By Bob Emrich on 4.4.08 @ 12:07AM
The Iowa senator has overstepped his constitutional bounds.
Senator Charles Grassley of Iowa recently demanded that popular
religious leaders Creflo Dollar, Kenneth and Gloria Copeland, Eddie
Long of New Birth Missionary Baptist Church, and Benny Hinn, among
others, comply with an unprecedented congressional request for
their financial records.
Pro-family leaders I have spoken to tell me they cannot recall a
similar previous instance in which a congressional committee
targeted major ministries under threat of subpoena. The ministries
have been asked to produce financial records and internal documents
to disprove their alleged guilt, about what exactly is not
clear.
Congress has a legitimate role to play in oversight of our laws,
including tax laws governing churches. But the targeting of these
ministries by Grassley has a "chilling effect" on the free exercise
of religion, which is guaranteed under the First Amendment of the
U.S. Constitution. This is why churches are exempt from taxation in
the first place -- to prevent the government from using its taxing
power to constrain the freedom of religion.
Some of the leaders, including Hinn, have indicated that they
will cooperate with Grassley's "request." Others, including Dollar
and Kenneth Copeland, have so far refused, claiming the request is
a violation of the First Amendment, and worse. Copeland sent a
letter to supporters saying, "The enemy is not going to steal what
the Lord had won through this ministry, and he is not going to use
this attack to bring harm to the rest of the churches and and
ministries in America."
Copeland is correct about the possible fallout here. Grassley's
action opens a Pandora's box of possible future investigations.
What other politically incorrect church leaders and theological
schools of thought will the U.S. Senate choose to target for
investigation?
What about the black liberation theology popularized by Barack
Obama's controversial pastor, Jeremiah Wright? Wright has retired
to a $1.6 million home in a neighborhood on the south side of
Chicago -- certainly a lavish lifestyle that seems equally ripe for
such an investigation.
Or what about the Hare Krishna temple in Grassley's home state
of Iowa, or the wealthy sect of Scientology, which is supported by
Hollywood stars like Tom Cruise and John Travolta?
The list of possible investigations targeted at unpopular
religious groups is endless.
THAT IS WHY CONGRESS outlawed political witch hunts when it passed
the Church Audit Procedures Act in 1984. The Act prevents the
Internal Revenue Service from launching a church tax inquiry unless
a "high level Treasury official" reasonably believes there is
cause. And it protects the church from politically-motivated leaks
during the examination. Confidentiality is assured to the ministry
in question.
Grassley's rifle-shot approach and his very public flailing of
these evangelical churches violates the spirit of this law, which
he supported. The Act represents the spirit of American justice --
investigate crimes, not people. Senators are now ignoring the very
laws Congress passed by eliminating the IRS middleman and
conducting the audit themselves.
What remains to stop the harassment of churches and legitimate
ministries by any high-level elected official now that the Senate
Finance Committee has demonstrated the ability of Congress to side
step the Church Audit Procedures Act and haul up church leaders to
satisfy popular prejudices, or a scandal-hungry liberal media?
The civil libertarian left and their allies in the press are
very vocal in their warnings of government power when it comes to
violations of civil liberties. But where were those liberal civil
libertarians and the "watchdog media" when these evangelical
ministries were targeted by headline-grabbing politicians and when
every major conservative advocacy organization in Washington D.C.
found itself under an IRS investigation in recent years?
Their silence this time is further proof that anti-Christian
bigotry is the last acceptable form of bigotry in America today.
It's sad to see a Senate committee, including Senator Grassley,
playing into the hands of those who despise religion.
topics:
Religion, Hollywood, Constitution, Law, NATO