Ask to see the community’s annual financial statement. Ensure your local bishop is supportive. And remember: you are always free in conscience to give less than 10%—but if you do, you may not feel "at home" in the movement.
In official communities, the money is counted publicly during the celebration. A lay treasurer (not a priest) manages the funds, and communities often produce annual reports. Many members testify they have never experienced pressure, only a reminder of the vow they took when joining the Way. The Criticisms and Controversies 1. The "Third Basket" Problem Critics (including some Vatican officials under Pope Francis’ early pontificate) have questioned where the "Expansion of the Way" money goes. While the poor basket is transparent, the third basket funds internal projects. Accusations have surfaced of communities using tithes to buy land or build chapels without diocesan oversight, leading to a 2012 Vatican investigation that resulted in a precept ordering the Way to send all seminarians to diocesan seminaries for philosophy/theology (though later relaxed). diezmo camino neocatecumenal
The Code of Canon Law (Can. 1262) leaves tithing as a local custom, not a universal precept. Many bishops have complained that the Way’s tithe bypasses the parish offertory, starving local parishes of funds. In some dioceses (e.g., in Italy and Spain), bishops have forbidden the Way from collecting the "bishop’s basket" directly, demanding it go through the diocesan curia. Ask to see the community’s annual financial statement
★★★☆☆ (3.5/5) – A powerful tool for mission when done in freedom and transparency; a potential source of scruples and division when done under compulsion. In official communities, the money is counted publicly
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