WorldNetDaily.com
Revolt of the pastors
By Jill Stanek
May 28, 2008
On Sunday, Sept. 28, the Alliance Defense Fund, or ADF, is planning a
nationwide pastors' revolt to challenge an IRS tax code that has
muzzled churches and pastors from expressing opinions on political
candidates for over 50 years.
Challenged will be a 1954 change in the code called the Johnson
Amendment, after then-Sen. Lyndon Johnson.
Johnson proposed the amendment to silence opponents to his second
Senate race. Two nonprofit foundations were pouring money into a
publicity campaign calling Johnson soft on communism.
There is no legislative history for the Johnson Amendment. According
to the scant Senate record, then-Democrat Minority Leader Johnson
stood up on the floor and proposed it as an attachment to an existing
bill. After Johnson said the bill sponsor was in agreement, the
presiding officer simply called for a voice vote. There was no debate.
Johnson was re-elected that year. Democrats won back the Senate
majority and made Johnson their majority leader, and the rest is
history.
Prior to 1954, churches were free to evaluate political candidates'
positions on moral issues without fear the IRS would revoke their
tax-exempt status.
The ramifications to the Johnson Amendment have been sweeping and
catastrophic to the mission of the Church.
The Rev. Barry Lynn and his Americans United for the Separation of
Church and State rely on this amendment to intimidate churches and
pastors from expressing any opinion on any political issues
whatsoever.
Many churches and pastors, wanting to live the biblical principle of
behaving "above reproach," have overreacted to avoid
criticism or risk losing their tax-exempt status and are today silent
on topics this amendment does not even implicate, such as abortion.
Meanwhile, in the half century that has elapsed since this code was
enacted, the IRS has only prosecuted one church. This was the Church
at Pierce Creek in New York, which sponsored a newspaper ad in 1992
opposing Bill Clinton for president.
But the IRS has remained vague on when a nonprofit might cross the
line, adding to the paranoia.
And in 2004, the IRS stepped up nonprofit investigations by creating
the Political Activities Compliance Initiative after receiving
complaints it was not enforcing or selectively enforcing the code. In
2006, the IRS increased the length of time the PACI committee meets
annually.
The IRS refuses to name churches it is investigating.
ADF will challenge one specific part of the code, the prohibition of a
pastor to speak from the pulpit about views on political candidates.
ADF considers this a violation of a pastor's First Amendment rights.
This has never been challenged in court.
On Sept. 28, approximately 50 pastors the ADF has chosen from
volunteers nationwide will preach sermons to provoke the IRS on this
point. This would immediately invoke a lawsuit that would find its way
to the U.S. Supreme Court.
In a press release condemning the plan as "deplorable" and
"worldly," AU's Lynn stated, "I assume the ADF will
provide a list of congregations unwise enough to join this move, and
we'll be ready to report those churches to the IRS."
Barry, ADF is planning one better – no, two better. It plans to give
you and the IRS videotapes of the sermons.
On May 16, the Palm Beach Post posted a good op-ed on ADF's plan,
stating in part:
The government can regulate – and tax – not-for-profit political
action committees, but tax-exempt status for religious institutions is
based on the First Amendment, not on a law passed in 1954. Congress
cannot overrule the First Amendment protection of the free exercise of
religion in its effort to regulate other not-for-profits. ...
This Supreme Court may well find for the church regardless of the
merits of its case.
Pastors and/or churches interested in participating in the Sept. 28
revolt can find more information at ADF's website.
http://www.alliancedefensefund.org/issues/religiousfreedom/churchandstate.aspx?cid=4485
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