And who decides what common sense is? This appears to me to be another case of people being very, very charitable with other peoples money.
Exactly. And notice how the scattershot examples are lumped together. “Marble floors” of what? A church? A cathedral? How old? what makes “marble” a 'luxury material? As opposed to what? Wood? Concrete? Dirt? over a period of decades or centuries, does marble hold up better? Does a marble floor which might have cost the equivalent of 10K a couple of hundred years ago and did not any further upkeep beyond sweeping and occasionally ‘deep cleaning’ with products like soap and water all that time and is good for at least another 500 years make more ‘sense’ and ‘cents’ than say a wooden floor ‘replacement’ which would cost the equivalent of 100K today and would need at least 1K ‘treatment’ every couple of years and full out replacement in 100 years for a cost THEN of perhaps 250K?
Coffee shops. And of COURSE the revenue they generate as net profit after meeting expenses doesn’t matter, because it is just too ‘much’ to have a coffee shop in a contemporary cathedral.
“Luxury cars”. . .(often donated, and often more cost effective than a cheaper one which is more prone to breakdowns and poorer gas mileage and more frequent parts replacement).
And when you point out that God doesn’t ask people to give Him ‘cheap’ because He is offended if you used money that ‘you could have spent on the poor’, why, it isn’t the problem of the poster who is trying to claim his personal scriptural interpretation as binding, it is
you causing the problem because “
you” are greedy, trying to cover up greed, hateful, in love with ‘lavish things’.
Etc.
Classic (and logically fallacious) attempts to use every type of emotionalism and dodge in an ‘argument’ which is basically a poster trying to use the ‘bully pulpit’.
You give people the benefit of the doubt at first. Are they genuinely convinced of their ‘righteousness’ because they are truly concerned about the poor? Are they the Mother Teresas of our time trying to be a voice for the poor?
Or are they more concerned about trying to enforce their views on others? Is it a power play going under the guise of ‘concern?’ You can usually pretty soon tell if a person is truly more concerned for the poor, because that person usually comes on with a much more ‘charitable’ kind of attitude. Mother Teresa never came on with, “don’t you people know the Vatican and Church are sitting on millions while people starve, get rid of your WEALTH you greedy beasts” but rather, "Will you good people join with me in trying to help people? There are so many with needs, but together, we can make a difference. Even the littlest help means so much, we are so grateful.’
Because she also realized that the poor in ‘material wealth’ should not be treated like ‘things’, to be thrown ‘only’ food, while the thrower basked in his Christ-like ‘concern’ and ignored the fact that ‘man does not live on bread alone’. That acting as though all a poor person needs is food in his body, and that neither he nor the person with ‘enough food’ already need anything MORE than just a full stomach. . .certainly that they do not need art, music, beauty, cultural heritage, and a ‘connection’ to people not just ‘today’ but past and future too. . .