LittleRocketBoy said:
Does the leader of your church where gold i.e. gold crosses, gold alters, gold robes and rings?
Do you attend a church in a building that cost hundreds of thousands if not millions$?
Does your church organization own millions of dollars in real estate, investment property, and real assets?
Do you pass by the homeless and impoverished on your way to your expensive church/cathedral?
Do you use the scriptures that speak of being poor, impoverished, homeless, hungry, etc. as proof that prosperity is not the will God? If so, do you follow these verses that you use?
Have you sold all you have and given it to the poor?
Are you rich by NT standards?
Do you have no place to lay your head?
Do you practice what you preach?
Do you do the very things you condemn others of doing?
Are you a false teacher?
And a hypocrite to boot?
Any of us who uphold Christ's teachings as the standard, yet fall short of them are hypocrites to some degree. We must all grow to see ourselves as the chief of sinners, realizing that we can not boast in ourselves, knowing without God we would parish in our sins.
I disagree that our church buildings cannot be ornate, though. Consider the exacting specs God gave for the Ark of the Covenant and O.T. temple. When it comes to God's holy temple, which now in the new covenant represents heaven on earth, uniting men to Christ, it is appropriate to have a building which reflects that mystical reality. In protestants churches, which function quite differently, being primarily a meeting place to worship and receive teaching, rather than receive the Holy Mysteries of Christ, which unite us to him, I can see not needing anything fancy--your view is affected by how your churches function. If we were just meeting to study the Bible and sing together, then I would agree any simple building would be fine.
You may not be aware of this, but the entire nation of Russian was converted to Christianity, partly do the the experience of a royal envoy who was searching for the true religion and stumbled into the magnificent Hagia Sophia in Constantinople. When they returned to the Russian Tsar, they told him that they didn't know whether they were on heaven or earth when they worshipped there. As foreign as it may seem to you, as a protestant, even our architecture magnifies God, and can lead people to Christ.
Also our priests wear fancy vestments, only during the holy services, not to be flashy and look rich, but as a symbol of the glory of Christ, whom they represent. Unlike some prosperity teachers, they don't go around in everyday life covered in jewelry and showing off other materialistic things, like limo's and mansions. Most are quite poor, like myself, by American standards (which would still be well off by N.T. or even current world standards).
These symbols do not diminish our responsibility to the poor, nor are the poor neglected by us because our temple is embellished with nice things. The money put into the temple is a sacrifice to God, and it does contribute to the experience people have when worshipping Him--aiding their salvation. Remember what Christ said about the poor, when expensive oil was poured on His head before His crucifixion? Judas, who carried the purse, objected saying the oil could have been sold and the money given to the poor, but Jesus corrected him saying that the poor would be with you always. There are those sacrifices that are appropriately made unto God, and those personal sacrifices of wealth that we should also make to give alms to the poor. Both sacrifices are clearly pleasing to God.
Basil