Prayer List
updated May 2nd, 2011
These are collected on Wednesday during the Bible Study and Prayer Time
1. Mandee’s seizures have greatly diminished. Pray for her continued health. She is having a MRI May 21. Also, she is severely congested. Pray for her asthma.
2. Mariam Carson might not be able to get a new pacemaker. Pray for her health.
3. Bud Hardy traveling for military veteran reunions. Pray for his legs to stay pain free and for safety.
4. Bob & Mable Johnston traveling back to Michigan this week.
5. Betty Wood’s is having trouble with her digestion. Ask travel mercies for her some Mike as he drives to Winston-Salem.
6. Benedict’s daughter Beth for sustained health.
7. Marshall Anderson with in-home dialysis for his kidneys. Pray for their strength and for Gloria as she keeps everything on schedule
8. Praise that both of JoAnn’s sons are employed at this time.
9. Friends of Charles: Joe Carlton with cancer; Jerry Barrett had back surgery and is home; and Bobby Chatham hoping to level out his medicine; and Howard Joes has cirrhosis of the liver.
10. Betty Locke with stomach pains and Pastor Tony with hip joint pain. Eli with stitches in his head.
11. Bill Kirkpatrick in his health challenges.
12. Dottie Davis’s nephew with multiple health challenges (endocarditis in his tricuspid, pneumonia, dialysis)
13. Joanne’s grand-daughter Brittany after she was mugged and stolen from last week.
14. Allen’s great niece with family and health concerns.
15. Robbie isn’t feeling well and her sister Marge Stanfiel is always in need of prayer
16. Linda Vick, Jenn’s mom, has been fighting a infection for over a year and can’t seem to get rid of it
17. Pray for Dorothy with failing lungs. She will be entering Hospice care soon.
18. Sherry Love’s health concerns.
Faith group to IRS: Don’t tread on us!
THE POWER TO DESTROY
John Kerry case reveals loophole for feds to quash political speech
Posted: October 22, 2011 11:00 pm Eastern By Drew Zahn
![]() Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass. (photo: cliff1066) |
A religious group is charging the Internal Revenue Service with using a legal loophole to first tax nonprofits’ free speech, then run away with impunity when challenged in court.
The nonprofit Catholic Answers tasted this tactic firsthand in 2008, when its president, Karl Keating, posted a discussion on the organization’s website arguing that, according to church rules, Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., should not be allowed to receive communion in the Catholic Church because of his support for legalized abortion.
The IRS then levied an excise tax on Catholic Answers for engaging in alleged “political speech” against then-presidential primary candidate Kerry, a tax Catholic Answers paid.
But when challenged in court, the IRS simply refunded the tax, while refusing to change its ruling that Catholic Answers’ speech was taxable political intervention in an election. Lower courts then ruled Catholic Answers had no course of action against the IRS.
But Catholic Answers, together with the James Madison Center for Free Speech, are now asking the Supreme Court to step in, claiming this “tax-and-run” strategy allows the IRS to arbitrarily tax churches, charities and religious activists into silence, or dodge the consequences if the nonprofits fight back.
“Not only did the federal courts in this case misapply Supreme Court law, they have allowed the IRS to engage in trickery by penalizing nonprofits who exercise their right to speak, only to return the money at the last possible second,” explained James Bopp Jr., general counsel for the James Madison Center and co-chairman of the Election Law Subcommittee of the Federalist Society. “So long as the IRS is allowed to do this, nonprofits like Catholic Answers will be deterred from speaking about individuals who are political candidates in any context for fear they’ll be investigated and taxed. Nothing prevents the IRS from doing this again. And these groups now have no judicial remedy.”
The IRS initially conducted an extensive investigation and concluded that, since nonprofits should not engage in political speech, Catholic Answers should be penalized for making a “political expenditure” during an election.
But Catholic Answers argued its speech was not about the election of a candidate but about a theological issue surrounding a public official.
When challenged, the IRS returned the money on the grounds that Catholic Answers didn’t intentionally try to engage in political speech, but the federal agency refused to change its decision.
Catholic Answers, in turn, asked the federal courts to review that decision, knowing that without a change in the IRS’s position on its speech, it couldn’t make comments on figures like Kerry again without risking another investigation and tax penalty.
Yet both the California federal district court and the federal appeals court held that because Catholic Answers got its money back, the issue was resolved, and there was nothing for the courts to do.
“This allows the IRS to harass and penalize nonprofits who discuss public officials who are also running for office while leaving those nonprofits without any recourse,” the James Madison Center said in a statement. “The IRS can simply return the money at the last minute and never be sued for taxing protected speech that shouldn’t be taxed in the first place.”
A copy of the petition to the Supreme Court can be seen on the James Madison Center website.
Related:
Previous stories:
Shut down: Question about pastors’ rights
Hundreds of pastors thumb noses at IRS
Feds mum on pastors’ speech code challenge
See what has the IRS stopped in its tracks!
83 pastors challenge IRS to investigate
Dozens of pastors challenge IRS rules
IRS investigation of church ‘closed’
IRS loosens grip on Christian church
Pastors called to defy IRS censorship rules
Pastors accuse Barry Lynn of ‘intervening in campaign’
Church’s pro-life advocacy earns IRS audit
IRS probes minister for backing Huckabee
Group sics IRS on Mormon critic
Activist’s church mixes politics, religion
IRS to church: Shut up. Church to IRS: No way
OC Couple Threatened With $500-Per-Meeting Fines For Home Bible Study
September 20, 2011 11:30 PM
MISSION VIEJO (CBS) — An Orange County couple has been ordered to stop holding a Bible study in their home on the grounds that the meeting violates a city ordinance as a “church” and not as a private gathering.
Homeowners Chuck and Stephanie Fromm, of San Juan Capistrano, were fined $300 earlier this month for holding what city officials called “a regular gathering of more than three people”.
That type of meeting would require a conditional use permit as defined by the city, according to Pacific Justice Institute (PJI), the couple’s legal representation.
The Fromms also reportedly face subsequent fines of $500 per meeting for any further “religious gatherings” in their home, according to PJI.
“We’re just gathering and enjoying each other’s company and fellowship. And we enjoy studying God’s word.” Stephanie Fromm told CBS2.
After city officials rejected the Fromms’ appeal, PJI, which represents other Bible study participants, will appeal the decision to the California Superior Court in Orange County.
“This is also about a city trying to get a family to pay fees – to pay fees and pay money to them – just to be able to have friends over to read the Bible,” attorney Brad Dacus of PJI told CBS2.
Neighbors have written letters to the city in support of the Fromms, whom they said have not caused any disturbances with the meetings, according to PJI.
The city of San Juan Capistrano was founded as a mission in the late 1700s by Catholic priest Junipero Serra, who established a local chapel that remains the oldest standing building in California.
Officials with San Juan Capistrano did not respond to requests for comment.

