Then there's the issue of not following the instructions that came with the product, and how that voids the warranty.
The proof that you didn't follow the instructions is based on the 'knowledge' that had you done so, it would have worked as advertised. They'll swear on the Bible that this is true!
Lemon laws don’t apply. The small print on the tithing slip says the church can spend your non-refundable donation on anything it wants, including blow and hookers.
I get their motivation for using that model...$$$. The strange thing is, the customers actually come back and buy more of the same product that didn't work!
Isn't this topic just/mostly about American Christianity and some primarily American groups like Scientology?
At least a sizable percentage of the non-Christian and non-cult religions I am aware of in the United States--Buddhism, Islam, Hinduism, Judaism, Zoroastrianism, Jainism, Native American religions, etc.--do not use the primarily Christian American "business model" at all.
I don't see the topic of this thread as a question about "religion" per se, but about a specific assortment of primarily American, and mostly (by membership numbers) Christian, groups and cults.
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 05/18/2021 02:33PM by Tevai.
I took it to mean this is a religious business model in a very general sense, while at the same time making it obvious which religions it may apply to. I detected a bit of sarcasm too.
Roy G Biv Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > I took it to mean this is a religious business > model in a very general sense, while at the same > time making it obvious which religions it may > apply to. I detected a bit of sarcasm too.
Yup, you are undoubtedly correct.
I've just recently discovered Natan Slifkin's books ("THE CHALLENGE OF CREATION: Judaism's Encounter With Science, Cosmology, and Evolution," etc.), and I'm thinking in areas and ways which are broader, and are far deeper, than I've ever habitually thought before.