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German Catholic groups denounce church tax decree

Liberal and conservative Roman Catholic activists in Germany have criticised a decree that came into effect today to deny sacraments and religious burials to people who opt out of a "church tax".

The German bishops issued the decree on Friday warning Catholics who stop paying the tax they would be excluded from all religious activities, also including working in a church job, becoming a godparent or taking part in parish activities.

"'Pay and pray' is a completely wrong signal at the wrong time," the reformist movement We Are Church said on Monday. The decree "shows the great fear of the German bishops and the Vatican about further serious losses in church tax revenue."

A conservative group called the Union of Associations Loyal to the Pope asked why Catholics who stop paying the tax would be punished but those it called heretics could stay in its ranks.

"So sacraments are for sale - whoever pays the church tax can receive the sacraments," it said in a statement, saying the link the decree created "goes beyond the sale of indulgences that (Martin) Luther denounced" at the start of the Reformation.

German tax offices collect a religious tax worth 8 or 9 percent of the annual regular tax bill of registered Catholics, Protestants and Jews and channel it to those faiths. An official declaration that one is leaving the faith frees the citizen from this tax.

Defending the decree, bishops had earlier said they were spelling out the consequences of a worshipper choosing to leave the church to avoid paying.

Some Catholics had tried to remain active in their parish despite officially quitting the church.

But "it's rubbish to assume one could leave the institutional Church and remain a Catholic," said the secretary of the German Bishops Conference.

"Whoever leaves the Church," Rev Hans Langendoerfer told the Catholic radio station in Cologne, "leaves it completely."

The annual total of Catholic church leavers, usually around 120,000, rose to 181,193 two years ago as revelations about decades of sexual abuse of children by priests shamed the hierarchy and prompted an apology from German-born Pope Benedict.

"EXCOMMUNICATION LITE"

Church taxes brought in about 5 billion euros ($6.5 billion) for the Roman Catholic Church and 4.3 billion euros for the Protestant churches in 2010, according to official statistics.

With such full coffers, the German Church runs a large network of schools, hospitals and charity organisations at home and is one of the biggest contributors to the Vatican and to Catholic projects worldwide.

Some commentators suggested the bishops issued their decree on Friday to sidestep a looming legal case by a retired theology professor challenging the right of the Catholic Church to excommunicate those who opt out of the tax.

The German bishops had long told Catholics they would be excommunicated from the Church if they officially declared they were leaving it.

But the Vatican ruled in 2006 that a simple declaration to a tax office that one was leaving the Church was not enough to justify excommunication, Rome's stiffest punishment. The church leaver must also declare this to a priest, it said.

That prompted retired canon law professor Hartmut Zapp to file a legal case against the German Church, saying it could not excommunicate him for leaving simply to avoid paying the tax if the Vatican did not agree he deserved that punishment.

After contradictory lower court rulings, Zapp's case will go on Wednesday before the Federal Administrative Court in Leipzig. A ruling in his favour could throw into doubt Germany's whole church tax system, which was introduced in the 19th century.

The bishops' Friday decree, described as "excommunication lite" by the German media, could however undercut Zapp's case because the exclusions it listed were not described as a formal excommunication.

The German bishops are due to open their autumn plenary meeting in Fulda tomorrow and the issue is expected to play a part in the discussions over the following three days

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Paul Attard

Oct 23rd 2012, 16:52

It was always about money and power. Nothing else. People are jst waking up to the fact.

B. Cachia

Sep 25th 2012, 08:03

This whole issue of 'paying your dues as a Catholic' is a purely German thing, however. As you know, there is no such rule elsewhere.

Andrew Busuttil

Sep 25th 2012, 13:02

@ B. Cachia...

The Vatican APPROVES of this policy!!!
So don't fool yourself into thinking that is is some "German Thing"

Francis Saliba M.D.

Sep 26th 2012, 15:31

The relation to religion is very tenuous but one cannot expect the anti-religious to miss such an opportunity to vent their spleen.

In any institution, not just the religious, members expect to pay their dues, to obey the rules and, in return, to enjoy the deserved benefits of membership in that institution.

It is only in the case of religion that the unbelievers brashly demand that they enjoy the benefits of religion without shouldering the responsibilties of membership but, on the contrary, to spend their life undermining the religion of others.

Mr Terry Gosden

Oct 27th 2012, 15:42

Its a bit like saying Drs. Should get free-bee's for promoting certain type of drugs, in order for the drug companies to enjoy their patronage. Not ethicale, not taxed, but saleries are paid for out of the tax payers pocket. And therefore all 'presents' should be stated and open to scrutiny.............

Andrew Azzopardi

Sep 25th 2012, 19:27

Read the article well. Lutherans also pay the tax, but of course their money goes to the Lutheran (Evangelical) Church.

Mr Tony Gatt

Sep 24th 2012, 20:32

So you have to buy your way to heaven?

Andrew Busuttil

Sep 24th 2012, 21:06

What???
Do you think Christ would approve such nonsense? Pay him or begone??

Julian Pio Cefai

Sep 24th 2012, 21:30

You have to be joking, please tell me you are joking. How can you stick with people selling sacraments? this is disgusting. if someone wants to donate it should be done out of free will. If they feel they need not then its up to them

Andrew Busuttil

Sep 25th 2012, 08:08

Are you so sure?

Do you seriously think Christ would ever withhold forgiveness from a sinner, or the cure from a leper over some money??

joseph engerer

Sep 25th 2012, 09:19

The German bishops are right, business is business, Christ is a different story.

Andrew Azzopardi

Sep 25th 2012, 19:22

To be exempt from the tax, you have to declare that you have abandoned the Catholic faith, and joined no other recognised faith. These people declare they are not believers, and then expect to get married in church, be godparents, have church funerala, etc, probably only because church functions look better in the photos and video.

Joe Sultana

Oct 31st 2012, 06:08

@Andrew Busuttil.
You are right,i don't believe that Jesus Christ would approve . However sometimes we are very selective in our choices. ,Did Christ not say "Give to Ceasar what is Ceasar's and to God what is God's?
and "You are Peter, and on this rock i build my church and the gates of hell shall NEVER prevail against it?

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