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  • #61
    I would like to think that no tithing funds are being used but I have my doubts. Cost projections went from $500M, when the project was first announced, to over $3B now. I have a hard time believing this cash came from other profit sources, unless the church makes a LOT more money than any of us realize.
    My hangup with the project is this: the church claims to be God's one true entity on earth but blows money on projects like this all the while there are roughly 20,000 children who starve to death on a daily basis, on a worldwide level. I have a hard time believing this is how God wants his money to be spent. I believe God would rather have his money spent helping humanity, not improving a couple of city blocks in a city that most of the world's population has never heard of.
    It will take decades before this project turns a profit, if it ever does.
    The timing of the project, given the economic problems, tell me that it wasn't exactly "inspired".

    Comment


    • #62
      Originally posted by TripletDaddy View Post
      I would be curious to see the pro forma on this project. Why is retail and domestic housing a great investment? Those sectors are hating it.
      I have a friend who works for a huge mall-building company. The conventional wisdom in that industry is the mall will make money for the first 3 years, and anything after that is gravy.

      Of course his company's goal was typically to have the entire property sold by around the 2.5 yr mark, even if it was at an apparent "loss" compared to the current "market value".

      Interesting side note: his company would completely build and fit out the building for a select few, profitable companies (first tier - Nordstrom, Kohls, Macy's, Dillards, Nieman Marcus, Saks...) and would require other 'second-tier' companies to build their own buildings (second tier - JC Penney, etc).

      This place will undoubtedly be excellent. Ironically it will also serve as a good buffer zone downtown.

      Comment


      • #63
        Originally posted by Eddie Jones View Post
        I'm just saying there are better projects out there than the CCC, although I understand those projects don't offer an 8% fiscal return. However, those other projects offer a much better spiritual return. I'm fine with keeping downtown SLC looking nice and all, but we are starting to make it look more like the Vatican City, which maybe isn't a bad thing. I'm not opposed to the CCC, I'm just struggling (not testimony-wise) with the blurred line of church/corporation in this whole deal.
        Let's assume that $1 buys one unit of good, and let's assume that the church has $100 dollars of extra tithing money. There are two alternatives for this $100:

        1) Buy 100 units of good, or

        2) Invest it at a 5% real rate of return and take 10% of the investment's earnings annually and buy units of good. The other 90% of the earnings will be reinvested at 5% real ROI (8% less 3% inflation)

        It chose option 2, and by the end of 17 years it had been able to purchase 17 units of good (in Year 0 dollars) with the earnings that were not reinvested, and the current value of the investments themselves is $189 (again in Year 0 dollars.) They have now effectively doubled their investment, buying good with $17 of the return, and leaving $89 of the increase unspent. They now have a decision to make between two options:

        1) Take the $189 and buy $189 units of good immediately,

        2) Leave the $189 units invested, but take all of the earnings to buy good, or

        3) Continue as they have, buying units of good with 10% of the earnings, and reinvesting the other 90%.

        At this point, they can't decide between 2 and 3, so they add $11 dollars, and split it $100 each between strategies 2 and 3. Twenty years later, they examine the results (values again in Year 0 dollars):

        Code:
        Option 2                                    Option 3
        Initial Investment      $100            Initial Investment       $100
        Current Value           $100            Current Value            $222
        Cumulative Dividends    $119            Cumulative Dividends     $ 23
        While Option 2 paid more in dividends, the purchasing power of those dividends, fixed at $8, is becoming smaller each year, and the church can see that the cumulative dividend payout of Option 3 will surpass that of Option 2 by year 65 (total dividend payout $227 Option 3 vs $226 Option 2.) At that point the real dividend of Option 3 will be nearly $10 compared to less than $2 for Option 2.

        The Church is now in a position where they realize that, long term, they can buy the most units of good by allowing their investment to grow and buying good with the dividends. This requires a long-term investment horizon, and it certainly exposes the leaders to criticism from those who see a lot of money that could buy units of good immediately. Over the long run, though, this investment strategy results in more units of good than any other.

        While it may seem that the Church's investments do not further the missions of the Church, I think it could be argued that, on the contrary, they do more to further its missions than any other uses of the funds.
        Last edited by cowboy; 10-25-2010, 12:34 PM.
        sigpic
        "Outlined against a blue, gray
        October sky the Four Horsemen rode again"
        Grantland Rice, 1924

        Comment


        • #64
          Originally posted by Spicy McHaggis View Post
          I would like to think that no tithing funds are being used but I have my doubts. Cost projections went from $500M, when the project was first announced, to over $3B now. I have a hard time believing this cash came from other profit sources, unless the church makes a LOT more money than any of us realize.
          And it might. But not having information there, I won't try to argue one way or another.
          My hangup with the project is this: the church claims to be God's one true entity on earth but blows money on projects like this all the while there are roughly 20,000 children who starve to death on a daily basis, on a worldwide level. I have a hard time believing this is how God wants his money to be spent. I believe God would rather have his money spent helping humanity, not improving a couple of city blocks in a city that most of the world's population has never heard of.
          I had understood that figure to be much higher. If we're down from 40,000, that's progress, I guess.

          Either way, my two earlier points stand here: 1. Why complain about the church doing a good thing? 2. Who's to say that financial investments such as these are not the very things that allow the church the monetary means to go about attacking hunger, poverty, sickness, etc? If I were convinced that a dollar going to the CCC was a dollar that could have otherwise fed a hungry child, I'd be more inclined to your argument. As it is, financial investments such as this may very well give the church the economic freedom to engage in more humanitarian projects.

          It will take decades before this project turns a profit, if it ever does.
          The timing of the project, given the economic problems, tell me that it wasn't exactly "inspired".
          The timing of the project, given the economic problems, makes me try as best as I can to bite my tongue lest I use it as direct evidence of its inspired nature. It would be very insensitive of the great amount of suffering that the recession has triggered to point out that the timing of this construction project could not have been better, both for the church and for those employed in the project. The project is also coming in as a fairly major cultural shift from the suburban to the urban is gaining steam. People are going back to the cities in force. I was very skeptical of the project at first, to be honest, but as things are turning out, it has the looks of a stroke of brilliance.
          τὸν ἥλιον ἀνατέλλοντα πλείονες ἢ δυόμενον προσκυνοῦσιν

          Comment


          • #65
            Originally posted by cowboy View Post
            While it may seem that the Church's investments do not further the missions of the Church, I think it could be argued that, on the contrary, they do more to further its missions than any other uses of the funds.
            You seem to be making the argument that the good Samaritan, rather than help the beaten naked man, should invest the money so that in a few years he can help two naked beaten people at the side of the road. Meanwhile, the naked beaten guy dies.

            Comment


            • #66
              Originally posted by cowboy View Post
              Let's assume that $1 buys one unit of good, and let's assume that the church has $100 dollars of extra tithing money. There are two alternatives for this $100:

              1) Buy 100 units of good, or

              2) Invest it at a 5% real rate of return and take 10% of the investment's earnings annually and buy units of good. The other 90% of the earnings will be reinvested at 5% real ROI (8% less 3% inflation)

              It chose option 2, and by the end of 17 years it had been able to purchase 17 units of good (in Year 0 dollars) with the earnings that were not reinvested, and the current value of the investments themselves is $189 (again in Year 0 dollars.) They have now effectively doubled their investment, buying good with $17 of the return, and leaving $89 of the increase unspent. They now have a decision to make between two options:

              1) Take the $189 and buy $189 units of good immediately,

              2) Leave the $189 units invested, but take all of the earnings to buy good, or

              3) Continue as they have, buying units of good with 10% of the earnings, and reinvesting the other 90%.

              At this point, they can't decide between 2 and 3, so they add $11 dollars, and split it $100 each between strategies 2 and 3. Twenty years later, they examine the results (values again in Year 0 dollars):

              Code:
              Option 2                                    Option 3
              Initial Investment      $100            Initial Investment       $100
              Current Value           $100            Current Value            $222
              Cumulative Dividends    $119            Cumulative Dividends     $ 23
              While Option 2 paid more in dividends, the purchasing power of those dividends, fixed at $8, is becoming smaller each year, and the church can see that the cumulative dividend payout of Option 3 will surpass that of Option 2 by year 65 (total dividend payout $227 Option 3 vs $226 Option 2.) At that point the real dividend of Option 3 will be nearly $10 compared to less than $2 for Option 2.

              The Church is now in a position where they realize that, long term, they can buy the most units of good by allowing their investment to grow and buying good with the dividends. This requires a long-term investment horizon, and it certainly exposes the leaders to criticism from those who see a lot of money that could buy units of good immediately. Over the long run, though, this investment strategy results in more units of good than any other.

              While it may seem that the Church's investments do not further the missions of the Church, I think it could be argued that, on the contrary, they do more to further its missions than any other uses of the funds.
              Impressive. Especially coming from a cowboy.
              τὸν ἥλιον ἀνατέλλοντα πλείονες ἢ δυόμενον προσκυνοῦσιν

              Comment


              • #67
                Originally posted by UtahDan View Post
                You seem to be making the argument that the good Samaritan, rather than help the beaten naked man, should invest the money so that in a few years he can help two naked beaten people at the side of the road. Meanwhile, the naked beaten guy dies.
                If the church were doing nothing to try to alleviate immediate and short-term suffering, your point would be even more meritorious. As it is, it's hard to find fault with keeping the long term in mind as well as immediate needs.
                τὸν ἥλιον ἀνατέλλοντα πλείονες ἢ δυόμενον προσκυνοῦσιν

                Comment


                • #68
                  Originally posted by UtahDan View Post
                  You seem to be making the argument that the good Samaritan, rather than help the beaten naked man, should invest the money so that in a few years he can help two naked beaten people at the side of the road. Meanwhile, the naked beaten guy dies.
                  Is it not possible to do both at the same time? If the church had, for instance, stopped ALL
                  humanitarian aid to cover the cost of the project you would have a valid point.

                  **edit** Perhaps building the center is equivalent to planting an apple tree?

                  Originally posted by All-American View Post
                  Impressive. Especially coming from a cowboy.
                  NEVER underestimate a cowboy.
                  Last edited by NorthwestUteFan; 10-25-2010, 12:56 PM.

                  Comment


                  • #69
                    Originally posted by All-American View Post
                    If the church were doing nothing to try to alleviate immediate and short-term suffering, your point would be even more meritorious. As it is, it's hard to find fault with keeping the long term in mind as well as immediate needs.
                    If you can cite some evidence for me that the church has spent even a fraction of 3B in recent years on charitable and humanitarian endeavors I will shut up.

                    Comment


                    • #70
                      Originally posted by UtahDan View Post
                      If you can cite some evidence for me that the church has spent even a fraction of 3B in recent years on charitable and humanitarian endeavors I will shut up.
                      How do you count paying for missions and chapels amd teaching materials and scritprue printing etc.?
                      PLesa excuse the tpyos.

                      Comment


                      • #71
                        Originally posted by UtahDan View Post
                        If you can cite some evidence for me that the church has spent even a fraction of 3B in recent years on charitable and humanitarian endeavors I will shut up.
                        over the last 25 years, not enough to entirely counter your argument (just 1/3 of it):

                        Humanitarian assistance rendered (1985–2009)
                        Cash donations $327.6 million
                        Value of material assistance $884.6 million

                        source: http://www.providentliving.org/welfa...eFactSheet.pdf

                        Comment


                        • #72
                          Originally posted by UtahDan View Post
                          If you can cite some evidence for me that the church has spent even a fraction of 3B in recent years on charitable and humanitarian endeavors I will shut up.
                          How much of a fraction do you need? I know several million went to Haiti alone.
                          τὸν ἥλιον ἀνατέλλοντα πλείονες ἢ δυόμενον προσκυνοῦσιν

                          Comment


                          • #73
                            Originally posted by cowboy View Post
                            They took a small initial investment of tithing and created something that not only repaid the seed money, but keeps paying a dividend that increases two to three times faster than inflation.

                            The church targets an ROI of 8% for its agricultural investments. If they pay only tithing on their profits, that is still a dividend of .8% that is increasing by 8% per year. That's $8 million a year on a billion dollar company, and it becomes $17 million per year in ten years.

                            Sure, they can take all their money and spend it on soup kitchens or whatever, and it will do a lot of good. But they can do more cumulative good with it if they invest it, grow it, and take increasingly large dividends from it for the same types of good projects.
                            That's great that the church gets high ROI for their investments. You (and everyone else) have given evidence of the financial benefits of for profit industries owned by the church. I have yet to see an example of a spiritual benefit.

                            All American mentioned the temple in Rome. I don't buy it. We know very little about the finances of these church owned companies. All we know for certain is that they pay tithing to the church on their increase, but we don't know what happens to the profits beyond that. Show me with hard evidence that the profits from those businesses go directly to building temples and I might change my tune, but I think you'll be hard pressed to provide that kind of evidence.

                            I'm not suggesting that they are being misappropriated, I just don't see how making money and all of the energy that is put into for profit activities contributes to the spirituality of the church. Buildings do provide a place to hold spiritual discussions, but I can think of several negatives for that one positive:

                            1. The for profit church businesses can have conflicting values with the non-profit (Deseret Book and Church Distribution have had their squabbles in the past).

                            2. The corporate mentality makes it more difficult for the church to invest in worthwhile activities that will lose money or make no money. African saints (and many other saints around the world) could use schools, but that hasn't and likely won't happen because schools lose money. If making money is seen as a spiritual activity then projects that make more money could easily be construed as more spiritual, and therefore more exigent. There is little incentive for managers and employees of for profit companies to take on projects that are not profitable.

                            3. Perhaps most importantly, the disconnect between revenue streams and market demands can cause the production side (i.e. church policy, leadership) to lose touch with the market (i.e. church members). If the church is making more equal or more money from its investments than it is from tithing revenues, then the investments and their demands will take priority in decision making. This can cause the leadership to become out of touch with the needs and feelings of the members. Of course, we'd never accuse leaders of this now, would we?

                            4. Related to the above, members can be seen as means to an end, the end being profit, or preventing loss. Why were we asked to flood the earth with BOM by sending them to others with our testimonies written in the front cover? Who paid for those BOMs?

                            I'm not saying that I'm right on this, but I fail to see any tangible spiritual benefits from the church making money. I do, however, see numerous problems and potential problems with the corporate structure and dealings of the church.
                            Dio perdona tante cose per un’opera di misericordia
                            God forgives many things for an act of mercy
                            Alessandro Manzoni

                            Knock it off. This board has enough problems without a dose of middle-age lechery.

                            pelagius

                            Comment


                            • #74
                              Originally posted by All-American View Post
                              This isn't meant as a shot to pellegrino and others, and I hope it doesn't come across that way, but this all reminds me a bit of the story of Mary when she anointed the Savior's feet. The apostles, Judas especially, were upset by the wasteful expenditure, suggesting that she should have sold the stuff and given the money to the poor. The Savior rebuked them; she did a good work-- why trouble her over it?
                              I don't take offense to anything anyone has said in this thread. That said, you've offered a poor analogy that is actually counterproductive to your point. Mary had an expensive item that could have be sold for a profit with the argument that those multiplied funds could be distributed to the poor. In other words, what the disciples were arguing for is the exact same defense that you and others are offering for the church's for profit activities. I think John's added detail that Judas was greedy and wanted to keep the money for himself is particularly poignant. Draw what conclusions you may.

                              Originally posted by All-American View Post
                              It seems to be a good thing they're doing. It just doesn't bother me.
                              Dallin H. Oaks's famous good, better, best talk comes to mind. I don't doubt that any downtown revitalization is a good thing, the better question would be more along the lines of: Is it the best thing?
                              Dio perdona tante cose per un’opera di misericordia
                              God forgives many things for an act of mercy
                              Alessandro Manzoni

                              Knock it off. This board has enough problems without a dose of middle-age lechery.

                              pelagius

                              Comment


                              • #75
                                Originally posted by cowboy View Post
                                Let's assume that $1 buys one unit of good, and let's assume that the church has $100 dollars of extra tithing money. There are two alternatives for this $100:

                                [Lots of PV stuff ].
                                Originally posted by All-American View Post
                                As it is, financial investments such as this may very well give the church the economic freedom to engage in more humanitarian projects.
                                This is what I tried to demonstrate in the golden egg laying goose parable (as awful as it was). There is a balance between growing an investment and using that investment for good. I'll leave it up to the church to determine where that balance lies but I can't help but be somewhat skeptical of a project of this magnitude. I'm skeptical, not critical.

                                Originally posted by creekster View Post
                                How do you count paying for missions and chapels amd teaching materials and scritprue printing etc.?
                                This is why I think the church is relatively less concerned with humanitarian projects (feeding, clothing, immunizing people) and more concerned with spiritually feeding people. While we still feed, clothe, and immunize people, our main goal is to save souls and in reality saving souls spiritually. This isn't a bad thing given our eternal perspective on life. It only looks bad to people that don't understand out mindset.

                                I have a lot of other thoughts on this but I suck at expressing myself and I'm sure it won't come out right, but suffice it to say that while I'm perturbed by the spending on CCC, my main issue is all the spin and reasons I've heard of why it's such a great thing the church is doing. We as members could find a silver lining on a turd (not that CCC is a turd, but you get the idea).
                                "Discipleship is not a spectator sport. We cannot expect to experience the blessing of faith by standing inactive on the sidelines any more than we can experience the benefits of health by sitting on a sofa watching sporting events on television and giving advice to the athletes. And yet for some, “spectator discipleship” is a preferred if not primary way of worshipping." -Pres. Uchtdorf

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