Wow. Didn't think I get these type of responses. So why stop at 10%? Why not give everything you earn to the church? Apparently you think this Supreme Being will take care of you regardless. Don't buy that $5 coffee, that nice LCD TV, those nice frags and fish you keep in that expensive hobby that brought you to this site. Just give it to the church.
I remember when I was a kid, we used to go to church, and the ushers would walk down the aisles during Communion with their weave baskets on a stick. We'd drop our $1 to $2 in the basket for our donation for the week. Now, I have friends and coworkers that attend various Catholic churches in the area. They tell me the church keeps a monthly statement on their contributions, and even mail them envelopes for them to return their weekly tithings in. They are required to reveal their annual income to the church so they can best determine what their 'contributions' should be. I ask them what would happen if they didn't send in a 'payment'? They say that normally they get a letter indicating they missed their payment, and if it continues, they get sent to the 'office' for a lecture with the head priest on the importance of contributing to the 'better good'. Meanwhile one friend was recently laid off. He's facing foreclosure on his house, but he tells me he still tries to give as much as he can to the church. He says, "God would want him to do it." Hope the church reciprocates when he's living out on the street.
Many churches take care of the less fortunate. Some give back to their community and their parishiners. But these "Super Churches" that people like this Schuller and this local nut in my town, John Hagee, run are nothing but personal profit centers. It's amazing the amount of money these conglomerates bring in by duping innocent people into thinking they'll find peace and euphoria in the afterlife if they hand over their hard earned money to them. Meanwhile, they live in palacial estates, drive overpriced status symbols, travel the world, and buy all the worldly goods they desire, all on your hard earned nickel. P.T. Barnum said it best, "There's a sucker born every minute."