In late July of this year, I asked the following economic questions, and this is how you answered:
[poll id=45]
***
[poll id=46]
***
[poll id=47]
***
[poll id=48]
I would be interested in knowing if those figures still hold true.
The even greater question is whether or not your church has discussed the economy. I’m suspecting now that they have.
Rather than open up a new set of polls, I’d simply like to ask you all to leave a comment on the following questions:
Has your church leadership addressed the financial meltdown? If so, what did they say or do?
Has your church leadership taken any steps to initiate a new program/benevolence to address financial issues among the congregants within the church? Outside the church?
Do people in your church think this meltdown is The Beginning of the End?
Thank you for being a reader and for contributing your comments.
It can’t account for the capricious whims of a college admission committee that this year (and this year only) thought that building ashrams in India was a more noble reason for selection than your solution to world hunger, therefore you had to settle for Podunk U. instead of Harvard. It can’t factor in that after you killed yourself for decades to crawl to a middle management position in Kludge Corporation of West Oconomowoc, the CEO’s mistress left him and, in a fit of pique, he sacked your entire department and farmed it out to bean counters in Pakistan. The next thing you know, you’re a greeter at Wal-Mart wondering how the American Dream passed you by.
I ask how they expect to ever be proactive in times of distress. Has the kind of crisis we see here in Acts 11 ever stopped happening? Shouldn’t the Church always be ready to deal with this kind of thing, supernatural revelation or not?