Churches Can Endorse Political Candidates
Digest more
A 2019 survey by Pew Research found that 76% of Americans and 70% of Christians say clergy should not endorse candidates from the pulpit, though evangelicals (62%) and Black Protestants (55%) are less likely to disapprove. Nearly two-thirds of Americans wanted churches to stay out of politics.
Churches can speak about candidates from the pulpit without risking their nonprofit status, the IRS said in a court filing
For religious organizations, loss of the rebates jeopardizes financing options for clean energy projects and is expected to result in millions of dollars less in energy cost savings that could otherwise be reinvested in other church ministries and programs.
2d
Raw Story on MSN'Time to recruit some churches': Experts blast new rules on pulpit politicsThe Internal Revenue Service promulgated a set of new rules on Monday that allow churches to endorse and donate to political candidates, The New York Times reported on Monday. The new rules were created at a time when religion had slowly become a staple in American politics.
We have a duty to lead our congregations, but also to serve the broader community. That means leaving the land, water and air better than we found it.