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Stuart Whatley

Stuart Whatley

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Pulpit Politicking Returns for 2010 Election Cycle

Posted: 09/30/10 01:43 PM ET

In a heated campaign season, the third 'Pulpit Freedom Sunday' in as many years, held this past weekend, garnered near equal attention as at its conception during the historic 2008 election. Per the initiative's blueprint, pastors from around the country purported to exercise their freedoms of speech and religion by endorsing political candidates in brazen violation of the current tax code; they then sent those sermons directly to the IRS to tout their civic transgression.

A tripling in the number of participants this cycle from 2008 -- from 33 to 100 pastors -- could be seen as a victory for the project's organizer, the $30M per year Alliance Defense Fund (ADF); but that number is still quite meager given that there may well be just as many churches in the United States as laundromats. The sheer insouciance from the IRS towards all tax-deviant clerics following Pulpit Freedom Sundays in 2008 and 2009 leaves little precedent for a change in policy this year.

Nevertheless, the ADF is determined to provoke a lawsuit from the IRS so as to challenge the 1954 provision that prohibits political endorsements from tax-exempt 501(c)(3) charitable organizations, which includes most religious institutions. According to the ADF's Erik Stanley, "We believe if a federal judge looked at the constitutionality of what the IRS has done, it wouldn't take long for the judge to strike it down as unconstitutional."

This prediction may be optimistic, and it further begs the question of whether the ADF seeks to be a serious advocacy group, or merely a headlining dramaturge. Arcane legality aside, the pulpit politicking effort is widely opposed by ordinary Americans, with the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life finding 70 percent in opposition to pulpit political endorsements. Moreover, the effort suffers from commensurate obloquy within the clerical community itself. Pulpit Freedom Sunday's participants have been publicly rebuked by a far larger interfaith alliance of pastors, who have pledged to distance themselves from partisan politics altogether.

Indeed, despite the ADF's many First Amendment evocations, its intent may not mirror the sentiments of those who sought to establish a Constitutional defense for individual liberty of conscious (the phraseology adopted by the founders from John Locke) in the first place. Fittingly, the clash in 1776, as it was this past Sunday, was actually over taxation (or an exemption thereof) -- except that in the period following American independence, the fight was against newborn States' efforts to assess compulsory taxes from the full populace to fund preferred denominational institutions, rather than on whether or not the intuitions themselves were to be taxed by a secular central government. These countervailing denominational fears were embodied in legion by Thomas Jefferson in his "Bill For Establishing Religious Freedom":

"To compel a man to furnish contributions of money for the propagation of opinions which he disbelieves and abhors, is sinful and tyrannical; that even the forcing him to support this or that teacher of his own religious persuasion, is depriving him of the comfortable liberty of giving his contributions to the particular pastor whose morals he would make his pattern, and whose powers he feels most persuasive to righteousness..."


Unlike today's church-state clash, disputants in post-Revolutionary America lacked a readily available secular adversary, as political secularism would not even emerge until the late 19th Century. Instead, fears were born of acutely diversified Protestant denominations anxious that, with government as merely a conduit, one sect could achieve supremacy over all the others, especially through tax policy (what James Madison designated "the violence of faction"). And herein lies the irony of the ADF's initiative. The original effort to separate church and state was carried out by strictly religious agents fearful of oppression by other religious agents of a very similar ilk. In retrospect, the ingenious revelation to divorce the two seems almost incidental, and yet inevitable all the same.

Money being fungible, it does not take any logical contortion to accept that a tax and a tax exemption are principally the same in an ultimate policy sense. The foregone revenues from a church that exceeds the conditional limits of its tax-exemption status is made up for by all, regardless of one's religious affiliation or belief. And so, in effect, all Americans who pay taxes are furnishing select partisan political actors with an IRS discount. Rather than embrace an originalist, non-preferential tax regime that protects all citizens' individual liberty of conscience, the ADF and its coterie of pastors now seem to be channeling a contrived historicism so as to have their cake and eat it too.

According to Americans United, a watchdog group that focuses on matters of church and state, Pulpit Freedom Sunday is hardly a lone measure in its attempt to activate evangelicals, whose votes are advised by sectarian ecumenism as much as by practical concerns. Countless events are being held nationwide in the lead-up to November -- from prayer vigils, to marches, to conventions and conferences -- that combine worship with voter registration and cloaked partisan political messaging. However, unlike pulpit politicking, these events, despite being rather disingenuous, are legal and at least slightly more reminiscent of the democratic cacophony of eras past.

The resurgence of the religious right in politics, as Americans United describes it, bodes ill for America's already frayed political and social fabric; but at least in a case of fortuitous irony, the IRS is probably already saddled with too much else to take the ADF's bait and capitulate before a Court that has demonstrated nothing less than bitter contempt for any constraining measure against speech and expression. In those races where traditional social issues reign, this year's religio-political movement may well achieve some modest ends. But elsewhere, most American families will likely be concerned with more pressing matters -- such as from whence their monthly income hails.

 

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In a heated campaign season, the third 'Pulpit Freedom Sunday' in as many years, held this past weekend, garnered near equal attention as at its conception during the historic 2008 election. Per the i...
In a heated campaign season, the third 'Pulpit Freedom Sunday' in as many years, held this past weekend, garnered near equal attention as at its conception during the historic 2008 election. Per the i...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dixdarlin
03:26 PM on 10/04/2010
Those words of Thomas Jefferson should be tacked on every church door!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
guitargeorge1964
Independent!!!
01:33 PM on 10/02/2010
Before the 2000 election I attended a 4-corners church with my girlfriend at the time (It was her church). The first Sunday the preacher started talking politics and said that the congregation needed to support the people who believe like we do and that kind of stuff. The second week, I guess he felt that some members didn't understand who he mean't and he repeated the line again but this time added George Bush to it. After the services I tried talking to my girlfriend about it but she completely didn't want to hear my point of view. I run in to her every now and then. Her politics seem to be to the right of Ann Coulter. But it seems to me that some of these churches don't have any separation from right wing causes anyway. It's just a way of using vulnerable people's beliefs as a weapon to tow the line. At least, that's my opinion, coming from a very limited interaction with them (that's right, I said "them").
11:01 AM on 10/02/2010
-continued-

I am told that it is not to late and that the preacher should lead the country in moral revival. You can legislate morality. In fact, that is about all laws do legislate. But legislation washes the outside of the cup and leaves the inside dirty. The gospel cleans the inside and progressively the outside with a perfect standard of morality (unlike the self interested morality of our legal code.)

I really believe that on matters that are clear in the Bible I am mostly ready to fight for the church's right to speak by speaking what is right regardless of the consequence. Sometimes I wimp out.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Linda Williams
11:19 AM on 10/02/2010
Why is it necessary to preach from the pulpit to those who already agree with you? Isn't this preaching to the choir? It makes no sense.
11:01 AM on 10/02/2010
-continued-

I am resistant to "let's all do" most anything. Pulpit days rarely bump me off course. I know that rah rah sells and feeling part of something big is exhilarating. But, I think I am a closet hippy.

My political goal at the moment is for the republicans to see that conservatism is not about money. It's about right and wrong - and no one can speak in those categories apart from revelation from God. Even the tea party is really not about right and wrong, denying that moral issues should be part of their agenda but throwing buzz words in hear and there to say the opposite.

The stone cut out without hands will grow to be a huge mountain. It will smash the vulnerable foot of the empires and power brokers of this world to dust. The kingdoms of this world will become the King of Yahweh and His Christ. Even His enemies will fake obedience until the final rebellion rises and than falls to leave an eternity where steel will be used for farm implements since King Jesus will be king of righteousness and king of peace.

-continued-
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Linda Williams
11:22 AM on 10/02/2010
Then, why doesn't God decide where to put Stop signs? And why do we have to pay someone to dig the holes to put the signs into the ground? Why doesn't God just do it himself? There is something missing between what God does and what is temporal. And, you, a mere human cannot bridge that from a pulpit no matter how much you preach. It is bogus.
11:00 AM on 10/02/2010
In principle I agree that Gov has no place telling us what to say in church. Period. However, in spreading the gospel and discipling those who believe, it may be expedient NOT to be perceived as politically motivated. I have criticized politicians for their moral stands, homosexual sin, abortion, hardheartedness toward the poor, feeding those who won't work, and government establishment of religion via regulations and education, etc. I expect one day to lose tax exempt status over the teachings of the Bible on homosexuality. The gov's expansion of their established religion will make non-conformers stick out more and more. Most citizens would even now agree that a group which discriminates against homosexuals (e.g. the US military) has not right to do so. How long will tax revenue be forgone to help such churches as speak discriminatorily in their teaching?

But to do a sermon on Jerry Brown and Meg Whitman is beyond my interests. We have passed out charts that compare candidates on moral issues in the passed. The problem was that fiscal conservativism crept in as a moral issue. Also military objectives were presented as moral issues. At that point I stopped making them available. Only a clear Bible point is of interest to me as a church backed endorsement.

Frankly, even homosexual marriage may not be a moral issue if "marriage" is just another gov license! The issue is what God thinks about men/men and women/women: such things are an abomination.

-continued-
04:30 AM on 10/02/2010
People like to complain that we should not legislate morality, but the fact is that we cannot legislate anything but morality. All laws legislate morality. The only question is whose morality will be legislated?

Be careful what you legislate, because once something becomes legal, it sends the message to vulnerable people that that thing is also moral.
01:01 AM on 10/02/2010
I wasn't aware god would be on the ballot this year. Now we're gonna have the whole birth certificate debacle all over again...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DevonTexas
Eternal Optimism
02:11 PM on 10/01/2010
What's so difficult to understand? If a church wants to have political sermons, they can, but they give up their tax exempt status. They are exempt because of the First Amendment establishment provision. If they want to be a political organization, just be prepared to pay taxes like everyone else.

Personally, I think it's wonderful that they want to change tax status. We need the bucks!
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Decorina
Hypocrisy means your karma ran over your dogma
12:06 PM on 10/01/2010
My property taxes already go to charter schools, whose mission is most likely a religious indoctrination. So why not expand the agenda of the religious to include political speech by tax exempt churches?
01:48 PM on 10/01/2010
Charter schools are still public schools and receive public funding as such. The way the current regulations for charters schools has it, religious groups cannot run charter schools. They can have their own schools in the style of charter schools, but they will not receive public funding.
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Decorina
Hypocrisy means your karma ran over your dogma
02:23 PM on 10/01/2010
You are right - they can't run a charter school. But if a religious group wishes to start a charter school and receive Federal funding (and State, too) they are advised this way:

"for religious groups that may be interested: create a separate, secular foundation to support the school; adopt a mission statement that includes specific educational goals unrelated to the religious or cultural purposes; and develop a curriculum that meets the school's religious, cultural, and educational needs.

In short, the school should be designed "to teach the ethics and history of the faith, but not to practice it."

From Education Week, June 2007.

IMHO this crosses the line of separation of church and state. If they taught comparative religions that would be different. But in practice I have yet to see a charter school that is run by a "private secular foundation" that doesn't emphasize a particular faith. They do receive my tax money, however.
DrSnuggles
You label me and I'll label you
10:45 AM on 10/01/2010
I really don't understand why these pastors don't understand - to retain tax-exempt status you cannot have a partisan political voice, this has nothing to do with religion it has to do with TAX. If you want to support a candidate just pay taxes like the rest of us.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Linda Williams
11:26 AM on 10/02/2010
Have they run out of gospel to preach? Actually, rather than studying their scripture it is easier to watch FOX news the night before and come to the pulpit on Sunday Morning and rant ab what they saw on TV. I listened to this every Sunday for 3 years. I work in a church. Some clergy spend 30 hours on a sermon. Usually more scholarly. Others watch Fox news and read People mag. No joke.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dixdarlin
03:45 PM on 10/04/2010
You sound like a smart cookie. Problem is....
Never argue with ignorance or try to reason with insanity. The Republicans own the flag, God, Gold, Greed, Guns, Glory. Republicans own it all, except human will. That has been stoked by Fox and Fear, but most intelligent inquiring minds know realiy from smoke,we see the reptiles without their mask.
10:30 AM on 10/01/2010
Twist it any way you want, but the outcome will ALWAYS be one of secular humanism, as that is what our constitution is founded upon.

Cal Thomas, Bill O'Rielly, Glenn Beck, Pope Benedict, Ann Coulter, Beavis, Butt-Head: Y'all can bitch about your lack of theocracy, but you cannot implant it. Period!
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
satanlite
Liberal blogger
09:29 AM on 10/01/2010
They are doing this because no one has been punished with repeal of tax exempt status.

Why is the IRS turning a blind eye to this illegal activity?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DevonTexas
Eternal Optimism
02:13 PM on 10/01/2010
agreed. they are doing it because they can. Now they are flaunting it and demanding the IRS respond. I can't wait until it does!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
granto2
08:57 AM on 10/01/2010
sickening. clergy using the tax free status to gain enormous wealth, promoting candidates from the pulpit, adding to the hate and fear mongering in this country and stubbornly refusing to do otherwise. blows my mind that people don't rebel against this abuse of position. think this is what your founding fathers wanted? oh so much evidence to the contrary... but these good patriots will thumb their nose at the law, and more and more are getting away with it. shameful, embarrasing and dangerous.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
satanlite
Liberal blogger
09:37 AM on 10/01/2010
Their behavior is proof there is no god. At least, not the one they say they are "worshipping".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
istvan13
The world needs more thinkers.
08:13 AM on 10/01/2010
I liked the article and thought it had great points. But I'm going to nitpick.

This prediction may be optimistic, and it further begs the question of whether the ADF seeks to be a serious advocacy group, or merely a headlining dramaturge.

Dramaturge is used incorrectly here. Or is the author saying that the folks at ADF are writing plays.
Here is the definition:
playwright: a playwright, particularly one who works with a specific theater or company
literary adviser in theater: a member of the staff of a theater with mainly literary responsibilities, e.g. choosing the plays for performance, editing and adapting texts, and writing program notes
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krr02
campaign reform = elections..not auctions
08:12 AM on 10/01/2010
after reflection....

can an entity really be "non-profit".."groups" or church..

if it chooses to contribute $$ to politicians....

actually pays $$ to lobbyists ...

pac's and super pac's seem to be no more than funnels of $$ to politicians...

after justice roberts opened up the floodgates...i say tax them all...

then if an individual wishes to donate tax-free...

send the $$ directly to the candidate...

and stop all these shell games