Churches (on average) spend 70% on buildings and salaries. Not vans, media, or excellence and other stuff. Buildings and salaries.
I'm not referring to vans (especially not the ones that are actually filled with people needing to get to church).
Some of us want vans (big projector screens, 200 acre campuses, $300 million buildings, bus fleets, and whatever else) because it adds to status and the appearance of success - not so we can do ministry. If it truly aids in ministry, I'm all for it. But we have gone too far with it and I dare anyone to argue that we haven't. I'm ready for that one - even from the BB.
Instead of us always defending the church and its materialistic practices, why not pause and think. What in the heck do we need to have that costs 70% (in the case of most small, new churches, that is actually 90-95%) of our total intake? Are we just going to pretend that most churches DO spend a significant sum of their money on outreach and serving the people or will we use the usual "well MY church doesn't do that, so..."? 70% of intake on buildings and salaries? Doesn't that defeat the purpose?