When Materialism Replaces Theology: Why Abuloy Stops Being a Moral Duty Under Lifestyle Disparity
Description
This paper explains why abuloy (church collections) can stop functioning as a moral religious gift and begin functioning, in practice, like extracted taxation once an organization’s “daily life” shifts from theology and Bible exposition toward logistics-heavy service delivery. When feeding programs, medical missions, and constant operational targets dominate, the institution behaves less like a congregation and more like a centralized service enterprise that requires steady revenue, continuous unpaid labor, and tight compliance. In that setting, moral obligation to give abuloy becomes ethically unstable, especially when a visible lifestyle gap appears between ordinary member-producers and an insulated leadership circle. The paper argues that where (1) giving becomes monitored and coerced, (2) allocation is centralized and non-transparent, (3) labor is treated as compulsory while labeled “voluntary,” and (4) sacrifice is asymmetric, members are not morally bound to fund the system. Instead, withholding becomes a legitimate form of “economic voice” and self-protection.
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When Materialism Replaces Theology.pdf
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Dates
- Created
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2026-01-11