November 9th, 2009
 

365 Gay: News

Anti-gay pastors in civil disobedience protest


(West Bend, Wisconsin) Pastor Luke Emrich prepared his sermon this week knowing his remarks could invite an investigation by the Internal Revenue Service. But that was the whole point, so Emrich forged ahead with his message: Thou shalt vote according to the Scriptures.

“I’m telling you straight up, I would choose life,” Emrich told about 100 worshippers Sunday at New Life Church, a nondenominational evangelical congregation about 40 miles from Milwaukee.

“I would cast a vote for John McCain and Sarah Palin,” he said. “But friends, it’s your choice to make, it’s not my choice. I won’t be in the voting booth with you.”

All told, 33 pastors in 22 states were to make pointed recommendations about political candidates Sunday, an effort orchestrated by the Arizona-based Alliance Defense Fund.

The conservative legal group plans to send copies of the pastors’ sermons to the IRS with hope of setting off a legal fight and abolishing restrictions on church involvement in politics. Critics call it unnecessary, divisive and unlikely to succeed.

Congress amended the tax code in 1954 to state that certain nonprofit groups, including secular charities and places of worship, can lose their tax-exempt status for intervening in a campaign involving candidates.

Erik Stanley, senior legal counsel for the Alliance Defense Fund, said hundreds of churches volunteered to take part in “Pulpit Freedom Sunday.” Thirty-three were chosen, in part for “strategic criteria related to litigation” Stanley wouldn’t discuss.

Pastor Jody Hice of Bethlehem Baptist Church in Bethlehem, Ga., said in an interview Sunday that his sermon compared Democrat Barack Obama and Republican John McCain on abortion and gay marriage and concluded that McCain “holds more to a biblical world view.”

He said he urged the Southern Baptist congregation to vote for McCain.

“The basic thrust was this was not a matter of endorsing, it’s a First Amendment issue,” Hice said. “To say the church can’t deal with moral and societal issues if it enters into the political arena is just wrong, it’s unconstitutional.”

At the independent Fairview Baptist Church in Edmond, Okla., pastor Paul Blair said he told his congregation, “As a Christian and as an American citizen, I will be voting for John McCain.”

“It’s absolutely vital to proclaim the truth and not be afraid to proclaim the truth from our pulpits,” Blair said in an interview.

Because the pastors were speaking in their official capacity as clergy, the sermons are clear violations of IRS rules, said Robert Tuttle, a professor of law and religion at George Washington University. But even if the IRS rises to the bait and a legal fight ensues, Tuttle said there’s “virtually no chance” courts will strike down the prohibition.

“The government is allowed, as long as it has a reasonable basis for doing it, to treat political and nonpolitical speech differently, and that’s essentially what it’s done here,” Tuttle said.

Not all the sermons came off as planned. Bishop Robert Smith Sr. of Word of Outreach Center in Little Rock said he had to postpone until next week because of a missed flight. Smith, a delegate to this month’s Republican National Convention, declined to say whom he would endorse.

Promotional materials for the initiative said each pastor would prepare the sermon with “legal assistance of the ADF to ensure maximum effectiveness in challenging the IRS.”

Stanley said the pastors alone wrote the sermons, with the framework that they be “a biblical evaluation of the candidates for office with a specific recommendation.” That could be a flat-out endorsement or opposition to one or both candidates, he said.

The legal group declined to release a list of participants in advance, citing concerns about potential disruptions at services. A list and excerpts from sermons will be made public early this week, with the delay necessary for lawyers to review the material, the group said.

Under the IRS code, places of worship can distribute voter guides, run nonpartisan voter registration drives and hold forums on issues, among other things. However, they cannot endorse a candidate, and their political activity cannot be biased for or against a candidate, directly or indirectly – a sometimes murky line.

The IRS said in a statement it is aware of Sunday’s initiative and “will monitor the situation and take action as appropriate.”

The agency has stepped up oversight of political activity in churches in recent years after receiving a flurry of complaints from the 2004 campaign. The IRS reported issuing written advisories against 42 churches for improper politically activity in 2004.

The ban on churches intervening in candidate campaigns survived a court challenge when a U.S. appellate court upheld the revocation of tax-exempt status of a New York church that took out a newspaper ad urging Christians to vote against Bill Clinton in the 1992 presidential election.

Opposition to Sunday’s sermon initiative was widespread. A United Church of Christ minister in Ohio rallied other religious leaders to file a complaint with the IRS. Roman Catholic Archbishop John Favalora of Miami wrote that the archdiocese abides by IRS rules in part because “we can do a lot for our communities with the money we save by being tax-exempt.”

Three former IRS officials also asked the agency to investigate the initiative, questioning the ethics of lawyers asking ministers to break the law.

Two-thirds of adults oppose political endorsements from churches and other places of worship and 52 percent want them out of politics altogether, according to a survey last month from the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life.

“It is good public policy that in exchange for the valuable privilege of a tax exemption, you cannot turn your church or charity into a political action committee,” said Barry Lynn, executive director of Americans United for Church and State, which intends to report the participating churches to the IRS, along with any other churches acting independently.


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  • Chris Sullivan Said: September 29th, 2008 at 12:25 pm
    • Ah, organized religion and the power of brainwashing.

  • Morgan Said: September 29th, 2008 at 12:58 pm
    • These particular churches do not speak one iota ever for the liberal, gay welcoming churches like mine that stay out of politics and do tremendous good providing assistence to the hungry and to the least in out society. I go to a church devoted to helping the hungry and the poor and which has devoted gay and stright member and which believes in social justice as being good, desireable, necessary and to the glory, thanks and praise of God.

      Politics never promotes spiritual well-being, feeding humgry people and caring for the least of out society keeps body and soul together for those who have little or nothing.

      While praying for world leaders in their mission of leading nations is always in good form, politics and candidate endorsing is never central to blessing people, praying for their healing and general well-being, helping those who are less fortunate, meditation and praying, finding a few hours of peace and calm in an atmosphere of praise, thanks, and calming paayer and hymns from the hectic world of bill-paying, hard work, car repairs, meeting tax deadlines etc and other sometimes stressful obligations that the world can put on us. To me that renews and refreshes my spirit.

      And not all churches want to live in a theocracy. Most of the people in my church want a separation of church and state. I heard a pastor on TV say that you can not be both a preacher and a politician, both things are at cross purposes and conflict with one or another, you have to choose or decide one or the other, you must not be both.

      Doesn’t mean you can’t be a spiritally inclined person, just means keep politics out of religion and religion out of politics. The two are like oil and water, not able to nix and should not even try to mix.

      And yeah, even though I am very grateful for my church’s tax examption, I would be the first to want it to lose tax emempt status should it willfully violate the exemption granted its correct mission to eerve God and to serve the needs of the spirit.

  • Opinionator Said: September 29th, 2008 at 1:06 pm
    • Can anyone explain why religion and politics/government should be considered in the same breath, other than as separate and disjoint entities?

      Religion is about after-life.
      Government is about before-death.

      And if my religion is different than yours, why is it that anyone religion trumps another, least of all mine? It is not logical or meaningful to think otherwise.

      If they can censor me, then I can censor them. Turn about is affair play.

      One religion cannot decide for me, and therefore, the fallible people who purport any religion are not in a position, moral or otherwise, to CHOOSE for me, or to FORCE me into their mold. Their judgment is not any better than mine, and they do not hold a monopoly on life, morals or any other topic for that matter.

      If any single religion is valid, then they all are valid. And that, my dear friends, is a contradiction, and therefore, they all must be invalid.

      So I say, keep your religion out of my mind and life, and I will keep mine out of yours.

      If you and your religion become a political action committee, then you must be bound by the laws of the same.

      Hence, TAX THE CHRUCHES, their real estate, all of their people and all of their activities. We, “the people”, need the revenue, and they seem to want to squander their time, talents and money and spend it on questionable practices and censorship.

  • TigerTzu Said: September 29th, 2008 at 1:37 pm
    • Removing their tax-exempt status would be the right thing to do, unfortunately no one in congress or the senate will have the balls to do it. In fact, many of our leaders are members of such churches and to some, given the choice between their constitutional and religious duty, they would choose their god over their constituents any day. We only have to observe how both presidential candidates fawn over the “faith” questions to see just how severely this has impacted our Constitution. Unless there are mass demonstrations of outrage, they will continue to do business as usual and that is less likely to happen than for Hubbard’s spaceship to land and take all scientologists to wherever it is they are supposed to go. Wonder how quick the IRS would jump on us if we decided to stop paying taxes.

  • jvic Said: September 29th, 2008 at 1:49 pm
    • These folks love this now, but how would they feel if it were chruches that didn’t support their views?

  • Alex Parrish Said: September 29th, 2008 at 2:17 pm
    • It’s time to start taxing all churches. The tax-exempt status of churches in the US runs dangerously close to endorsement of religion already — the recent blurring of the line by these renegades just proves that churches cannot be trusted to remain non-partisan, and should be taxed, like everyone else, for the services and protection they enjoy. Besides — the US needs the money — the property of the RC churches alone, if taxed,could go a long way towards helping our overburdened cities out of a financial morass. Tax! Tax! Tax!

  • Roger RamJet Said: September 29th, 2008 at 2:33 pm
    • The sad part is that the religious right is using government entities to target the status of liberal churches and their attempts to oppose war – which is legal.

      http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/0918-05.htm

      The Religious Right is neither religious, NOR right! Just Puling Hypocrites

  • Peter-Nicholas Said: September 29th, 2008 at 3:59 pm
    • No one was a better human being/christian
      than my late grandmother. She never went
      to church nor gave any money to them.
      She just said her prayers daily,
      sometimes more than once a day. If you love and respect your god PRAY AT HOME!
      We do not have to support these evil
      institutions (most of them).
      God made us what we are! Don’t ever
      be ashamed!

  • rone Said: September 29th, 2008 at 4:15 pm
    • Snatch every one of those churches tax-free status and charge them for back taxes….NOW!

  • R. Zeke Fread Said: September 29th, 2008 at 4:38 pm
    • Churches believe their above the law, ignoring IRS tax exemption codes and nothing is being done about it. Even after a local newspapers write about it and a news station did a investigative report on churches preaching politics from the pulpit. Then even approached the local IRS office, showed them video of this, they refused to comment or even say they would look into it.

      If churches continue to blatantly defy tax codes, and flaunt this in the faces of the IRS. Why the heck shouldn’t they lose their tax exempt status. While the IRS chases down citizens to make them pay up, they continue to allow churches to get away with doing as they please. It’s just sickening

  • ncmijs Said: September 29th, 2008 at 4:46 pm
    • First of all Tax Them Tax Them Tax Them.
      Second if they belive in life whty in the world would they vote for McCain when he wants war and more war. These religous fanaticals belive in Religous cleansing of anyone and anything that does not belive the way they do.

  • Tom Said: September 29th, 2008 at 5:20 pm
    • Yup: After what they’ve done … Tax *all* church organizations!

      I bet we could get at least $700,000,000,000 from them (for starters).

      Maybe Congress could draft a “Tax churches [*instead* of requesting thousands of dollars from each and every Americans (religious or otherwise)]” bill ??

      Two birds. One stone.

  • AngryNelly Said: September 29th, 2008 at 5:26 pm
    • If they want to act like political organizations, then they should be taxed like them.

  • Wes Said: September 29th, 2008 at 5:46 pm
    • First of all I think the government and the Bar associations should go after the lawyers who encouraged churches to break the law. Isn’t that against their own ethics like “Do no harm” is to a doctor? I would lose my license to practice if I encouraged my clients to break the law (therapist).

      Then go after the churches who knowingly broke the law. Why are they above the rules any more than any business that practices outside the law.

      Churches, not all but most, have become tax exempt big businesses who put money into acquiring property, playing the stocks, and turning a sunday sermon in to a theatrical event with the sole purpose of raising more money. Look at how wealthy some of the TV evangelists are all in the name if God. It is a shame and should be taxed just like I am and any other business is. A true non profit actually uses the income to help those in the world who need it. Tax them if they are going to break the law. They deserve it. And disbar the lawyers who encouraged it.

  • Lee Said: September 29th, 2008 at 6:28 pm
    • These so-called Christians, are nothing more than the American Taliban. They should not be tax-exempt.

 
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