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In Romney's Tax Returns, Details On Mormon Tithe

Romney Mormon

By RACHEL ZOLL   01/25/12 02:28 AM ET  AP

-- Mitt Romney's newly released tax returns provide more than an accounting of the Republican presidential candidate's remarkable personal wealth. The documents also give a rare glimpse into tithing to the Mormon church by one its most prominent members.

Romney reports he will give a total of $4.13 million to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints over two years as part of his overall charitable donations. The former Massachusetts governor reported income of about $43 million for the two years. Separately, over the past decade, Romney and his wife, Ann, have given more than $4.7 million to the denomination through the Tyler Charitable Foundation, a multimillion-dollar trust the couple leads.

The LDS church famously seeks a high level of commitment from its members – in prayer, study, service to others and charity. A lifelong Mormon, Romney served as a missionary in France as a young man and as a top Latter-day Saint leader in the Boston area.

However, the Republican candidate's commitment to the church is a double-edged sword in the contest for the presidential nomination. Many GOP voters are Christians who do not consider Mormons to be part of historic Christianity. Romney supporters worry that details of his church donations contained in the tax returns could fuel opposition to him based on his religion.

"I feel it can be misconstrued if the sums of money he's giving to the church struck observers as unusual or as indicating some particular loyalty that threatens his independence as a politician," said Terryl Givens, a professor at the University of Richmond and author of several books on Latter-day Saints.

The annual 10 percent donation is a Bible mandate taught throughout Christianity. (Evangelical pastor Rick Warren, author of the bestselling book "The Purpose Driven Life," is known to "reverse tithe," keeping 10 percent of his earnings for his family while giving away 90 percent.)

Particular to Mormon teaching, Latter-day Saints must pay the tithe to remain a church member in good standing and participate in temple rituals. The Doctrine & Covenants, a collection of revelations from church founder Joseph Smith, says of tithing that Mormons "shall observe this law, or they shall not be found worthy to abide among you." Nearly 80 percent of Latter-day Saints said they paid a tithe in a recent survey by the Pew Research Center's Forum on Religion & Public Life.

Mormon giving is shaped by an ethic of self-reliance from the church's pioneer heritage, and by the history of anti-Mormon persecution over religious beliefs and past support for polygamy, which the church renounced in 1890.

Smith was assassinated by a mob in 1844. The earliest Mormons were driven from their homes, often under violent attack. Settlers in the Salt Lake Valley faced food shortages, disease and other hardships. Out of these experiences, the church developed its own massive welfare system, which it still operates today, providing food and other goods from its own factories and farms.

"They had to learn very early on in their history to provide for the material needs of their own people," Givens said.

In addition to the tithe, Mormons also give what they call a "fast offering." One day a month, Mormons fast, then donate the money they would have spent on the food to their local church leaders. The funds are used to help anyone struggling in the community because of unemployment, illness or other difficulty.

In addition, Latter-day Saints are expected to donate to a variety of church charities, including a low-interest education loan fund, a publishing fund for the Book of Mormon, and the church's international disaster relief and aid fund – the denomination's equivalent to the Red Cross – which responds to tragedies such as the 2010 earthquake in Haiti.

The giving process is private, making the details of Romney's charitable donations that much more noteworthy. No collection plates are passed during worship services. No financial records are used. Mormons are expected to give according to their conscience. Once a year, local LDS bishops hold tithing settlement meetings with families to ask if they've paid their full 10 percent. The church, based in Salt Lake City, releases no specifics of what it collects in tithes annually, although the amount by some estimates is several billion dollars.

On his tax returns, Romney reported that he gave the church $1.53 million in 2010 on income of $21.7 million, and in 2011 estimates he'll donate $2.6 million to the church, on expected income of $21 million. The 2010 amount is less than 10 percent, while the 2011 figure is higher than the expected tithe. A campaign official said the governor bases his tithes on estimated income, since he donates to the church at the end of the calendar year before his taxes are finalized. He plans to pay above the 10 percent in 2011, to make up for the underestimate the year before, the campaign official said.

For many Mormons, the percentage of tithing varies from year to year.

"In one given calendar year, I might actually `pre-pay' some tithing and then the next year, I'll kind of work that into my calculation," said Paul Edwards, editor of the Deseret News, which is owned by the LDS church. "I think that most Latter-day Saints can recognize it looks like he's giving roughly a 10th, whether it's one calendar year or over an extended period of time."

In an interview on "Fox News Sunday," one day after his loss in South Carolina, Romney said he'd be surprised "if people want to discriminate against someone based upon their commitment to tithe."

"The Bible speaks about providing tithes and offerings. I made a commitment to my church a long, long time ago that I would give 10 percent of my income to the church. And I followed through on that commitment," Romney said. "And, hopefully, as people look at various individuals running for president, they'd be pleased with someone who made a promise to God and kept that promise."

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-- Mitt Romney's newly released tax returns provide more than an accounting of the Republican presidential candidate's remarkable personal wealth. The documents also give a rare glimpse into tithing ...
-- Mitt Romney's newly released tax returns provide more than an accounting of the Republican presidential candidate's remarkable personal wealth. The documents also give a rare glimpse into tithing ...
Filed by Paul Brandeis Raushenbush  | 
 
 
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01:01 PM on 01/30/2012
I have no problem with Romney's tithing, my question is why giving to a church is tax deductible.
11:39 PM on 01/30/2012
That is a question for Congress.
09:28 AM on 01/31/2012
More a question for the country as allowing tax deductions for religious institutions is essentially supporting state religion.
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Ken Scherer
Scherenkreuz, Chi-Rho, Nehushtan, Ankh
09:50 AM on 01/30/2012
Every time Jesus talked about tithing he criticized how the priests burdened the faithful. I used to belong to a church whose pastor insisted we tithe of our gross, not net, income. He actually instructed me to provide him a copy of my W2s and to pay my tithes by check (not cash) so he would know that I wasn't robbing God. There is no New Testament command to tithe. I donate stuff to charity all the time and, at the age of 46, I've attended over 10,000 church services and been a very faithful Christian. My current pastor, a Greek Orthodox priest, shocked me when he said my ministry is to take care of my family and told me to not worry about paying a pledge I had made before losing my job and having to take care of my mother-in-law and my father-in-law, both of whom had strokes. My priest told me that a church that is doing God's will by helping the poor and needy will never worry about finances.
11:52 PM on 01/29/2012
I don't understand how anyone could vote for a person who was gullible enough to belong to this cult. Anyone who is actively religious does not belong in a leadership role in government. I want someone who knows they is responsible for their own behaviour and there is no god to come save us when stuff goes wrong.
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ScribL
Shared Sacrifice, Social Justice
01:52 AM on 01/29/2012
If my church pressured me to title like this I'd run as fast as I could, these are scary cultish people.
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06:54 PM on 01/28/2012
Mormons are #1 in fraud and bancruptcies.

How polygamy affects your wallet

"Their religious belief is that they'll bleed the beast, meaning the government," said Mark Shurtleff, Utah's attorney general. "They hate the government, so they'll bleed it for everything they can through welfare, tax evasion and fraud."

It makes some sense. Polygamists have multiple wives and dozens of children, but the state only recognizes one marriage. That leaves the rest of the wives to claim themselves as single moms with armies of children to support. Doing that means they can apply for welfare, which they do. And it's all legal.

"More than 65 percent of the people are on welfare ... compared with 6 percent of the people of the general population," Shurtleff said.

Shurtleff hasn't filed charges against Jeffs or his organization, but he's investigating Jeffs for "cooking the books," avoiding taxes, and even setting up offshore accounts.

www.cnn.com › Hot Topics › H1N1
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towerofpower11
03:01 PM on 01/28/2012
First he openly shows the world his tax returns, and then we all get to judge Mitt that he actually believes and is open about his Donations to his religion and other charities. And don't forget that he is actually faithful to his wife.
This is not the kind of person we want in politics, or is it?
It certanly is not the norm.
01:53 AM on 01/29/2012
Obama has the same qualities - and he wouldn't sell his soul twice over t get elected.
02:54 PM on 03/02/2012
What was his percentage, of his donations?
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Mr Bobo
Warriors, come out and PLAY-AY!!
01:37 PM on 01/27/2012
As much bashing as romney takes for being mormon, the sad truth is an atheist could never be elected president or they have to fake it.
03:46 AM on 01/29/2012
Reagan did a pretty good job of that.
08:53 AM on 01/27/2012
It must be time the church are paying tax, Im pretty sure that god Will approve it
11:50 AM on 01/26/2012
All due respect to the Mormon Church and to its members tithing.

Here is the curious question,though ?

Doesn't the Mormon Church request a 10% tithe from a members annual income?

If so, why does Romney give less?

forty plus million X .10% is 4 plus million in tithing. He is reporting about hallf of that?
08:26 AM on 01/27/2012
It reports he tithed 4.13 million on 43 million in income. That is pretty close to 10%. Also the church doesn't check tax records or request income. Bishops simply ask member's if they have payed a full tithe and an answer of "Yes" suffices.
01:54 AM on 01/29/2012
Except my coworker who was fuming after his Bish asked to see his W2 to prove his decrease in income.
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04:39 AM on 01/26/2012
Romney's tithe donations to the LDS funded the Mormon's massive California's Prop 8 Campaign against marriage equality. Tax exempt Churches seem to be obsessed with using their Money to influence the political process. When church & the State mix... Both lose.. Like Gandhi said; “I like your Christ. I do not like your Christians. They are so unlike your Christ.” Secular institutions can be fair and moral without the prejudice of individual Religions. Using the Bible as the sole legal objection amounts to a theocracy defense..& that sounds more like Iran than America.
I do not object to Romney's wealth or his donations per say.. Separation of Church and State in our Constitution.. is it's genius & what make America strong.
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Willie12345
07:42 AM on 01/26/2012
I don't believe tithing money was used to the purpose you propose. However, the Mormons as individuals did participate in the Prop 8 campaign.
04:46 PM on 01/26/2012
The Mormon church proper funded the largest campaign against Prop 8 and the vast majority or vocal opposition and funds contributed against the proposition came from Utah. Pretty sick when one state and it's dominant religion force people in another state to abide by their morals. The add campaign against prop 8 was despicable and full of outright misinformation and rhetoric. If God told the Mormons polygamy was okay then why did they go against God? Now they have to take a stand against someone else's beliefs? Spare me the hypocrisy. The Mormon church also runs the BSA now and drives it's anti gay stance. Mormons have shown conclusively they will use money and politics to force others to adhere to their beliefs. Why would Romney be any different?
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01:48 AM on 02/03/2012
That's the same 'logic' that is used when the church is asked where $5 Billion came from to purchase the new shopping mall in downtown SLC. The answer is always 'Not from members tithes'. And the faithful swallow that one hook line 'n sinker.
< must be a quote from P.T. Barnum that fits this >
08:20 AM on 01/27/2012
Not exactly. The Church did urge members to take action on the local level if they felt so inclined, so in a way yes they did influence the vote because a very massive amount of donations came from private donors who were also Latter Day Saints. However, the church did not donate funds specifically to any cause or campaign from official church funds.
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Willie12345
08:58 AM on 01/27/2012
Thanks for the clarification.
06:20 PM on 01/27/2012
correct...
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Roelvdwegen
Reality has a liberal bias.
07:26 PM on 01/25/2012
So... taxes are evil but a religion demanding you donate or else you get kicked out is good?
11:41 PM on 01/25/2012
I'm LDS. I think this article, although overall very accurate, may have caused you to (understandably) misjudge one point. Nobody is kicked out for not paying tithing, everyone can still go to church on sunday, and participate in church activities, etc. Nobody in the congregation, except perhaps the Bishop and his assistants, even knows if the other members pay tithing or not, as it is completely private. It is true however that if a church member confesses to their bishop that they are not keeping the law of tithing, then they cannot attend the temple (different than weekly church meetings). This is not the only requirement to enter the temple: one must be able to honestly tell the bishop that they are keeping laws related to sexual morality, honesty to fellow men, and they must be able to profess a belief in the doctrines of the church. The temple is a special place, and it is great goal for many members of the church to prepare themselves to be able to go there. Personally, I think of tithing as a blessing. I would never not pay my tithe, because I feel like God has blessed me much more than the money I have given. I have been taken care of in life, and I attribute it to obedience to this law.
02:00 AM on 01/29/2012
Tithing is an old testament principle which was revoked by Jesus and especially Paul in favor of unforced free giving. Since the middle ages, churches have done their best to reinstigate tithing for their purposes. Whilst mainstream churches try to encourage members to aim for 10%, this practice reached its logical conclusion with LDS, which makes it a condition to remain temple worthy. But to pretend it's Christian teaching is probably willfully misleading. Brigham Young knew this, which s why he famously never paid a red cent to the church.
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ammy
12:32 AM on 01/28/2012
No one is kicked out for not paying tithing. None of us know what others pay or if others pay.
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edgarcaycedoc
07:11 PM on 01/25/2012
How is it possible that a "tithe," which is expected throughout Christendom, can turn out to be a negative for a Mormon. I have a personal distaste for Mormonism, because my ex-wife lived a very polluted version of Mormonism. BUT, I also had the opportunity to meet some very committed Mormons, and if I could emulate their lives, I would consider myself a most complete individual.
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Steamboater
Forget hope. Agitate.
11:43 PM on 01/26/2012
As long as you emulate their lives and stay out of other people's lives e.g., Prop 8 in CA, go for it.
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edgarcaycedoc
06:23 PM on 01/27/2012
And that is one of the problems I have with Mormonism. What happened in CA with Prop 8 was despicable. And I fail to see how who another person marries in any manner diminishes me.
05:42 PM on 01/25/2012
From the 10% figure that is discussed in relation to Romney's "income", I can only assume that the LDS Church has authorized the use of IRS "adjusted gross income" figure. This means that they recognize all the IRS "deductions" for mortgage interest, medical expenses, other charitable donations, etc. If Romney deducted $1million for mortgage interest paid, then compared to the poor renter who deducts zero, Romney's 10% tithe is actually $100,000 on the short side. Very interesting to have not only a tax advantage but a tithe advantage!
12:12 AM on 01/27/2012
i pay my tithing on my gross income and am shure im not alone the lds church asks only that we pay acording to what the scriptures ask , but i like that you asume we think the same way you do all asumptions aside ;)
08:23 AM on 01/27/2012
The church doesn't actually specify 10% of what (gross, after tax, etc...) it only says 10% of our personal gain, to be interpreted by the individual.
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Mr Bobo
Warriors, come out and PLAY-AY!!
04:56 PM on 01/25/2012
Judging by these comments, I can understand what JFK must have gone through as a Roman Catholic candidate for president.
04:43 PM on 01/25/2012
Give the church all you want. Just dont claim it on your return.
tumorimmunologist
Hate is harder to cure than cancer
05:04 PM on 01/25/2012
Why not? Are you opposed to declaring all charitable donations or just the ones to the Mormon Church?
05:07 PM on 01/25/2012
definitely
05:13 PM on 01/25/2012
i am opposed to all titheing being tax deductible, no matter what the faith.
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ammy
12:34 AM on 01/28/2012
Really? And your position on donations to Media Matter - they are tax exempt.
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KaAp
06:44 PM on 01/28/2012
They are NOT a church ... try a good analogy