gsp Thoughts From A Diva: Texas official says Unitarian church not a tax-exempt religion

Thoughts From A Diva

Random images and thoughts from a misplaced Minnesota Diva trying to survive in Wisconsin.

Tuesday, May 18, 2004

Texas official says Unitarian church not a tax-exempt religion

"What constitutes religion? When and how should government make that determination? Questions that for years have vexed the world's great philosophers have now become the province of the state comptroller's office.
Questions about the issue were referred to Jesse Ancira, the comptroller's top lawyer, who said Strayhorn has applied a consistent standard - and then stuck to it. For any organization to qualify as a religion, members must have 'simply a belief in God, or gods, or a higher power,' he said.
'We have got to apply a test, and use some objective standards,' Ancira said. 'We're not using the test to deny the exemptions for a particular group because we like them or don't like them.'
Since Strayhorn took over in January 1999, the comptroller's office has denied religious tax-exempt status to 17 groups and granted them to more than 1,000, according to records obtained by the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Although there are exceptions, the lion's share of approvals have gone to groups that appear to have relatively traditional faiths, records show.
But of the denials, at least a fourth include less traditional groups. In addition to the Denison Unitarian church, the rejected groups include a Carrollton, Texas, group of atheists and agnostics, a New Age group in Bastrop, Texas, and the Whispering Star Clan/Temple of Ancient Wisdom, an organization of witches in Copperas Cove, Texas."


As churches find themselves in more and more difficult economic times, happenings like this make life even more difficult. To suddenly have a body of the government decide that your church is not a "real church" can come as a real shock to a community.

How many people live in a rural community that cannot afford to support 2 or more churches, so they have combined faiths? Or they have simply said, "We don't care what religion you believe in, just come be part of our community for the sake of the community."

I worry about the fate of this country when the government starts telling us what to believe.

On PBS last night, the premier of Colonial House was on. It is about a group of 17 people that have decided to go back in time and live like they did in 1627.

There was a statement made by one of the members that really struck me. One member (a minister in real life) stated something to the effect that people came from England and battle those horrible elements in order to have religious freedom. They did not want some person in the government telling them how they have to believe and what they have to believe in.

Are we headed there again with George W. and Co.?

1 Comments:

At 6/03/2004 9:48 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

As a Unitarian-Universalist, I have a suggestion: revoke the tax exemption on all religious organizations. The Constitution prohibits the establishment of any religion (so needless to say, the Texas criteria are totally unconstitutional). Think of all the taxes we could collect from Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson, not to mention the Catholic church !

As soon as the Puritans got to Massachusetts, they set up a theocracy with little separation between church and state. George Washington was arrested for riding his horse too fast on the Sabbath, and we all know what happened to Anne Hutchinson (or at least we should; she was banished from Massachusetts for daring to preach and eventually massacred by Indians.) Having been persecuted, Puritans lost no time in setting up their own system of persecution. That's why the Baptists fled to Rhode Island, but now Southern Baptists are trying to push their beliefs down everyone's throat.

Unitarians were once concerned we'd be too popular, but that hasn't turned out to be the case. Even combined with the Universalists, Christians who belived a just and loving God would never condemn people to Hell, we are a smaller population than Muslims. What can be more unpopular than a church that condemns no serious searcher for the truth, regardless of sexual orientation? I say, Bring on the taxes, and we'll pay our fair share.

 

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