(January 1, 2019 at 1:58 pm)Fake Messiah Wrote: There are other people like some secular organizations:
UNICEF, Amnesty International, Doctor’s Without Borders, S.H.A.R.E., Goodwill Industries. They help people much more than Christian organizations because they don't use "obligatory part of the money" to build castles, jets, jewelry, cars etc like religious charitable organizations do.
False on many fronts. You are only pointing to what amounts to a handful of people in Christianity who have mega churches, and those mega churches are all giving 80-90% of their money to charity each year, and their IRS tax forms are publicly posted to prove such.
UNICEF is run by a Christian, Henrietta H. Fore who is the executive director and who is also the CEO of the United Nations as well as a member of the Board of Directors of Christianity Today International.
SHARE is also run by the United Nations whose CEO is a Christian (see above)
Let's take a look at Goodwill Industries, since you brought it up. Goodwill pays disabled people minimum wage for hard labor and it's CEO and boardmembers are all millionaires.
Goodwill: The current President and CEO of Goodwill is Jim Gibbons, who in 2015 received a total reported compensation of $712,202.
Goodwill Omaha CEO Frank McGree was fired in 2016 after a World-Herald investigation revealed that he received between $400,000 and $930,000 annually, while more than 100 workers at his stores made less than minimum wage. (Paying employees pennies per hour, by the way, is perfectly legal thanks to a loophole in the Fair Labor Standards Act—something we’ll come back to shortly.)
Likewise, a 2013 Watchdog report found that the married couple in charge of Goodwill Industries of Eastern North Carolina, Dennis and Linda McLain, received close to $800,000 annually while employing workers with disabilities who were paid less than minimum wage.
https://www.countryliving.com/shopping/a...nonprofit/