Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Some pastors praise Trump order, others concerned over less integrity

- By Amy Forliti

Associated Press

MINNEAPOLI­S — President Donald Trump’s order to ease limits on political activity by religious organizati­ons is being met with both enthusiasm and dread from religious leaders, with some rejoicing in the freedom to preach their views and endorse candidates and others fearing the change will erode the integrity of houses of worship.

Mr. Trump signed the executive order Thursday, saying it would give churches their “voices back.” It directs the Treasury Department not to take action against religious organizati­ons that engage in political speech.

“It’s never good for the church or the state when the two get in bed with each other,” said the Rev. Gregory Boyd, senior pastor of Woodland Hills Church, a nondenomin­ational church in suburban St. Paul.

For pastors to use the pulpit “to get others to buy into their particular way of voting is, I think, a real abuse of authority,” he added.

The Rev. Charlie Muller, pastor of the nondenomin­ational Victory Christian Church in Albany, N.Y., is excited. As soon as details of the order are sorted out, his church plans to endorse a candidate for mayor.

“I’m very involved politicall­y, but we’ve been handcuffed,” Rev. Muller said. “We want to have a voice, and we haven’t had that.”

Mr. Trump had long promised conservati­ve Christian supporters that he would block the IRS regulation, known as the Johnson Amendment, though any repeal would have to be done by Congress. The amendment, named for then-Sen. Lyndon Johnson, was enacted in 1954 and allows a wide range of advocacy on political issues. But it bars electionee­ring and outright political endorsemen­ts from the pulpit.

Soon after the president signed the order, an atheist group known as the Freedom From Religion Foundation filed papers in federal court seeking to block the measure.

The IRS does not publicize violation investigat­ions, but only one church is known to have lost its tax-exempt status for breaking the rule. Because the limits are rarely enforced, some say the regulation never had teeth, and Mr. Trump’s signature amounted to a photo opportunit­y.

The Rev. Wallace Bubar, pastor at Central Presbyteri­an Church in Des Moines, Iowa, described the order as “pandering to the religious right.” He does not foresee any effect on his church or any other.

“For whatever reason, the religious right evangelica­ls have developed a persecutio­n complex here in the last few years, and I think this is intended to address that,” Rev. Bubar said.

Rabbi Jonah Pesner supports the Johnson Amendment, calling it “a gift to preachers.”

“It gives me the freedom, from the pulpit, to peach about values and policy, but to be protected from partisansh­ip,” said Rabbi Pesner, who runs the social and advocacy arm of Reform Judaism, the largest American Jewish movement. “Because if I were able to cross that partisan line as a preacher, I’d be under enormous pressure from stakeholde­rs, from members, from donors. It would undermine my moral authority as a guardian of religious tradition.”

Preachers, he said, must speak truth to power “in the spirit of the prophets,” no matter which party holds power.

The Rev. Gus Booth, pastor of Warroad Community Church, an interdenom­inational congregati­on in far northweste­rn Minnesota, said he was ecstatic about the order, calling it an “incrementa­l step” toward getting the rule overturned — an effort he’s been championin­g for years.

During the 2008 presidenti­al primary, Mr. Booth openly preached against Democrats Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. He invited a newspaper reporter to his sermon, then sent a copy of the article and his sermon to the IRS, saying, “Hey, come get me,” he recalled.

He said the IRS started an inquiry but dropped it. Since then, he’s sent the IRS a sermon every year, showing he’s in violation of the rule but practicing his right to free speech.

“I ought to be able to say anything that I want to say, wherever I want to say it,” he said. “I don’t lose free speech rights when I step behind the pulpit.”

All Saints Church in Pasadena, Calif., felt the Johnson Amendment’s effects firsthand. The IRS investigat­ed the liberal Episcopal congregati­on over an anti-war sermon by a former rector days before the 2004 presidenti­al election. That pastor did not endorse a candidate but suggested Jesus would condemn the Iraq War and thenPresid­ent George W. Bush’s doctrine of pre-emptive war.

The church was not penalized, but it racked up hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal fees over three years.

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