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Bang / Guns
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Title: Government Crusade Against Churches Begins With Removal Of Non-Profit Status
Source: Newsmax Headlines
URL Source: http://www.prophecynewswatch.com/2015/July06/064.html
Published: Jul 7, 2015
Author: July 06, 2015 | BEN SHAPIRO
Post Date: 2015-07-07 13:31:37 by Don
Keywords: None
Views: 4088
Comments: 39

In the aftermath of the Supreme Court decision mandating that states reward same-sex marriages throughout the nation, churches across the country prepare for the inevitable assault on their tax-exempt statuses.

“Beliefs” columnist for The New York Times, Mark Oppenheimer, wrote at Time.com that churches should have their tax-exempt statuses ripped away for opposing same-sex marriage. Felix Salmon at Fusion wrote the same thing:

[T]he US government subsidizes churches to the tune of many billions of dollars per year by giving them tax-exempt status. … The First Amendment guarantees freedom of religion, but that’s free as in love, not free as in beer. Taxation is a purely secular affair, and by default it applies to everyone equally, whether they’re a religious institution or not.

The left wishes for a nation where same-sex couples are given tax benefits for participation in a homosexual lifestyle, but where churches are punished for rejecting that lifestyle.

And it won’t stop with churches. The Christian Science Monitor asks whether conservative religious colleges will lose their tax-exempt statuses. Professor Michael Olivas of the Institute for Higher Education Law & Governance at the University of Houston said, “I don’t think that a number of these religious schools can reasonably hope to adhere to principles that are clearly in violation of public policy, a la Bob Jones.” As I wrote years ago, the Bob Jones University case, in which the IRS removed non-profit status from the university over its rules on interracial dating, will now be used as precedent by the IRS to go after non-profit institutions over same-sex marriage.

The crusade against religious churches and schools amounts to bigotry against religious believers – a bigotry clearly expressed by University of Virginia law Professor Douglas Laycock, who told The Washington Post, “The gay rights side keeps escalating its demands and public opinion keeps shifting in their favor. … Conservative believers are their own worst enemies and lead people to think they are hateful morons, so they’re not getting much sympathy.”

And this is the point: when public consternation governs the regulations on churches, we have violated the purpose of the First Amendment. There is no First Amendment right to tax exempt status, but as the Supreme Court wrote in Walz v. Tax Commission of City of New York (1970), the leading case on tax exemptions for religious institutions:

Grants of exemption historically reflect the concern of authors of constitutions and statutes as to the latent dangers inherent in the imposition of property taxes; exemption constitutes a reasonable and balanced attempt to guard against those dangers. … Elimination of exemption would tend to expand the involvement of government by giving rise to tax valuation of church property, tax liens, tax foreclosures, and the direct confrontations and conflicts that follow in the train of those legal processes. … The grant of a tax exemption is not sponsorship, since the government does not transfer part of its revenue to churches, but simply abstains from demanding that the church support the state.

The Court summed up that tax exemption for religious institutions “covers our entire national existence and indeed predates it.”

This, historically speaking, is true. As religious regulation expert Richard Couser wrote, “The notion of exempting churches from taxation did not begin in the United States. Medieval Europe, the Roman Empire under Constantine, and even Egypt in Joseph’s time exempted church property from taxation.” Erik Stanley, senior legal counsel of the Alliance Defense Fund, explained, “The unassailable fact remains that, for as long as anyone can remember, churches have always been tax-exempt or enjoyed favorable tax treatment.”

In the United States, tax exemption served the purpose of not excessively entangling the government with religious institutions, given that most civilized countries of Europe had established state churches sponsored by the government itself. The Founders – and most legislators and regulators throughout the history of the United States – understood that using the government to discriminate against particular churches would act as an abridgement of religious freedom. And the Founders would have been appalled by the federal regulations currently in place that crack down on pastors’ ability to speak politically from the pulpit.

Such regulations began in 1934 with a congressional amendment to the tax code, as Stanley points out. That amendment attempted to reject tax exemption for a church if a “substantial part of … [its] activities … is carrying on propaganda, or otherwise attempting, to influence legislation.” That amendment came after one legislator got upset with a church for campaigning against him based on veteran benefits.

In 1954, then-Senator Lyndon Johnson sponsored the Johnson Amendment, which labeled tax-exempt organizations those that did not “participate in, or intervene in (including the publishing or distributing of statements), any political campaign on behalf of (or in opposition to) any candidate for public office.” He sponsored the legislation because a rival secular non-profit opposed his candidacy. Now the IRS has expanded the regulations to include a bevy of possible violations in order to quash religious speech.

In short, politicians, given power over churches, would move to destroy those who oppose them. That is why tax exemption is an important aspect of protection for churches: the government’s attempts to smack down particular churches smacks of First Amendment-violating viewpoint discrimination. Either all churches should receive tax exempt status – which they should to prevent government specifically targeting religion, since the “power to tax involves the power to destroy,” as Chief Justice John Marshall put it in 1819 – or they should not. But the idea that government will selectively benefit those churches it approves makes religion an arm of the state, precisely the situation the First Amendment was designed to prevent.

Read more at http://www.prophecynewswatch.com/2015/July06/064.html#AiFkbZjp1sakidSZ.99

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 19.

#2. To: Don (#0)

" churches across the country prepare for the inevitable assault on their tax-exempt statuses. "

Well, I guess there are some that will be happy with that. And make no mistake, it will not end with that.

The left is always on the attack, they are like the terminator, they never ever stop, they never ever back down. They are always in a state of war attacking those that are opposed to them.

Likewise, the right, for want of a better term, never, ever stands up to them, the right never ever quits backing down.

Eventually, the backing down will stop, and the fight will begin. When, I do not know, but the left will be shocked. Just like the Nazis were shocked when the Jews fought back in the Warsaw ghetto's

Stoner  posted on  2015-07-07   14:28:29 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: Stoner (#2)

Just like the Nazis were shocked when the Jews fought back in the Warsaw ghetto's

The Nazis WERE shocked. But then they sent in more troops and killed them all.

The generals were shocked by the loss at Bull Run, but it ended at Appomatox Courthouse, and not very many of the soldiers who stood on the first field were still standing, or had legs to stand on, at Appomattox.

The Christian Church should not be an organization that accumulates wealth and property. Jesus and the Apostles didn't. Tax exempt status is a way for the left hand to know what the right is doing. They should teach their messages clear and clean, and if that means that tax exempt status is lost, they shouldn't be engaging in the sort of economic activities where that matters much anyway.

Vicomte13  posted on  2015-07-09   16:43:13 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#12. To: Vicomte13 (#9)

I know that the RCC accumulates a heck of a lot of wealth and many t.v. Preachers do as well. Then, there are many Christian Churches that work much like the early Christian Churches. The First Amendment is still in the Bill of Rights.

Don  posted on  2015-07-09   23:50:03 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#14. To: Don (#12)

The First Amendment doesn't prevent the taxation of Churches.

Vicomte13  posted on  2015-07-10   0:25:31 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#19. To: Vicomte13 (#14)

The First Amendment doesn't prevent the taxation of Churches

Unless it limits freedom of religion including use of property needed for service and support.

A Pole  posted on  2015-07-10   10:50:14 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 19.

#20. To: A Pole (#19)

Unless it limits freedom of religion including use of property needed for service and support.

All taxation somewhat limits the use of property needed for service and support of whatever organization one speaks of, whether a business, family, charity or church. That's the nature of taxation: it TAKES, and leaves the taxpayer with less - less money, less power, less ability to do whatever he (or it) was doing before.

And that, in and of itself, is NOT a violation of the First Amendment.

Taxation would limit Churches in property, service and support. It would take somewhere around 30% of their revenues away, and thereby reduce their ability to do something like 30% of what they current do.

This is not unconstitutional, because the same thing is true as everybody else. Taxation falls on all. Right now the Churches have been exempted for political reasons, not constitutional ones. Laws of general applicability CAN be applied to churches.

Example: the drug laws are of general applicability. Certain traditional American Indian religions require the use of psilocybin mushrooms, an illegal drug. To prohibit the use of the drug because of its illegality has the effect of preventing "communion" within that religion, a rite as central to the religion as holy communion is to Catholics and the Orthodox. The government suppressed the use of the drug even in the religious ritual, and the Supreme Court upheld that application of the law. If a law of general applicability acts in such a way as to render it impossible to practice a religion, the First Amendment does not protect that religion.

Another example would be Aztec human sacrifice, central to their ancient religion. Neo-Aztecs could build pyramids in the desert. They could dress in robes and make arcane prayers to their gods. But their belief was that it was the human death, the blood, the eating of the heart, that was required to appease the god and to unleash the power. Without sacrifice, the god is displeased. The general applicability law against murder serves to effectively prevent the practice of ancient Aztec religion in America. Human sacrifice is required for the religion. Human sacrifice is prohibited as murder. Therefore, the religion itself cannot be practiced - and that is not a violation of the First Amendment. Laws of general applicability can hinder religion to the point of non-practice.

Yet a third example: wine during Prohibition. Now, for political reasons, sacramental wine was excluded from Prohibition's alcohol ban, and continued to be bought and used. But this exception from the law was just that, an exception written specifically into the law, for political reasons, to make the law easier to pass. The law COULD outright ban all alcohol, including church wine. This would most certainly interfere with our religion: the sacrament could not be legally performed, but it would nevertheless be constitutional.

Truth is: churches can be taxed.

Vicomte13  posted on  2015-07-10 11:57:21 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 19.

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