News

The IRS will let churches endorse candidates from the pulpit, overthrowing six decades of nonprofit regulation. It's a move ...
The I.R.S. recently said that churches could endorse candidates from the pulpit, a shift from a longstanding interpretation ...
The Christian Post reached out to a couple of churches involved in Pulpit Freedom Sunday to get their perspectives on the IRS ...
You want a service from the government, you pay for it. But taxation with conditions of behavior attached is worse than theft ...
When the IRS announced two weeks ago that it would not enforce a section of federal law commonly called the Johnson Amendment ...
When the IRS announced recently that it would not enforce a section of federal law commonly called the Johnson Amendment, many clerics rejoiced. The Johnson Amendment — named for its author, then-Sen.
The Internal Revenue Service says it will relax its longstanding ban on churches engaging in political campaign activity.
The IRS will offer religious congregations more freedom to endorse political candidates without jeopardizing their tax-exempt ...
In the wake of the IRS’s recent decision to allow churches to endorse political candidates, some scholars are raising ...
Although the IRS announced this month it is reversing precedent by allowing tax-exempt houses of worship to endorse political ...
Readers debate issues raised by a recent op-ed headlined "Do we really want churches to become more political?" ...
On July 7, the IRS didn't outright repeal the Johnson Amendment, but it said in court that communications in "good faith" by a church to its members wouldn't amount to "intervening" or affecting the ...