Thursday, June 14, 2007

Does This Remind Anyone of the Lottery?
Rummage Sale 2007


The state lotteries were established to "help education." Public education is worse than ever before and still craving more money. States with lotteries never experience any tax relief. They are the high tax states.

Notice is hereby given of the next Rummage Sale at Luther Prep.

The Gospel Is Not Efficacious in WELS, So We Voted To Engage in Public Begging and Commercialism

"Mission Advancement Offices were established at each of the four synodical ministerial education schools, as directed by the synod in convention in the summer of 2005. The four ministerial education schools are: Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary in Mequon (training pastors), WI; Martin Luther College in New Ulm, MN (training pastors and teachers, staff ministers); Michigan Lutheran Seminary in Saginaw, MI; and Luther Preparatory School in Watertown, WI (college prep education for future pastors, teachers, staff, and lay ministers).

The goal of these offices is to advance the mission of the schools."

The problem with a rummage sale, sometimes called Junk For Jesus, is that the charity competes with real businesses to sell products to the public. The charity is free from all kinds of restrictions and taxes, so any bargain is really subsidized by the taxpayers in one sense and business owners in another sense.

The Christian charity is saying, "We cannot support ourselves with Gospel-motivated gifts, so we are getting free stuff from merchants and selling it to their potential customers." This is really shameful for the Christian Church. The parents, who are already paying $8,000 for a year at prep, are then supposed to give again.

The next problem comes from the success of these dishonest efforts. They make money, hand over fist. Free labor. Free goods. Tax free. No rent. No insurance. No business license. No pesky inspectors to see how much salmonella is being distributing in the donated food products. Christian commercialism produces greed. Soon the group says, "We need a pie sale. We need a car wash. We need a dinner. We need cash."

The Faith, New Ulm, building used to belong to the United Church of Christ. The UCC members built a hall and kitchen for selling food to the public. It was a restaurant with a professional kitchen taking business away from legitimate concerns.

Commercialism is the last gasp of a Christian group. The classic teaching on stewardship is 2 Corinthians 8 and 9, (not 1 Corinthians, as WELS wrote on one slide show). Paul was collecting money for the poor in Jerusalem. He did not organize a camel wash, sell used robes, or compete with local eateries. He asked the Christian believers to give based on the Gospel message of Christ.