Maybe they should be booking more weddings?
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This is a shame. This is all about greed and mismanagement. They need to sell off everything, all buildings, property, and holdings, to pay off the creditors and if that does not cover everything then the members need to dip into their own pockets to cover the rest. At least they could show even though they were irresponsible in handling money they are honorable in paying their debts.
Why should the members have to pay for the ignorance and ineptness of church leadership? They entrusted the leadership with their money. They were not irresponsible, the leadership was!
So using your logic, if my son commits a murder, as a member of my family we should all pay for his crime. Also, using your same faulty logic, any time any member commits a crime or is irresponsible it falls back on the other members as well. Not a real incentive to "go2church".That's what it means to be a church member. If you don't want to pay the piper don't become a member.
Yeah, I'm not a big fan of bankruptcy and I believe that for a church to do it is an extremely bad witness to the world.
On the other hand, I can't help but wonder whether or not this particular church being in this situation isn't God's way of exposing some much bigger problems.
Actualy, since this local church is just part of the larger universal Church, why don't you take the lead and send in your check first? When you came to Christ you automatically became a member of the Church...so "pony up".There is no doubt that this church is having to hang out its dirty laundry, but the sad thing it reflects on all who name the name of Christ. The best thing that they could do is pay their debts even if it means selling all they have, and yes the members and clergy should have to pony up out of their pockets if needed to pay all. I can see where bankruptcy is necessary at times, but only to keep the creditors at bay until the person filing the bankruptcy can pay down the debt. It should never be used to shirk the responsibility of paying.
Actualy, since this local church is just part of the larger universal Church, why don't you take the lead and send in your check first? When you came to Christ you automatically became a member of the Church...so "pony up".
I can agree that large churches can accomplish more than small ones, but I do fear the sacrifice of intimacy, formation, and development.
Joseph M. Smith said:In a large church people can just warm pews and not participate in hands-on work. But I do see that in a small church everyone spins their wheels in maintenance tasks, not mission.
Joseph M. Smith said:When I was a pastor, I felt my congregation was right-sized ... large enough to accomplish a variety of things, but not unwieldy and not burdened by huge investments for staff and buildings.
So quit beating around the bush, this is the second post to me in two days...are you saying I'm not a believer? Yes or no will do just fine.Like I said this stuff is all spiritually discerned. There is no way of explaining this to you.
Church discipline is becoming increasingly rare. Nice to see it being practiced.
Of note, "big churches" did not just appear on the horizon that way. They GOT that way by growing!
Why do churches grow? Two reasons that I can see (pragmatically). First, they are not church at all, and grow because they are places of entertainment akin to concerts and public venues like sporting events, productions, etc. Second, because they are faithful to the Scriptures and are making disciples.
We have some mega churches in each category. Guess which ones are filing for bankruptcy?
The membership covenant at the "big church" I attend is much more stringent than that I've found in the majority of medium and small churches that I've either led, been a part of, or known of (in excess of 1000 due to my work in the Graham School). People who do not attempt, in good faith, to live out the conditions of the covenant they agreed to when becoming a member will be visited by church elders and disciplined as befits the Scriptural mandates. Two were removed from membership in our last church meeting. One was restored after repentance. Our system is not just lip service!
Read our membership covenant here: http://sojournchurch.com/wp-content/uploads/Covenant-Constitution-9.7.2010.pdf
freeatlast, you have responded to posts after mine...are you going to answer the question, or are you going to continue the cowardly veiled attacks?So quit beating around the bush, this is the second post to me in two days...are you saying I'm not a believer? Yes or no will do just fine.
This is common sense, not spiritually discernable...something you seem to lack.
So using your logic, if my son commits a murder, as a member of my family we should all pay for his crime. Also, using your same faulty logic, any time any member commits a crime or is irresponsible it falls back on the other members as well. Not a real incentive to "go2church".
I doubt anywhere in any membership agreement it states members are responsible for the irresponsibility of other members and poor decisions of leadership.
We don't have this unbiblical church model...we are Elder led, as the Scriptures teach. Church democracy is not biblical, hence "business meetings", "committees", "officers" are not made up of the congregation.Don't be ridiculous. Perhaps you should go back to church membership 101. There is a reason most churches have business meetings and keep minutes and elect committees and officers, it is because they are a corporation.
No volunteer of a non profit organization is held accountable for the organization's actions. That is a fact. If the March Of Dimes were to file bankruptcy the employees and volunteers would not be on the hook for the debt.Being a church member is actually a legal situation. As churches are now mostly incorporated, when you join you are joining in the benefits and responsibilities associated with the goings on of that church, you are joining the corporation. If a church declares bankruptcy the members are on the hook, as it were, for whatever is due.
I have to agree with you on this. The problem is that most churches have let things go so far that to start the discipline process they would have to remove most deacons and pastors right from the start, not to mention those in the congreations.
freeatlast, you have responded to posts after mine...are you going to answer the question, or are you going to continue the cowardly veiled attacks?