset if the extra offerings had been spent frivolously every year rather than set aside for future expenditures. It would be sad if a church that teaches financial self reliance didn't have a rainy day fund. Again, I don't really see much of a scandal here (nor care much if others do).