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Thank you very much! | Support and Partner with Our World Miracle Crusades | If you want your television station or videos to be removed and you want us to add your videos (no more free space), for more information please send us an email at. Anointedtube needs your financial support to continue running. But that can get pretty tricky to distinguish in practical circumstances.”įollow Charlotte Scott on Facebook and Twitter.Please click here to support anointedtube by making a monthly donation of any amount through PayPal. They are not supposed to speak in favor of candidates in their capacity as clergy. What’s tricky, though, is that they can speak in favor of certain candidates in their private capacity. They are going to support certain candidates. And so this certainly falls into that because clergy do not lose their rights as citizens because they are clergy. “There are always these really murky kind of boundary conditions–what’s on one side of the line, what’s on the other side of the line. “Whenever you’re trying to police speech, which is what’s going on here, we’re trying to restrict what people can and can’t say,” Wilson said.

He is toeing a fine line between supporting members of his congregation and endorsing candidates. So let’s not let that happen, especially at midterms,” Pastor Morris said last week. And we had no one to blame but ourselves. “Christians sat on the sidelines for too long, and then all of the sudden, they started teaching our children some pretty mixed up things in these schools. Pastor Morris asked the congregation to take pictures of the candidates’ names and encouraged them to vote. But I don’t think any action can be taken against the church simply for identifying those members of its congregation who are seeking office.”

“Now, if they say, ‘You should vote for them,’ then that’s where they crossed the line into risking their tax-exempt status. “It is certainly legitimate for the Church to call attention to the fact that these people are engaged in political campaigns,” Wilson said. There was even a disclaimer on the bottom of the screen that said he was not endorsing them. He added the Church is not “supporting” these candidates.

“We don’t endorse a candidate or support a candidate financially, but we let you know if there’s someone that’s a member of the family of churches,” Pastor Morris said on Oct. He did not respond to a request for comment. “So as a result of that, there’s not a lot of enforcement action that gets taken with regard to political activity in church congregations.”īefore early voting began, Pastor Robert Morris at Gateway Church in Southlake, northwest of Dallas, asked the congregation to pray for certain candidates on the November ballot. “Republicans don’t want to open that can of worms and seem to be going after Black churches and then therefore, perhaps bringing more scrutiny on to some of the white evangelical churches where this happens as well,” Wilson said. He said there’s a long history of “strong and overt political involvement” in African American churches. Wilson specializes in religion and politics.

“That being said, that is very seldom enforced.” “Churches are not supposed to say vote for ‘X’ in terms of a specific candidate, or they could potentially lose their tax-exempt status,” said Matthew Wilson, an associate professor of political science at Southern Methodist University (SMU). They may have made it harder to vote but our communities are energized as ever. This Souls to the Polls Sunday, I spent my morning visiting different churches and talking to community members about this midterm election.
