Jul 30

Welcome back!

When religious authority conflicts with political authority, which authority takes precedence?

Any consideration of the relationship between religion and politics in the United States must take into account that most churches, religious organizations, and ministers are tax exempt.

Congress has enacted special tax laws applicable to churches, religious organizations, and ministers in recognition of their unique status in American society and of their rights guaranteed by the First Amendment of the Constitution of the United States.

Churches and religious organizations are generally exempt from income tax and receive other favorable treatment under the tax law; however, certain income of a church or religious organization may be subject to tax, such as income from an unrelated business. (“Churches and Religious Organizations:  Benefits And Responsibilities Under The Federal Tax Law” )

Now we come to another fine line. What is the difference between legal and illegal actions by religious organizations with tax-exempt status? This an important question, especially in an election year.

 
Political Campaign Activity

Under the Internal Revenue Code, all IRC section 501(c)(3) organizations, including churches and religious organizations, are absolutely prohibited from directly or indirectly participating in, or intervening in, any political campaign on behalf of (or in opposition to) any candidate for elective public office. Contributions to political campaign funds or public statements of position (verbal or written) made by or on behalf of the organization in favor of or in opposition to any candidate for public office clearly violate the prohibition against political campaign activity. Violation of this prohibition may result in denial or revocation of tax-exempt status and the imposition of certain excise tax.

Certain activities or expenditures may not be prohibited depending on the facts and circumstances. For example, certain voter education activities (including the presentation of public forums and the publication of voter education guides) conducted in a non-partisan manner do not constitute prohibited political campaign activity. In addition, other activities intended to encourage people to participate in the electoral process, such as voter registration and get-out-the-vote drives, would not constitute prohibited political campaign activity if conducted in a non-partisan manner. On the other hand, voter education or registration activities with evidence of bias that: (a) would favor one candidate over another; (b) oppose a candidate in some manner; or (c) have the effect of favoring a candidate or group of candidates, will constitute prohibited participation or intervention.

Individual Activity by Religious Leaders

The political campaign activity prohibition is not intended to restrict free expression on political matters by leaders of churches or religious organizations speaking for themselves, as individuals. Nor are leaders prohibited from speaking about important issues of public policy. However, for their organizations to remain tax exempt under IRC section 501(c)(3), religious leaders cannot make partisan comments in official organization publications or at official church functions. To avoid potential attribution of their comments outside of church functions and publications, religious leaders who speak or write in their individual capacity are encouraged to clearly indicate that their comments are personal and not intended to represent the views of the organization.  IRS “Tax Guide For Churches And Religious Organizations”

My intention at this point is to post this IRS material on the blog for future reference as we go farther into the political campaign.

For now, I will include two references to cases when Roman Catholic priests denied communion to church members.

Word spread like wildfire in Catholic circles: Douglas Kmiec, a staunch Republican, firm foe of abortion and veteran of the Reagan Justice Department, had been denied communion.

His sin? Kmiec, a Catholic who can cite papal pronouncements with the facility of a theological scholar, shocked old friends and adversaries alike earlier this year by endorsing Barack Obama for president. For at least one priest, Kmiec’s support for a pro-choice politician made him a willing participant in a grave moral evil.

Kmiec was denied communion in April at a Mass for a group of Catholic business people he later addressed at dinner. The episode has not received wide attention outside the Catholic world, yet it is the opening shot in an argument that could have a large impact on this year’s presidential campaign: Is it legitimate for bishops and priests to deny communion to those supporting candidates who favor abortion rights? (“Denied the Rite“)

In Kansas City, Kan., Archbishop Joseph F. Naumann has ordered Ms. Sebelius [Governor of Kansas] also an Obama supporter, not to receive Communion after she vetoed abortion legislation riddled with constitutional red flags. The bill in question made it easier for prosecutors to search private medical records, allowed family members to seek court orders to stop abortions and failed to include exceptions to save the life of the mother. Along with many public officials, Ms. Sebelius recognizes the profound moral gravity of abortion. She has supported prudent public policies that have reduced abortions in Kansas by investing in adoption services, prenatal health care and social safety nets for families. But in his diocesan newspaper, the archbishop blasted the governor over her “spiritually lethal” message and her obligation to recognize the “legitimate authority within the Church.” (“Don’t Play Politics With Communion”)

In recent posts, I have been raising questions about the relationships between religion, politics, and the Bible by offering a series of specific, current examples of the collisions between political and religious beliefs.

Behind the specifics of any particular incident, lawsuit, political campaign, or religious organization, the basic challenge is this: the First Amendment of the Constitution of the United States requires that we must respect the rights of others whose religious beliefs and practices are different from our own.

It is also important to recognize that any belief about religion comes under the category of religious belief. Atheism is as much a religious belief as belief in God. (For a perceptive commentary on this point, see the comment by John Thomas.)

As our society continues to become more and more religiously, culturally, ethnically, and linguistically diverse, this means that clashes between religion and politics will grow more and more frequent. The question then becomes a matter of authority. Which authority is the ultimate authority on such matters? Does religious belief trump federal law?  Or does Federal law trump religious belief?

I remember the 1960 presidential election when John F. Kennedy’s Roman Catholic faith was a major political issue, based on the question of authority:  Would John Kennedy abide by federal law or be obedient to the authority of the Pope?  

The basic question of authority has not changed, and applies to Roman Catholics who must decide if they are going to follow church teachings or federal, state, and local laws at the risk of being denied sacred rites.

The same question applies to evangelical Christians who treat the Bible as their highest authority. When there is a conflict, do they obey the Bible or the law? 

What happens when churches provide sanctuary to illegal immigrants against federal law, based on a claim that they are following a higher authority? 

Under Martin Luther King, Jr, the civil rights movement was fundamentally a proclamation that a biblical vision of justice carried higher authority than Jim Crow laws requiring segregation by race.

And since the question of Barack Obama’s faith continue to be the stuff of internet urban legends, with endless claims that he is really a Muslim and would take the oath of office on the Koran, what happens when a non-Christian is elected to political office? 

And if we are going to teach the Bible in public schools, are we willing to provide money to teach the Koran in public schools? Will we spend tax dollars to educate Muslims in private Muslim schools?

We might even add to the list, is it really possible for someone in the United States to run for President who claims to be an agnostic or atheist?

I don’t pretend to know the answers to such questions. I know only that religious and political beliefs can never be treated as if they inhabit separate realms. Like it or not, every religious question is also political and every political question is also religious. And in each case, the real question comes down to authority.

When religious authority conflicts with political authority, which authority takes precedence? This is the most impolite and the most difficult of the Impolite Topics.

Dr. Kalinda Rose Stevenson


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Jul 23

What authority in your life is primary? Is it God? The Bible? The government? Some person? An organization? A business? Whom or what do you fear the most? Or to ask the question in a different way, what authority will you obey above all others?

Some Christian churches claim that the central theme of the Bible is salvation from human sin. But if you read the Bible carefully, you will see that salvation from sin is nowhere nearly as important a theme as the question of power. At its core, the Bible is a book about the use and abuse of power and conflicting demands for obedience to authority.

The Bible, taken as a whole, is a study in the relationship between God, government power, and personal obedience. It claims that God is the ultimate authority, but has mixed messages about whether or not human rulers are agents of God’s authority on Earth.

Most of the Bible stories are about these questions of power and the abuse of power and about authority and conflicting claims to authority.  I didn’t learn those Bible stories in Sunday School. Instead, I learned sweet stories about being nice and giving to the poor. Mostly, I learned that I was supposed to be obedient to established authority.

In fact, the stories about Jesus are fundamentally the stories of a man who was acting against the authority of the government with its government-controlled religion. Again and again, Jesus confronted the abuse of power by the religious/political power system. Yet my religious education was almost exclusively about teaching me to obey established authority without question.

For most of us, this is the essence of both religious and public school education. Our lives are one long experience of being told that we must obey some external authority. When we are small, ultimate authority is vested in our parents and teachers and the other big people in our lives. For children, God is just another big person to obey. The idea of God easily becomes a Santa Claus type figure in the sky who is watching to see if we are naughty or nice. 

The older we get, the more complicated the questions about obedience to authority become. We have traffic rules, IRS rules, homeowner association rules to obey. Every where there are rules to follow. Don’t walk on the grass. Don’t litter. Don’t park here. And sometimes the obedience to rules makes the difference between life and death.

I am old enough to remember the Vietnam War and the tremendous personal anguish involved in questions of obedience to authority. In the era of the wartime draft, the government claimed obedience as its right. If it drafted one of its citizens, that young man had no choice. He had to obey or face the consequences.

Military training is fundamentally an exercise in teaching people to obey authority, even at the cost of their lives. This is why there are ranks with visible insignia, and people are taught to salute signs of authority.

While my husband was an officer in the Air Force during the Vietnam War, we lived for three years on an Air Force base in Arkansas. We had a sticker on the front bumper of the car signifying that this was an officer’s car.

I used to drive on and off the base to go to work each day, and always felt a bit awkward each time the guard saluted as I drove back onto the base. Even then I thought it was odd. What was he saluting? I didn’t deserve the salute, because I was not an officer in the Air Force. He was told to salute a sticker. If intelligent people can be trained to salute a sticker on the bumper of a car, think of how powerful the forces of persuasion are to persuade people to kill as an act of obedience to authority.

This blog is named “Impolite Topics.” Most churches have their own list of impolite topics. For many churches, the most impolite of all the impolite topics is the question of power in relationship to the government. These churches tend to be mainstream, established, and practicing traditional religion. In contrast, churches made up of people who feel oppressed or excluded from social power are not so polite on the topics of religion and politics.  The topics of power and confrontation of government abuse of power are no longer impolite topics, but become central to the teaching of the church.
 
In my book, Going Broke With Jesus, I wrote about what Jesus said about money as part of his condemnation of the abuse of power by the government and temple system. One of these stories concerns the temple tax. Matthew 22:15-22 and Luke 20:19-26 tell two versions of a story in which members of the political and religious establishment attempt to trap Jesus with a question about paying the temple tax with a coin with Caesar’s image on it.  Jesus answered with the words: ”Render to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s and to God the things that are God’s.

If anyone has any idea that money is simply a matter of personal morality, this episode brings to the surface the relationship between religion and government. This is a story about taxation. But it is about more than taxation. It involves questions of authority on Earth. Do believers obey God or the government? Interpretation of this particular episode goes far beyond money. The Bible verse: “Then render to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, and to God the things that are God’s,” is responsible for shameful moments in church history, when Christian churches kept silent while governments perpetrated atrocities.
Going Broke With Jesus, Chapter 9, By Kalinda Rose Stevenson

Religion, politics, and the Bible are completely interwoven with questions about authority and obedience. And so this is the fundamental question: What authority will you obey above all others?

Dr. Kalinda Rose Stevenson

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Jul 17

For many of us, there are only two reasons to put both “religion”
and “politics” in the same sentence.

  • The first reason involves etiquette in the form of this well-known social warning: “Never discuss religion and politics.” The belief behind this warning is that it is simply not polite. People get passionate about religion and politics. If religion and politics are topics of conversation at the dinner party, people might argue and never get around to oohing and aahing over the dark chocolate mousse with fresh raspberries. So, to save embarrassment for the hostess who went to all that trouble to make the chocolate mousse, polite people keep their political and religious beliefs at home, and talk about safer topics. “How about those Red Sox?” “Did you hear that Bob and Alice are divorcing?” “Can you believe the price of gas?”
  • The second reason to put “religion” and “politics” in the same sentence is to claim that religion and politics don’t belong together. After all, we are supposed to have separation of church and state, don’t we? Religion is personal. Politics is public. Religion and politics have nothing to do with each other. Let’s keep them separate.

What about these reasons? I’m all in favor of politeness. In fact, we would probably all be much happier if we went out of our way to be polite and consider how our words and actions affect other people. If keeping your political and religious opinions to yourself will keep you from spoiling the dinner party, then the convention is a good one. But if not talking about religion and politics keeps you silent when you need to speak and powerless when you need to act, then this convention of etiquette needs to be tossed out of the window. Better
to be impolite than silenced and powerless.

What about the idea that religion and politics can and should be kept separate from each other? This notion is actually dangerous. Why dangerous? Because religions are always political and politics are always religious. It is dangerous to pretend that religion and politics are somehow separate because this effort to separate the inseparable blinds us to how much religious politics and political religion affect our lives.

And this raises other questions, which get to the heart of the reason for this blog.

  • Why have we been taught to keep silent about religion and politics at the
    risk of offending people?
  • Why have we been taught that religion and politics are somehow separate spheres, with very little connection between them?

The basic reason boils down to power and persuasion. The politically and religiously powerful have vested interests in keeping their political and religious power. One of the ways they do this is by teaching people that the religious should not be interested in political power and the politically powerful should not be interested in religion.

So, What Is “Impolite Topics” Blog About?

  • It is a place to stop being so polite about these impolite topics of religion and politics, to see how religion and politics are intimately and inseparably related in our world.
  • It is about techniques of persuasion as weapons of power. It demonstrates how you are persuaded to believe what you believe. And it also reveals how the powerful benefit from your beliefs.
  • It is about religion and politics in the Bible. If you really want to know what the Bible says on any topic, you need to see how the inseparable connection between religion and politics affects every topic in the Bible. (If you want to see how religion and politics affect your bank account, see Going Broke With Jesus.)
  • Most of all, “Impolite Topics” is a blog about how the Bible is used in our contemporary world as a tool of persuasion. Words are the most powerful weapons on earth. Words from the Bible are often used to persuade people to be silent and surrender their power.

What Is “Impolite Topics” NOT About?

  • It does not challenge belief in God.
  • It does not challenge Christian belief in Jesus as the Son of God.
  • It does not attempt to prove or disprove the validity of the Bible.
  • It does not demean believers or attempt to persuade non-believers.

Who Is “Impolite Topics” For?

This is a place for seekers, who are no longer satisfied with old answers that separate religion and politics.

Our world is constantly in turmoil because of conflicts that are both religious and political. We cannot create solutions for these conflicts if we pretend that religion and politics are somehow separate.

Most of all, this is a place where we can discuss the “Impolite Topics” without being impolite to each other. I invite you to join me in this discussion.

Dr. Kalinda Rose Stevenson

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Jul 03

Religion is at the heart of this political campaign. Candidates are involved in efforts to persuade religious voters by traveling to particular locations associated with specific religious groups.

In a transparent effort to persuade Catholic Hispanic voters, John McCain has traveled to Mexico.

McCain, whose home state of Arizona borders Mexico, began the day at Mexico City’s famed Basilica de Guadalupe, the country’s holiest site for Catholics.  (“McCain To Meet Mexican President”)

McCain not only visited the site, he received the blessing of the monsignor.

The Republican received a blessing from the basilica’s monsignor, laid a wreath of white roses at the altar and stood atop the Papal balcony there. (“MCain To Meet Mexican President.” )

There is nothing innocent in such gestures. Through Christian history, kings and emperors have sought the blessing of the Church. Politicians do the same. Blessings from the clergy, laying roses on an altar, and an appearance on the Papal balcony are all religious actions, done in an effort to demonstrate that God is on the side of the candidate. These are powerful strategies of persuasion.

Meanwhile, Barack Obama has gone into the lion’s den by going to Colorado Springs. Colorado Springs is the home of Dr. James Dobson, of “Focus on the Family,” who recently characterized Obama as distorting traditional understanding of the Bible.

“I think he’s deliberately distorting the traditional understanding of the Bible to fit his own worldview, his own confused theology,” Dobson said. (“Dobson: Obama ‘Distorting’ Bible, Pushing ‘Fruitcake Interpretation’ of Constitution“)

Obama’s choice of Christian conservative Colorado Springs for his visit showed the degree to which he is courting Republican religious voters and trying to make McCain compete for their affections. (“McCain To Meet Mexican President.”)

My point is that candidates are attempting to persuade potential voters on religious grounds. As time goes on, we will see political candidates continue to make pilgrimages to religious sites, to seek the approval of religious leaders.

As voters and observers of the political scene, our task is to be aware of how such strategies are used as means of persuasion and manipulation.
 
Dr. Kalinda Rose Stevenson

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Jul 01

For many of us, there are only two reasons to put both “religion”
and “politics” in the same sentence.

  • The first reason involves etiquette in the form of this well-known social warning: “Never discuss religion and politics.” The belief behind this warning is that it is simply not polite. People get passionate about religion and politics. If religion and politics are topics of conversation at the dinner party, people might argue and never get around to oohing and aahing over the dark chocolate mousse with fresh raspberries. So, to save embarrassment for the hostess who went to all that trouble to make the chocolate mousse, polite people keep their political and religious beliefs at home, and talk about safer topics. “How about those Red Sox?” “Did you hear that Bob and Alice are divorcing?” “Can you believe the price of gas?”
  • The second reason to put “religion” and “politics” in the same sentence is to claim that religion and politics don’t belong together. After all, we are supposed to have separation of church and state, don’t we? Religion is personal. Politics is public. Religion and politics have nothing to do with each other. Let’s keep them separate.

What about these reasons? I’m all in favor of politeness. In fact, we would probably all be much happier if we went out of our way to be polite and consider how our words and actions affect other people. If keeping your political and religious opinions to yourself will keep you from spoiling the dinner party, then the convention is a good one. But if not talking about religion and politics keeps you silent when you need to speak and powerless when you need to act, then this convention of etiquette needs to be tossed out of the window. Better to be impolite than silenced and powerless.

What about the idea that religion and politics can and should be kept separate from each other? This notion is actually dangerous. Why dangerous? Because religions are always political and politics are always religious. It is dangerous to pretend that religion and politics are somehow separate because this effort to separate the inseparable blinds us to how much religious politics and political religion affect our lives.

And this raises other questions, which get to the heart of the reason for this blog.

  • Why have we been taught to keep silent about religion and politics at the risk of offending people?
  • Why have we been taught that religion and politics are somehow separate spheres, with very little connection between them?

The basic reason boils down to power and persuasion. The politically and religiously powerful have vested interests in keeping their political and religious power. One of the ways they do this is by teaching people that the religious should not be interested in political power and the politically powerful should not be interested in religion.

So, What Is “Impolite Topics” Blog About?

  • It is a place to stop being so polite about these impolite topics of religion and politics, to see how religion and politics are intimately and inseparably related in our world.
  • It is about techniques of persuasion as weapons of power. It demonstrates how you are persuaded to believe what you believe. And it also reveals how the powerful benefit from your beliefs.
  • It is about religion and politics in the Bible. If you really want to know what the Bible says on any topic, you need to see how the inseparable connection between religion and politics affects every topic in the Bible. (If you want to see how religion and politics affect your bank account, see Going Broke With Jesus.)
  • Most of all, “Impolite Topics” is a blog about how the Bible is used in our contemporary world as a tool of persuasion. Words are the most powerful weapons on earth. Words from the Bible are often used to persuade people to be silent and surrender their power.

What Is “Impolite Topics” NOT About?

  • It does not challenge belief in God.
  • It does not challenge Christian belief in Jesus as the Son of God.
  • It does not attempt to prove or disprove the validity of the Bible.
  • It does not demean believers or attempt to persuade non-believers.

Who Is “Impolite Topics” For?

This is a place for seekers, who are no longer satisfied with old answers that separate religion and politics.

Our world is constantly in turmoil because of conflicts that are both religious and political. We cannot create solutions for these conflicts if we pretend that religion and politics are somehow separate.

Most of all, this is a place where we can discuss the “Impolite Topics” without being impolite to each other. I invite you to join me in this discussion.

Dr. Kalinda Rose Stevenson

written by Kalinda \\ tags: , , , , , , ,