For the most part, Newsday notes, the U.S. religious funds and indices are very small. But in Australia, one faith-based group is a major player in the stock market. The Salvation Army has a total investment portfolio of $300 million (US$153 million) in the national stock market, reports The Australian. With its other assets, it’s worth far more than $1 billion. “We don’t exist to hoard money, we exist to deliver services,” Lieutenant-Colonel Brian Hood tells the paper. “Money is put aside into investments to make sure it is well utilized until it needs to be drawn down.” In any case, such funds make it a major player in several large Australian companies.
But religious investing isn’t all safe, reminds the Chicago Tribune: “Prosecutors and securities regulators say investment fraud schemes, especially those doing business in the name of the Lord, are growing rapidly, stealing larger sums of money every year. Investment frauds that reach investors through religious rhetoric or their churches are stealing more than $1 billion a year, most of it from the elderly.” The newspaper focuses special attention on former Baptist pastor Michael Richmond, who recently pleaded guilty to 17 counts of wire fraud. Prosecutors say he bilked 170 investors (40 percent of whom were over 70) out of $8.5 million. (See our Money & Business area for recent Christianity Today coverage of these issues, including investment fraud schemes.)
Go, Crusaders, go Last year, Wheaton College’s decision to retire its 73-year-old Crusader mascot won headlines around the country. Now a Catholic high school in San Juan Capistrano, California, is following suit, but their Crusader mascot hasn’t been around as long—the school hasn’t even opened yet. Board members came up with the name, but school boosters, behind the $70 million Junipero Serra High School suggested the mascot committee go back to the drawing board.
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