Weekly Opinion Editorial
SHOULD A CHURCH BE
POLITICAL?
by
Steve Fair
In
1954, then U.S. Senator Lyndon Johnson, (D- Texas) authored a bill that
prohibited all 501(c) (3) organizations from endorsing, opposing or engaging in
any political activity. Johnson’s target
wasn’t churches. He was trying to stop billionaire
H.L. Hunt from using his non-profit foundation to run a campaign against LBJ in
his Texas Senate re-election bid.
Because most churches are tax exempt organizations, LBJ’s amendment made
them fearful of an IRS audit, so most ceased engaging in the political arena
after 1954. The fact is, the IRS has only
pulled the tax exempt status on one church in all those years, but liberals have
used the amendment to publically expose churches and pastors who engaged in
conservative politics. Liberals
partnered with their media brethren to accuse churches that were political of
breaking the law. Not surprisingly, these
zealous watchdogs haven’t been as vocal about liberal churches and pastors involvement
in politics.
Last Thursday on the National Day of
Prayer, President Trump signed an Executive Order directing the IRS to not take
‘adverse action’ against churches or pastors who engage in political activity.
"We will not allow people of faith to be targeted, bullied or
silenced anymore. And we will never, ever stand for religious discrimination.
Never, ever," Trump said. Trump’s
actions, in effect, stopped the enforcement of the Johnson amendment by the IRS.
Many conservatives greeted the news as a
great victory. “On Sunday, go and tell your pastor that its time to get engaged in
politics,” an Oklahoma GOP leader said Saturday at the state GOP
convention. Three observations about
Trump’s action and the Johnson amendment:
First,
the Johnson amendment should be repealed. It clearly violates the first amendment. If a church or pastor wishes to engage in
politics they should have the right to do so in America. They should be able to organize their church
to help a campaign, preach politics from their pulpit, and decorate their
sanctuary with campaign signs without fear of the government auditing their
books and taking away their tax exempt status.
The Johnson amendment clearly violates their right of free speech. Trump’s EO is just a temporary fix. Congress should repeal the Johnson amendment
and get it off the books.
Second, Trump’s action will likely lead some
churches to organize and become more political. Critics of Trump’s action believe
conservative churches will solicit tax exempt contributions that will be used
for political purposes and that will lead to more ‘dark money’ groups. ‘Dark Money’ groups are defined as those
involved in politics whose contributions are next to impossible to track. That is certainly a possibility. Some churches will ‘launder’ money from their
membership to political causes, but liberal ones are doing that now. It’s the conservatives that have been
muzzled. Rabbi Jack Moline, a liberal
Jewish cleric, expressed the fear of the left: "President Trump's executive order will clear the way for the
Religious Right to weaponize their churches for partisan battle."
Some
ministers and churches- both liberal and conservative- have built their
ministry on politics. Attending a
worship service is like going to a political rally. If that’s their bailiwick (political
ministry), so be it and now Trump’s actions will likely energize them and allow
them to take their activism to the next level.
Third, just because a church can be
political, should it be? What is
the scriptural mission of the local church?
Jesus gave the church its marching orders on the Mount of Transfiguration
(Matt. 28:19). That mission is to ‘preach
the gospel’ throughout the world. The
good news(gospel) is the means God uses to reconcile man to Himself. The gospel is the only message God
blesses. The gospel changes lives,
cultures, and nations. Churches and
pastors who abandon preaching the gospel to preach conservatism will reap
converts to conservatism, not to Christ.
The hope of America
is not for churches and pastors to abandon their calling to become more
politically involved. The hope of America is the faithful
preaching of the gospel. The gospel is
the only thing that eternally changes hearts and lives. Far too many churches and pastors have
abandoned reverence for relevance. They
fear man more than God. They are
consumed with the kingdom of darkness rather than the kingdom of light. As John MacArthur says: ”The kingdom of darkness is going to do what the kingdom of darkness
does.” That is true whether a
conservative or a liberal is in power.
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