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(Two conservative Ohio) Churches could face IRS probe
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH ^ | January 16, 2006 | Mike Harden and Joe Hallett

Posted on 01/16/2006 10:46:49 AM PST by Between the Lines

More than 30 local pastors last night officially accused two evangelical megachurches of illegal political activities.

In a rare and potentially explosive action, the moderate ministers signed a complaint asking the Internal Revenue Service to investigate World Harvest Church of Columbus and Fairfield Christian Church of Lancaster and determine if their tax-exempt status should be revoked.

The grievance claims that the Rev. Rod Parsley of World Harvest Church and the Rev. Russell Johnson of Fairfield Christian Church improperly used their churches and affiliated entities — the Center for Moral Clarity, Ohio Restoration Project and Reformation Ohio — for partisan politics, including supporting the Republican gubernatorial candidacy of Secretary of State J. Kenneth Blackwell.

The complaint asks the IRS to seek a court injunction "if these churches’ flagrant political campaign activities do not cease immediately." It was signed by 31 pastors from nine denominations during a meeting last night at the North Congregational United Church of Christ in Columbus and was to be faxed late last night to IRS Commissioner Mark W. Everson.

"For me, it’s church and state, not church in state and I really feel there are some churches in central Ohio crossing that line," said Eric Williams, senior pastor of the host church. "The law allows church involvement in issues. This goes beyond issue-involvement to partisan politics and we’re simply asking the IRS to uphold the law."

Williams and the other signers stressed that they were acting individually and not on behalf of their congregations, whose affiliations include: The American Baptist Churches/USA; the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ); the Episcopal Church in the USA; the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America; Judaism; the United Church of Christ; the United Methodist Church; Presbyterian Church, USA; and the Unitarian Universalist Association.

The complaint makes three main allegations:

• That church-sponsored events conducted by Parsley and Johnson have showcased a single gubernatorial candidate — Blackwell.

• That Parsley and Johnson have launched a "partisan-oriented" voter-registration campaign "with the goal of registering 400,000 voters to support Blackwell’s candidacy."

• That Parsley and Johnson have been behind efforts to distribute "biased voter education" materials aimed at solidifying voter support for Blackwell.

Johnson said last night that his church and its affiliate, the Ohio Restoration Project, do not support candidates and he was disappointed to learn about the complaint.

"It’s sad to see the religious left and the secular left forge an unholy alliance against people of faith," Johnson said. "We have invited people to pray, to serve and to engage, and candidly, we will not be intimidated or bullied by these folks."

In a statement e-mailed to The Dispatch last night, Mark Youngkin, spokesman for Parsley, did not directly address the allegations. But he said the World Harvest Church, Center for Moral Clarity and Reformation Ohio are separate nonprofit ministries "who are committed to full compliance with all applicable federal tax laws governing" the organizations.

"Voter registration has been encouraged — without regard to political affiliation — from diverse communities, including predominantly urban neighborhoods in Toledo and the Miami Valley," he said.

The IRS complaint, launched by members of mainline Judeo-Christian denominations, represents a deepening concern that leaders of the evangelical religious right are mounting an assault on the separation of church and state.

John Green, a University of Akron authority on religion and politics, said the complaint is extraordinary because it was filed by pastors rather than watchdog groups that routinely monitor church and state issues.

"This complaint is detailed and complex enough that I think the IRS is going to say, ‘We better look into this,’ " said Green, author of Religion and the Culture Wars.

Jack Seville, Ohio conference minister of the United Church of Christ, was among those asking the IRS to investigate.

"I would raise a question about any church, be it of the left or the right, that would endorse a candidate or ask its members to vote only for a specific candidate on the basis of its religious or moral values," Seville said.

"There were a number of people within my denomination who were framers of the Constitution. That’s why alarm bells go off when I see churches becoming directorial instead of letting the individual church member make up his or her own mind."

Rabbi Harold Berman of the Columbus synagogue Tifereth Israel, who also signed the complaint, said: "There are some Jewish groups that cross the lines of church and state, and I’ve spoken out about that as well. It’s a violation of the law if we want to be tax exempt."

Marcus Owens, a Washington, D.C., tax attorney and director of the IRS tax-exempt division from 1990 to 2000, said that IRS investigations of churches typically involve theft, but examinations of churches for playing politics are becoming more common.

Owens, who helped the clergy draft the IRS petition, said they had extensively documented the alleged political activities of Parsley and Johnson and their affiliated organizations.

"You have a number of churches and charities involved with a number of road trips for Mr. Blackwell, all of which seem to be aimed at gaining him visibility for his political campaign," Owens said.

Blackwell, who often carries a Bible to GOP events, has actively courted Christian right voters and became a champion for many of them by leading the successful campaign to ban same-sex marriages through a ballot issue in the November 2004 election.

The complaint cites nine instances when Blackwell was featured at events by the churches or their entities. During an October gathering at the Ohio Statehouse orchestrated by Reformation Ohio and led by Parsley, the televangelist called upon supporters of his $38.5 milliona-year church and affiliated operations to sign up 400,000 voters statewide. Blackwell shared the dais with Parsley.

"Man your battle stations," Parsley commanded attendees, who had been bused Downtown from his World Harvest Church. "Ready your weapons. Lock and load. Let the reformation begin."

The University of Akron’s Green said the "most problematic allegation" in the IRS complaint involves preferential treatment accorded Blackwell by Parsley, Johnson and their affiliated organizations.

Marci A. Hamilton, a professor of constitutional law at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law in New York City and an expert on the separation of church and state, said she was surprised by the pastors’ complaint.

"There are very few instances where anybody’s ever been turned in on this," she said. "Even though the laws are on the books, it’s rare that the law is enforced."

During the last 15 years or so, Hamilton added, churches have had "a tacit agreement" to look the other way and not criticize each other for political activities. But, she said, that appears to be changing as televangelists and conservative evangelical churches flex their muscles in the political arena.

"Those who have been in favor of separation of church and state have been pretty quiet, and it may be because they couldn’t get hold of the microphone. The agenda has been set by the religious right for so long."

Owens, who is representing a pacifist California church being audited because its former pastor delivered an anti-war sermon, said the number of investigations has grown dramatically of late, particularly under the Bush presidency.

"I think historically there were about 20 audits a year, and the number now is up to 50 or 100," he recalled from his 25-year tenure at the IRS, including 10 as head of its tax-exempt arm.

Owens said the jump in the number of church investigations has occurred because, since 2004, audits no longer require high-level approval in the IRS, and can be initiated by revenue agents or their subordinates.

"It is like doing away with the grand jury and giving authority to the cop on the beat," he said. "On its face, it really smells and suggests that there is something very wrong with how the IRS selects cases for review."

Supporters of Owens’ client church, All Saints Episcopal, of Pasadena, say that the IRS singled out the church for preaching against President Bush’s prosecution of the war in Iraq.


TOPICS: Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Ohio
KEYWORDS: blackwell; doublestandard; irs; megachurch; parsley; pastor; politicking; sendmeallyourmoney; snakeoilsalesmen; theragingprophet; worldharvestchurch
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To: Between the Lines
It makes you wonder who got these 30 pastors together? Who is hiding behind these churches skirts?

Yeah. They came together for an explicitly political purpose.

Pot, kettle, black, that sort of thing...

If I was like them, and believed in turning in my fellow citizens to the Gestapo, I'd suggest they be given some of their own medicine.

Unlike the conservative churches they are seeking to destroy, they would completely fall apart without their tax exempt status.

21 posted on 01/16/2006 11:08:04 AM PST by EternalVigilance
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To: dufekin
God himself instituted both the jurisdiction of the Church and the Civil Magistrate. The first amendment was an attempt to keep the state out of the jurisdiction of the church as had happened in England. Both the free exercise clause and the establishment clause keep "congress" or its agents from passing any law, including tax law, regarding the church.

This is an attempt at political intimidation.

22 posted on 01/16/2006 11:08:45 AM PST by DaveyB (Peace follows victory - never before)
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To: blues_guitarist
I think churches should abandon tax exemption anyway.

My daughter's church (Fundamentalist Baptist) gave up it's tax exempt status a few years back. They separated the ministries from the church and the ministries retained a tax exempt status. The ministries owns the property and leases it to the church. So they divide their tithes between the church and donations to the ministries. That way the church only has the pastor, utilities and a small rent payment to make, yet they can still speak out politically, and the ministries are unaffected by taxes.

23 posted on 01/16/2006 11:10:01 AM PST by Between the Lines (Be careful how you live your life, it may be the only gospel anyone reads.)
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To: Blood of Tyrants
One of the best reasons to get rid of the income tax for the Fair Tax.
Bingo.

24 posted on 01/16/2006 11:11:13 AM PST by conservatism_IS_compassion (The idea around which liberalism coheres is that NOTHING actually matters but PR.)
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To: From One - Many

Actually it was taken away by a law passed by LBJ (in 64?) which wasn't originally intended to be used against churches.


25 posted on 01/16/2006 11:12:34 AM PST by DeweyCA
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To: Between the Lines

In related news, Reno was spotted at an Army-Navy surplus store.


26 posted on 01/16/2006 11:13:53 AM PST by Westlander (Unleash the Neutron Bomb)
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To: Between the Lines
Eric Williams

His email address can be found at the church's web site.

http://www.northucc.org/

27 posted on 01/16/2006 11:13:59 AM PST by T.Smith
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To: Between the Lines

I would think it would be none other than the good "rev" Barry Lind. He's got issues if you ask me.

http://www.au.org/site/News2?page=NewsArticle&id=7007&abbr=cs_


28 posted on 01/16/2006 11:14:11 AM PST by CajunConservative (Don't Blame Me, I Voted for Jindal.)
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To: EternalVigilance
They came together for an explicitly political purpose.

Pot, kettle, black, that sort of thing...

Beat you by a minute and a half!

29 posted on 01/16/2006 11:15:02 AM PST by conservatism_IS_compassion (The idea around which liberalism coheres is that NOTHING actually matters but PR.)
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To: zzen01

It should be noted that a lot of mainline denominations give a lot of slack to their pastors. So, in some cases the pastors will be accurately reflecting their denomination's view, some will be working against the view of the majority of clergy (let alone of parishoners).


30 posted on 01/16/2006 11:15:39 AM PST by AmishDude
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To: blues_guitarist

A national retail sales tax is worth five minutes of your time.

FAQ page:http://www.fairtaxvolunteer.org/smart/faq.html


31 posted on 01/16/2006 11:17:26 AM PST by Principled
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To: T.Smith

Boy, I bet their staff meetings are interesting...

http://www.northucc.org/staff.html


32 posted on 01/16/2006 11:19:35 AM PST by Humidston (Two words: TERM LIMITS!)
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To: Between the Lines
the moderate ministers

The reporters prove themselves liars when they go on to add this:

affiliations include: The American Baptist Churches/USA; the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ); the Episcopal Church in the USA; the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America; Judaism; the United Church of Christ; the United Methodist Church; Presbyterian Church, USA; and the Unitarian Universalist Association.

33 posted on 01/16/2006 11:22:32 AM PST by PAR35
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To: Humidston

Try reading their "Declaration of Inclusiveness". Barf...


34 posted on 01/16/2006 11:25:51 AM PST by T.Smith
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To: Between the Lines

Does this mean that the libnut pols will stop bowing and scraping at the alter of black churches during every campaign?


35 posted on 01/16/2006 11:44:28 AM PST by trubluolyguy (Allah demands you to send your son to die for him, God sent His son to die for me.)
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To: zzen01
"Moderate ministers"

Guess those are the ones who try to see Satan's side of things -- out of 'fairness'.

36 posted on 01/16/2006 11:49:20 AM PST by BenLurkin (O beautiful for patriot dream - that sees beyond the years)
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To: Between the Lines

"North Congregational United Church of Christ is committed in word and deed to the equality of all God's people. We welcome and affirm persons of every race, gender, age, sexual orientation, nationality, ethnicity, family status, economic status, physical, mental or emotional ability into the full participation, membership, and leadership in our faith community."
http://www.northucc.org/open_and_affirming.html


37 posted on 01/16/2006 11:50:56 AM PST by PAR35
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To: Between the Lines
they should get to those 2 evangelical churches right after investigating the 1000's of black churches that host democrats each election year.
38 posted on 01/16/2006 11:59:26 AM PST by conservative physics
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To: conservative physics
should get to those 2 evangelical churches right after investigating the 1000's of black churches

That would be racist.
/sarcasm

39 posted on 01/16/2006 12:16:36 PM PST by DaveyB (Peace follows victory - never before)
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To: blues_guitarist

We do not have to lose our tax exempt status. The government has no right to take money from a church that belongs to God first! The point is that the church should be engaging this lost culture at every level and especially at the elected level of goverment. Those on the lost left have no trouble gathering funds at their kind of gatherings to support abortion rights, gay rights, etc.--why do we want to give up our tax exempt status? The idea that it doesn't matter is wrong.


40 posted on 01/16/2006 12:32:09 PM PST by truthingod
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