Article

Who Can See Giving Records?

Q: Can a pastor or members of the church board inspect the contribution records of members?

A: This is a controversial question. Many pastors do not want to see donor records since they do not want this information to influence their relationship with individual members. Others want to see them.

Why would a pastor and church board want to inspect the records? One legally justifiable reason might be to enforce a bylaw requirement that members "tithe" or make some other specified financial commitment to the church. The far more common wording in church covenants that members "support the church financially" is an ambiguous standard that would not warrant accessing an individual's records.

If a state's nonprofit corporation law does not specifically authorize pastors and board members to inspect individual members' contribution records, then doing so could expose the church to possible liability for invasion of privacy.

Few churches will want to make a specified financial commitment a requirement of church membership. And, if a specified financial commitment is not a membership requirement, then there is little if any justification for the pastor or board members having access to members' contribution records.

www.ChurchLawToday.com

A Car with Strings Attached

Q: A member wants to donate a car to the church to then be given to a needy person in our congregation. We will transfer the car to the recipient designated by the donor as soon as we take possession. How do we determine the amount of the contribution? What is our responsibility as a church in this transaction? What forms do we need to give the donor, and what do we need to file with the IRS?

A: The rules for substantiating donations of cars changed drastically a few years ago. (They're explained fully in 2007 Church & Clergy Tax Guide.) You must issue to the donor Form 1098-C, and you are required to send a copy to the IRS.

These new substantiation requirements only apply to transfers of vehicles that qualify as a charitable contribution. In your case, it sounds like the donor is giving the car to the church with the stipulation that the church give this vehicle to the person designated by the donor. This may be a generous act, but it's not a charitable contribution the IRS will recognize, since the donor is depriving the church of any meaningful control over the car.

You should decline to receive the car under these circumstances, since the church's temporary "ownership" will be illusory. Instead, encourage the donor to either (1) give the car outright to the needy person without expecting a tax deduction, or (2) give the car to the church with no strings attached, and subject to the church's complete control regarding its use or disposition.

—Church Treasurer Alert! (8/07)

Attorney Richard Hammar addresses financial and legal questions from church leaders in our sister publications Church Law & Tax Report and Church Treasurer Alertwww.ChurchLawToday.com.

Copyright © 2007 by the author or Christianity Today/Leadership Journal.Click here for reprint information on Leadership Journal.

Posted October 1, 2007

Also in this issue

How churches are reaching "the least of these".

Megachurch Myths

Dumping Ground

In a place where even people are considered refuse, no one would listen to the educated, accomplished pastor. Until he became one of them.

The Zoloft Dispensation

Pastoring in the meds age, when everybody’s on something.

Story Time

A small group that’s all about you.

The Healing Arts

Take Time to Be What?

A classic hymn shows why holiness is scarce these days.

Law or License?

Fewer Whiffs

Chronics Overload

When the needy get too needy.

All I Have Is Second String

Can my B-players make an A-team?

Why Many Young Adults Quit

One in four young Protestants has walked away from the church.

Want to Be Wonder-full?

We really like our Vaseline tubes. That’s what makes us less likely to follow Jesus to the margins.

Alien Nation

One pastor’s perspective on the immigration debate—and immigration opportunity.

Effective Hospital Visits

Look carefully for the primary condition: fear, fatigue, or …

"Unproductive" Visits

Why must I spend so much time nodding and smiling, when my to-do list is so long?

From Good Intentions to Actions

How one church got started ministering to their neighbors.

Guides to the Kingdom

Why our church attends to prodigals, children, the poor, and those with disabilities.

Outside In

What it takes to minister to those on the margins.

Dei Laborers

Rick McKinley and the Imago Dei Community are taking the whole gospel to the whole city of Portland, Oregon, even to the margins.

Taking Membership to a New Level

My Death

Darin announced his suicide plans online, and followed through. How can I help our small town cope with his very public pain?

5 Kinds of Christians

Understanding the disparity of those who call themselves Christian in America.

Good Marginal Thinking

The heroes of church history began as reflective Christians who doubted what everyone else took for granted.

Turning the Tables

God's House Goes Green

View issue


Our Latest

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube
Down ArrowbookCloseExpandExternalsearch