For thousands of years, the watchdog has blessed us.
This dog is an important warning system—perhaps nature’s first security system—that adds a comforting level of protection to a home. “Bad guys think twice about breaking into a house with a dog,” Mike Ehrmantraut tells his widowed daughter-in-law Stacey in Better Call Saul. And a canine’s nose is an indispensable shield for any army or nation. Consider Patron, Ukraine’s famous bomb-sniffing dog, a Jack Russell terrier so light he can walk on mines without them exploding, saving the lives of many soldiers and citizens.
But a dog’s bark is sometimes little more than obnoxious irritation as it yaps at the slightest sound on the sidewalk.
As one who has worked for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints’ Public Affairs and Communication Departments for nearly 13 years, I’ve read and heard oceans of concerns, legitimate and otherwise, that people have with the institution. I’ve learned a lot and developed a thicker spiritual skin along the way.
I’m rarely bothered by the barking of the dogs outside of—and sometimes within—the walls of Zion. We need people to speak up when problems arise. But sometimes, I’m simply bemused by the myopia—what feels like yapping—of otherwise brilliant people. For example, the Church’s significant financial reserves have been a topic at which many with a watchdog spirit have barked. A December 14 opinion piece from the gifted Jana Riess at Religion News Service (RNS)—an important contemporary watchdog—repeated hackneyed arguments I’ve heard so often that the Muse demanded I open a blank Word doc to process my thoughts. Some have greater reasons—deeply spiritual and personal—to trust the work of the faith’s prophets, seers, and revelators.
In any case, it’s an easily diagnosable case of myopia. Public information refutes it soundly.
In 2021 alone, the Church’s expenditures for those in need totaled nearly US$1 billion. That puts the Church right up there with some of America’s top charitable organizations. And this year, the faith has given $32 million to the World Food Programme, $10 million for polio and neonatal tetanus vaccinations to Rotary International and UNICEF, $5.1 million to the American Red Cross, another $5 million to UNICEF’s global malnutrition program, and millions more for flood relief in South Africa.
And that’s just what was reported publicly.
Riess acknowledges only the $10 million donation for vaccinations. “Such efforts are beautiful and important—and not nearly enough,” she writes. She concedes that “$10 million is a fair amount of money” but is a pittance “in comparison to the billions that the church takes in each year.” Because of this perceived shortcoming, Riess says she no longer pays tithing to the Church.
Surely a church that teaches a mindset of daily repentance can do better. Nobody—not even leaders at the highest levels—is exempt from the consequences of violating sacred trust. Scripture teaches this; discipline of recent years verifies this.
But the Church of Jesus Christ is doing a great deal. Why not acknowledge that more generously?
Is there a dollar amount of donations to the poor that is enough to satisfy the doubting soul?
None of us grasp the vastness of the Church’s expenditures. This is because the faith hasn’t published a detailed account of expenses in decades. Aside from the annual auditing report at general conference, it seems the body of Christ is being asked to trust that things are in good order and caring hands so we can focus on serving our families and communities.
Every day we give a somewhat blind trust to others—that a restaurant isn’t poisoning our food, that the mechanic really is honestly and accurately diagnosing our car problem, that the news we read is true.
Some have greater reasons—deeply spiritual and personal—to trust the work of the faith’s prophets, seers, and revelators. Go ahead. Call us credulous sheep. Jesus already did that, so we’ll take the compliment.
Really, though, don’t you wonder what it’s like to be a Latter-day Saint bishop and see how much money just one of the faith’s 31,300-plus congregations spends on the needs of its poor? And, as important as helping the poor is, the Church is committed to other equally important expenses: education, temple and meetinghouse construction, genealogy, missionary service, the workforce, and more. This Church is a joint venture of salvation—the perfect Jesus Christ in partnership with the imperfect Saints.
These cost a lot of money for the Church to provide them at low cost or completely free.
After Elder Bednar’s speech, he fielded more than a dozen questions over 25 minutes from Press Club President Jen Judson. One question was, “With over $100 billion in funds and assets, the Church has more capability than any other church in the country to help eliminate poverty. What more could the Church do in terms of humanitarian efforts?”
“People want to bang on the Church and say, ‘Well, you’ve got all that money in reserve.’ Yeah, and it’s a good idea for other people to follow that example,” Elder Bednar responded. “You can read in the Old Testament about seven years of famine and seven years of plenty. It’s a good idea to prepare. These undertakings that I’ve described are resource-consuming, not resource-generating. And a lot of people depend on the resource that we provide. And if things are different in the future than they are now, we think it’s provident and wise to prepare to maintain that kind of support in an uncertain economic environment.”
No institution is perfect. The full name of the Church—The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints—is itself a sermon on this. This Church is a joint venture of salvation—the perfect Jesus Christ in partnership with the imperfect Saints. In a half-human partnership, we should expect errors along the way as God lets us grow. His work is to perfect us.
And so we must watch—like watchdogs—for ways to improve.
But as we watch, and before we bark, let us ensure the lenses through which we see reality allow us to grasp “things as they really are.”