to Germany to teach them how to hate Greeks and follow his teaching. There shall be no Greek Bettors in Nassau OTB on Roman Catholic Holidays because Nassau OTB only closes on Roman Catholic Holidays and NOT GREEK ORTHODOX HOLIDAYS. This Cuomo crusader know how to put Greeks in their place, out of Nassau OTB, while Cuomo goes to Church or wherever.
German Catholic Church Links Tax to the Sacraments
By MELISSA EDDY
Published: October 5, 2012
BERLIN — It is a paradox of modern Germany
that church and state remain so intimately tied. That bond persists
more and more awkwardly, it seems, as the church’s relationship with
followers continues to fray amid growing secularization.
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Last week one of Germany’s highest courts rankled Catholic bishops by
ruling that the state recognized the right of Catholics to leave the
church — and therefore avoid paying a tax that is used to support
religious institutions. The court ruled it was a matter of religious
freedom, while religious leaders saw the decision as yet another threat
to their influence on modern German society.
With its ruling the court also dodged the thorny issue of what happens
when a parishioner formally quits the church, stops paying taxes, but
then wants to attend services anyway. The court said that, too, was a
matter of religious freedom, a decision that so rankled religious
leaders fearful of losing a lucrative revenue stream that they made
clear, right away, that taxes are the price for participation in the
church’s most sacred rituals: no payments, no sacraments.
The Catholic Bishops’ Conference in Germany issued a crystal clear, uncompromising edict, endorsed by the Vatican.
It detailed that a member who refuses to pay taxes will no longer be
allowed to receive communion or make confession, to serve as godparents
or to hold any office in the church. Those who leave can also be refused
a Christian burial, unless they “give some sign of repentance,” it
read.
“Whoever declares they are leaving the church before official
authorities, for whatever reason, impinges on their responsibility to
safeguard the community of the church, and against their responsibility
to provide financial support to allow the church to fulfill its work”
before their death, it read.
The tussle highlighted the long-established but increasingly troubled
symbiosis between church and state in Europe that, repeated polls have
shown, grows more secular-minded as each generation moves further away
from the church. Like many European countries, Germany’s churches are
independent but function in partnership with the state, which collects
taxes from members of established religions and then funnels the
revenues back to the religious institutions, for a fee, in keeping with a
19th-century agreement following abolishment of an official state
church.
Income from church taxes in Germany amounted to about $6.3 billion for
the Roman Catholic Church in 2011, and $5.5 billion for the Protestant,
mostly Lutheran, churches in 2010, official statistics show. The money
goes to support hospitals, schools, day care and myriad other social
services, but a sizable amount of the Catholic money is also channeled
to the Vatican.
The German church tax — which is 8 to 9 percent of the annual income tax
— is so steep, however, that many people formally quit the church to
avoid paying, while nevertheless remaining active in their faith. That
is what is angering Catholic Church officials.
To many faithful, the court ruling validated that choice, and the edict
from the Catholic Bishops’ Conference amounted to a sharp response by
church leaders against the government’s increasingly aggressive
secularism taking root in society. They see it threatening the future of
the religious institutions upon which Germany’s modern democracy was
founded.
Unlike the United States, where politicians attend prayer breakfasts,
and service as an altar boy is cast as a solid political credential,
discussion of faith plays little role in German public discourse.
Although Chancellor Angela Merkel’s party is called the Christian
Democrats, and her father was a minister, the outward emphasis is far
more on democracy than on Christianity.
The contrast could be seen starkly at a recent gala in Berlin honoring
30 years since the former leader Helmut Kohl’s first term as chancellor.
Of a dozen international speakers, only three sought God’s blessing for
Germany. Two were the American speakers, the elder George Bush and
Philip D. Murphy, the ambassador to Germany. The other was a Catholic
priest.
Even so, it is the United States, where churches are tax exempt, that
prides itself on a constitutional separation between church and state,
while most European governments continue to support their churches
through a variety of means.
In Belgium, Greece and Norway, churches are financed by the state.
Churches in Austria, Switzerland and Sweden all use the state to collect
taxes from members, but the contributions are either predetermined
amounts or, compared with Germany, a more modest 1 to 2 percent of the
annual assessed income tax. Spain and Italy allow congregants to decide
whether they would like a percentage of their income to flow to
religious organizations or be earmarked for civic projects.
In Germany, roughly a third of its 82 million people are Roman
Catholics, and about the same number belong to the country’s Protestant
churches. All of these members, as well as the estimated 120,000 Jews,
pay taxes to the state. Muslim organizations rely on donations or
support from outside sources, often based in countries abroad.
Critics charge that the German bishops’ decree denying sacraments to tax
dodgers was driven more by greed than necessity, pointing out that
belonging to a congregation in neighboring countries like the
Netherlands or France is based on tithes, not a predetermined charge
levied by the government.
Indeed, the tax in Germany is blamed in part for driving about three
million members from the ranks of the Roman Catholic Church over the
past two decades, as disgruntled parishioners decided the payments were
better spent on something else.
Norbert Lüdecke, a professor of canon law at Bonn University, said that
while every disobedient Catholic is to be punished based on the sin
committed, the bishops’ decree effectively placed refusal to pay church
taxes nearly on par with the most severe offenses in the church.
“Now refusing to pay taxes is considered an offense only slightly less
bad than denial that Jesus Christ is the son of God,” Mr. Lüdecke said.
“While at the same time, there is no specific punishment for other
offenses, such as, for example, the sexual abuse of minors by clerics.”
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