Inflated salaries, expensive homes, first-class globetrotting for Christian megachurch pastors, authors.
Maybe the problem with the church in America is not the pew-sitting evangelical but the decadent men leading the church?
“Little of what we have would be considered necessities, and as long as we are living in our culture, we will be surrounded by luxuries. So why not simply begin a process of limiting and eliminating some of them? Why not begin selling and giving away luxuries for the sake of the poor outside our gates? Why not begin operating under the idea that God has given us excess, not so we could have more, but so we could give more? Now we’re getting radical.” –David Platt, Radical, p. 127.
During the sweltering month of August, megachurch pastor and author David Platt headed to see firsthand the crisis at the border. A first-class airplane flight took the Radical author to San Diego, California and from there he traveled into Mexico.
While at the border, Platt helped feed asylum seekers in the Tijuana, Mexico area. Platt’s image serving food was published online and he tweeted some general photographs and thoughts of his experience along the border.
He hit all the Social Justice, anti-nationalist talking points.
An image of him feeding refugees was published online by BR Now.
At the US-Mexico border, spending time with brothers and sisters on both sides. Especially as citizens of another world, God give us wisdom and courage to live for justice and mercy in this one. pic.twitter.com/UBasZEXZiq
— David Platt (@plattdavid) August 6, 2019
Those experiences including the image of him serving food to refugees in Tijuana contrast starkly with a first-class plane ride. Most travelers are stuck in Economy, but far more often than church members realize, Christian ministry celebrities and parachurch organizations provide luxury travel and accommodations. For too many Christian leaders, they live the Lifestyles of the Rich & Famous while writing books and collecting big paychecks from ministries you fund.
Platt is noted for his negative view of wealth and the American lifestyle. His book Radical is a screed against the excessive consumerism of Americans in general and American Christians in particular.
Yet, it is these same American Christians who fund Platt’s Radical lifestyle. Platt’s Radical organization took in over $1 million, most of it, about $490,225 from Secret Church, according to the most recent tax documents available. His latest book Something Needs to Change urges Christians to do more for those suffering. In a slickly produced video published to YouTube by Platt’s Radical organization, he talks about his new project:
“In the middle of our home hangs a painting. It’s a picture of how I want my life and family and church to count. It comes from trails I trekked among some of the highest mountains in the world and for a few minutes, I want to take you there with me. I want to take you to a place where children are dying of preventable diseases. Little girls as young as eight years old are being sold into slavery.”
His home is in the elite enclave of Vienna, Virginia and cost McLean Bible Church $835,000. As they say in real estate, location, location, location. The city is located in one of the richest, most educated sections of the country, according to the Washington Post.
One person close to the church said he understands the real estate market is expensive, but the church should have engaged in a real discussion about this move before spending almost a million dollars.
Platt’s first-class plane travel and almost million-dollar home stand out because of his outsized influence on millennial evangelicals—a group that is expressing doubt about capitalism and America.
Christian publishing and conference speaking has its rewards too. For example Beth Moore.
Moore, the latest cause célèbre of the Woke crowd, was told to “Go Home,” by John MacArthur in a rebuke to women assuming the role of preaching. Moore’s home is valued at $1.8 million, according to one blog. And pulled in over $250,000 in compensation from Living Proof Ministries, according to its most recent and available Form 990.
But expensive homes are not only for the darlings of Christian publishing. Even church planters and denominational employees are reaping the benefits.
Expensive homes are a way that Christian organizations reward leaders. For example, the North American Mission Board (NAMB) spent millions on acquiring homes in expensive locations for church planters. Some of the examples exposed by Reform NAMB include: a $475,000 home located at 5141 N Apache Hills Trail, Tucson, AZ. In Tucson, the average home price is $179,000. Also, NAMB spent $415,000 on a condo located at 9025 Woodlands Trail, Unit 13 Alpharetta, GA, perfectly placed near Avalon to enjoy the best of big city life.
According to research from Reform NAMB Now, over 40% of homes purchased by NAMB they’ve located are valued over $400,000.
Your Annie Armstrong dollars at work.
These expensive homes provide a double win for ministers. According to the IRS, “If your congregation furnishes housing in kind as pay for your services as a minister instead of a housing allowance, you may exclude the fair market rental value of the housing from income, but you must include the fair market rental value of the housing in net earnings from self-employment for self-employment tax purposes.”
Big properties and big salaries come with big jobs. The leader of the North American Mission Board sold his almost 5,000 square foot, seven-bedroom, seven-bathroom home for $880,000 this summer. There is nothing wrong with owning a big home or earning a big salaries, but how can ministers afford such large homes? Unfortunately, Southern Baptists aren’t told how big a salary Kevin Ezell or Russell Moore earn leading Southern Baptist entities.
If there is nothing to hide, then why won’t Southern Baptist entities publish the salaries of top employees? This is required of non-church non-profits. Why aren’t our Christian institutions as open and honest?
Hoping to correct this failure to be open and honest about compensation, Morris Chapman introduced a motion at the Southern Baptist Convention’s Annual Meeting in Birmingham in June calling for transparency. His motion was referred to the Executive Committee of the Southern Baptist Convention for further action.
Maybe the Democrats are right? Maybe it is time to reconsider tax exempt status for Christian churches and charities. Too many leaders are earning big salaries and taking big benefits from the organizations. Even Christian leaders we support are often earning big salaries. Maybe they are worth every penny, but it is hard to judge when Southern Baptist entities hide their salary structures.
Maybe the problem in the church today is not the people in the pews, but the people in leadership?
I’ve seen all this many times before. Leadership’s love of money causes deception and wickedness that perverts any organization and everything it touches.
As leaders ask you to be frugal, they are not. They value their services just as any successful businessman would, regardless of their constant refrain that you should tithe and give your services as well.
There is NO EXCUSE for the SBC and all its subsidiaries, including the member churches, to publish salaries, fringe benefits, etc. of employees over $50,000.
There is no excuse for the SBC leaders, including its member pastors, to publish their additional income that is derived from their professional positions (or related too, such as writing books, service on non-profit or corporate boards, travel, etc.)
Only when this is done with the SBC be Godly…only when those with an unquenchable thirst for money be exposed and their wickedness be removed from the SBC.
The SBC is corrupt at the very top levels and these over-paid, high-priced preachers are a disgrace to their calling (if they even have one.) The Boards of Trustees of these organizations know the salaries of these men and still permit them to occur so they are complicit in the sin. Please don’t shine a light on televangelists because their corruption is even deeper. How in the world can a middle aged man even think about spending that kind of money on tennis shoes much less getting up to preach in them.
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