It’s
the End of the
Church
as We Know It
(I Don’t Feel Fine)
By DOUG NEWMAN
Am I the only person outraged
by this? Future generations will look back on December 12, 2002 as a bleak
day in the history of Christianity in America. On this day, President Bush
signed an executive order allowing churches and other religious organizations
to compete for federal funds for charitable purposes. This is a horrendously
bad thing for a variety of reasons.
To begin with, this is an
executive order. There is no constitutional basis for the president to rule
in such a fashion. Bush is a president. He is not a king or a dictator. Presidents
do not make the rules. It does not matter if you like the president. It does
not matter if you like his intentions. The executive branch may only carry
out laws. The legislative branch must make them first.
Conservatives become indignant
when liberal judges "legislate from the bench." Our freedom is similarly
threatened when presidents legislate from the Oval Office. Just because presidents
have been issuing executive orders for decades does not make it right. Kings
and dictators rule by executive order. Presidents of constitutional republics
restrain themselves from acting in such a manner. But then we stopped being
a constitutional republic nine decades ago
Bush's rationale for issuing
this executive order was that he had difficulty getting his Faith Based Initiative
through Congress. Well la-de-da. Is this how it will be from now on? Whenever
a president does not get his agenda through Congress, will he just implement
it by executive order?
What precedent does this
set for a future president, who is loved by secular folks and despised by
Christians, when he wants to push an agenda that is not popular with Christians?
Why do we even bother with a legislative and judicial branch? In the words
of Clinton PR flak Paul Begala, "Stroke of the pen, law of the land.
Kinda cool."
There was a time when conservatives
hated the welfare state. But those days are long gone. Today, they praise
its expansion. "Compassionate conservatism" is just another
name for Clintonian socialism. Jay Sekulow of the American Center for Law
and Justice hails the order as removing barriers that discriminated against
churches that compete with secular organiztions for federal funds.
There is nothing Christian
about the welfare state. Its very existence violates the Eighth and Tenth
Commandments, which forbid theft and envy. II Thessalonians 3:10 says that
if you don't work, you don't eat. When churches take taxpayer funds, it further
violates Scripture. II Corinthians 9:7 says that God wants a joyous giver,
not one who gives out of compulsion. Taxation is compulsory. It is theft.
You either pay your taxes or you go to jail.
There is nothing compassionate
about the welfare state. Be honest: do you pay your taxes out of compassion
or out of threat of jail? This is strictly my personal opinion, but I believe
we have lost a lot of old-fashioned Christian compassion for the poor because
so many of us are taxed into the pavement to support the welfare state. On
the receiving end, so many people have their hand out thinking someone else
owes them a living that many of us ignore legitimate suffering.
But doesn't the Constitution
delegate to Congress the power to provide for the general welfare of the United
States? Yes it does. However, the Article I, Section 8 spells out in detail
what "general Welfare" means. It speaks of things like coining money,
a post office, courts, copyrights, weights and measures and so forth. It says
nothing about massive transfers of wealth from producers to non-producers.
The Tenth Amendment forbids Uncle Sam from engaging in any activity not authorized
here.
Federal aid always results
in federal control. Making churches eligible to participate in federal welfare
programs will poison them. This is not speculation. It would be instructive
to look at the history of federal aid in other areas.
When Congress launched aid
to college and university students, everyone was assured that this money would
not lead to federal control of higher education. Before long, colleges and
universities learned that, in order to keep receiving this aid, they would
have to comply with federal affirmative action regulations, racial hiring
quotas, and numerous other requirements.
Any university, corporation
or other organization receiving federal monies or contracting with the federal
government must now comply with an endless labyrinth of federal regulations
on everything from racial hiring quotas to drug testing. For states to receive
federal funding for education, highways, and numerous other purposes, they
must likewise surrender a measure of their autonomy.
Can you imagine your church
being faced with the choice of having to perform homosexual marriages or otherwise
losing federal subsidies? Can you imagine having sermons subject to federal
scrutiny if your church wishes to keep receiving federal money for a day care
center? Can you imagine your church losing federal money because one of its
alcohol counselors violated church-state separation by telling the story of
the Prodigal Son to an alcoholic in desperate need of help?
Based on the history of federal
funding of education, this is what awaits us. If Caesar has the gold, Caesar
makes the rule. Do you want to risk the possibility of a president Hillary
Clinton manipulating the purse strings of your church? Administrations and
legislative majorities are temporal. Are you willing to subject your church
to the whims of a government that hostile to Christianity?
Much of this will be lost
on many Christians. 501(c)(3) churches -- and that means most churches --
must either refrain from endorsing or opposing political candidates or risk
losing the tax-deductibility of contributions. I do not know if 501(c)(3)
is the reason, but contemporary church culture has developed a taboo about
any serious discussion of social and political issues.
I can respect pastors who
prefer to keep things apolitical, but it is madness to abstain from political
discussion altogether. Because the Bible discusses political issues, churches
must talk about them from time to time. God's people suffer for lack of knowledge.
(Hosea 4:6)
In the Old Testament, earthly
rulers were the greatest enemies of the children of Israel. In the New Testament,
the greatest enemies of Christians were the Roman authorities. In the modern
world, the greatest enemies of Christians are civil governments.
Christian preachers can fulminate
against Harry Potter, Britney Spears and Ozzy Osbourne all they want with
impunity. But let them get too vocal politically and the IRS starts asking
all kinds of questions. Christians must ask if their local church is built
on a rock so that the gates of Hell shall not prevail against it (Matthew
16:18) or is it just an elaborate tax dodge? Could your church survive if
it lost its tax exemption?
When
it comes to vice, you can change the channel or hit the delete key very easily.
However, you cannot do so with government. Government steals half our
money before we can even buy groceries, provide for our families or -- oh,
by the way -- tithe to churches.
Government
forces children to attend its socialist, secularist indoctrination pens for
12 years and forces everyone to bankroll these indoctrination pens.
Government
disarms innocent law abiding citizens leaving them defenseless against street
thugs and other criminals. Government incinerated 80 innocent people
at Waco, Texas. And America's preachers are silent about this!
It
is governments that perpetrate untold horrors against Christians in
the Sudan, Red China, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and numerous other countries.
The
church must bear a great deal of the blame for the abject ignorance of American
Christians about these matters. "Render unto Caesar that which is Caesar's"
(Matthew 22:21) does not mean pay all your taxes, obey all the laws, sit down
and shut up!
This
is America! "That which is Caesar's" is spelled out in the 18 clauses
and 431 words of Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution. We must rendereverything
else unto God. This includes child rearing, aiding the poor, instilling
morals, rehabilitating alcoholics and drug addicts, etc.
There
was a time when families and churches shouldered these responsibilities. People
were not raped on taxes and ministers were not whining and weeping and wailing
about how the government was not doing enough to usher in some kind of optimal
Christian society.
The
government cannot perform effectively the duties God has placed on
churches and families. Seventy years of the failure of the welfare state,
the drug war and so forth bear witness to this.
It
does not matter how nice and wholesome your president's program may sound.
When you take federal money you subject yourself to federal control. Do you
want your church to come under federal control? Then go ahead! Take the money
and see if it doesn't end in disaster! I am no great clairvoyant. I don't
read tea leaves. But federal aid to churches will be just as disastrous as
federal aid to schools and colleges. Dependence on federal money will poison
the churches! Just watch!
American
Christians need to learn that government is not their friend. It does not
matter who is in the White House or who has a majority in Congress. Once government
oversteps its constitutional limits, bad things start happening. It cannot
provide anything for free. It can only do for you insofar as it can first
do to you. Its goodies carry a stiff price in both money and freedom.
December
12, 2002 was indeed a bleak day in the history of the American church. To
paraphrase the 1980s hit song by R.E.M., it's the end of the church as we
know it. I don't feel fine.