News

Why the IRS Has Stopped Auditing Churches—Even One that Calls President Obama a Muslim

Decision on who can authorize investigations of churches that influence voters is frozen for foreseeable future.

Why the IRS Has Stopped Auditing Churches—Even One that Calls President Obama a Muslim

Why the IRS Has Stopped Auditing Churches—Even One that Calls President Obama a Muslim

Christianity Today October 26, 2012
Courtesy of KSAT.com

"Vote for the Mormon, not the Muslim! The Capitalist, not the Communist!" read the sign outside Church of the Valley in Leakey, Texas. Beyond its inaccuracies, it was a clear violation of federal tax code, which prohibits nonprofits from doing anything that might support a candidate running for office.

But a revocation of the church's tax-exempt status isn't likely to come soon—if ever.

The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has officially halted tax audits of churches until it can adopt rules that clarify which high-level employee has the authority to initiate them.

"We are holding any potential church audits in abeyance," Russell Renwicks of the IRS's Tax-Exempt and Government Entities division told BNA.com this week.

While this is the first public announcement of the moratorium, the IRS hasn't been auditing churches since 2009, said Erik Stanley, senior legal counsel with the Alliance Defending Freedom (formerly the Alliance Defense Fund).

That's when a federal court found that the IRS wasn't following its own regulations.

An IRS official at the level of regional commissioner or above is required to approve any church audits before they are initiated, according to a law passed in 1984. But in 1996, Congress reorganized the IRS from geographical regions to national practice groups—a move that eliminated the office of regional commissioner.

"The IRS designated an official within [its] exempt organizations section to be the one to approve the church audits," Stanley said.

But that position did not rank high enough to be adequate, the court decided after a Minnesota church challenged the legitimacy of their audit in 2009.

"The IRS shut down all church audits at the time," Stanley said. The agency proposed new regulations in 2009, but never got past the review process, he said.

"After that, it has taken absolutely no action on finalizing the regulations," he said. "They've just been sitting out there."

No one seems to know why the IRS hasn't changed its regulations to allow another position to approve the audits, or why IRS commissioner Douglas Shulman hasn't been approving church audits in the interim. Shulman will step down November 9, the end of his five-year term.

"They could finalize those regulations whenever they wanted to," Stanley said.

Rob Boston, senior policy analyst for Americans United for the Separation of Church and State, also doesn't know why the finalization has taken so long.

"All we get are drops of information here and there, which sometimes seem to point in different directions," he said.

The hotly contested presidential election this year has seen plenty of churches violate the rules, Boston said.

"This is absolutely the worst time for the IRS to be taking a step back," he said. "The agency needs to resolve this matter and move forward with enforcement. If they fail to do that, we're only going to see more flagrant violations of the law."

But most pastors don't need the IRS to stop them from offering voting advice from the pulpit. According to a recent LifeWay Research poll, almost 90 percent of Protestant pastors believe they should keep endorsements out of the pulpit—up from about 85 percent who felt that way last year.

On the other hand, most pastors—79 percent, according to a 2011 LifeWay survey—believe the government should not "regulate sermons by revoking a church's tax exemption if its pastor approves of or criticizes candidates based on the church's moral beliefs or theology."

Sally Wagenmaker, an attorney who works with nonprofits, said she urges her clients to exercise caution when using the "vote" word.

"However, the more the government has been appropriating areas of morality, the closer we get to this intersection of churches not able to speak upon acute [moral] issues in a political campaign," she said. "There has never been a better time to challenge constitutionality. [And] this is probably the worst time [for the IRS] to push on enforcing this prohibition."

Our Latest

Review

Gen Z Women Are Not Commodities

Elise Brandon

Freya India’s book Girls wants to fix young women’s consumption habits—and the way our culture consumes us.

Excerpt

5 Ways to Forge Male Friendships That Last

Seth Troutt

An excerpt from Authentic Masculinity: Leaving Behind the Counterfeits for God’s Design.

Not Everything Is Christian Nationalism

Automatically hurling this accusation at believers who raise questions about Islam or other issues is intellectually lazy.

The Bulletin

Voting Maps, DHS Funding, Troops in Europe, and Reclaiming ‘Evangelical’

Supreme Court rules on voting maps, DHS shutdown ends, Trump reevaluates troops in Europe, and the controversy over ‘evangelical.’

Inside the Ministry

Discover a New Way to Read, Reflect, and Connect

The Christianity Today app is a curated, personalized, and mobile-friendly way to stay informed on faith, culture, and the world.

Review

Review: Angel Studios’ ‘Animal Farm’

Spinning a happy ending for George Orwell’s dire warning about communism, this film can’t decide if it’s a serious commentary or a collection of fart jokes.

News

Courts Briefly Pause Abortion by Mail, Then Allow It to Resume

After a lower court froze telehealth access to abortion drug mifepristone, the Supreme Court temporarily restored mail-order pills while it plans to consider the case.

Agentic AI Isn’t Laborsaving If You Don’t Know How to Sabbath

A. Trevor Sutton

New tech promises to do our work for us. But it can’t replace our need for rest in God.

addApple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseellipseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squarefolderGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastprintremoveRSSRSSSaveSavesaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube