Religion
Related: About this forumIRS leaves churches alone
May 21, 2013
By Mark Silk
Professor of Religion in Public Life at Trinity College and director of the college's Leonard E. Greenberg Center for the Study of Religion in Public Life.
There were no churches among the religious organizations apparently targeted for heightened scrutiny by the IRS. Want to know why? Because a quirk in the law currently bars the IRS from investigating houses of worship for political activity that would warrant removal of their tax exempt status.
Back in 1954, your classic 501 (c) 3 non-profits (including houses of worship) were prohibited by Congress from engaging in political activity on pain of having to pay taxes. Thirty years later, out of a desire to protect the constitutional rights of churches amidst a revival of faith-based politicking, Congress passed the Church Audit Procedures Act (CAPA). Among other things, CAPA required that an audit of a church had to be approved at the level of IRS regional commissioner or higher before the agency could contact the church.
Then in 1998, Congress reorganized the IRS, replacing regions with divisions based on the constituency served. Regional commissioners were done away with, and responsibility for approving church audits was given to the director of examinations in the Division of Exempt Organizations. In 2009, a federal judge in Minnesota barred an audit approved by the director of examinations on the grounds that this violated CAPA. And so far as is known, there hasnt been a church audit since.
That hasnt stopped an increasing number of conservative pastors from participating in Pulpit Freedom Sunday, an election-year event that began in 2008. The pastors publicly endorse candidates as a way of protesting the 1954 law. Although cracking down on them would hardly require a special audit, the IRS, recognizing PFS for the protest it is, has wisely declined to lift tax exemptions.
http://marksilk.religionnews.com/2013/05/21/irs-leaves-churches-alone/
patrice
(47,992 posts)contributing to the general social welfare.
Vanity liturgy and m&ms sunday-school, pizza parties and referral letters for college, higher priorities than a commitment to catechism and development of honest mature autonomous moral-reasoning skills.
Phillip McCleod
(1,837 posts)..even *sort of*?
because you think the IRS should leave churches alone? all of them? any of them? or just the ones you like?