|
YOU ARE UNGODLY |
(OR UNHOLY) |
According to IRS Publication 517 (2001 edition), pages 3 and 11, a minister of a church or religion not considered to be a "religious order" where the minister thereof takes a "Vow Of Poverty" (an early Roman Catholic Church religious doctrine), only works for the church, or that is, the organization of the congregation and its official representatives under the "common law." Never mind how the IRS got the legal ability to decide for itself what the common law was or wasn't, or is or is not, the fact is, ministers were never historically considered to be merely employees of a church under the common law. Originally, ministers of every known religion who lived and traveled abroad throughout the United States were believed by their followers to work for God, in spite of their necessary temporal relationships with their congregations. NOT SO, says the IRS. Common law ministers have to eat from the fruit of their labors, paid them by their common congregations. Catholic Priests and nuns do not have to eat anything to live, but if they should ever find the occasion to want to, they are given, not paid, something to eat - by their only real employer - (by Vow Of Poverty) - God. To substantiate that statement, that at one time ministers of other churches were believed to be called by God, we need only to look at and recognize the fact that within the general populace of ministers, such ministers often obtain their calling entirely outside of any requirements of any church organization whatsoever, but instead consider themselves to have been called to preach or minister by God. Those same ministers - announce their call to ministry - when ready to do so, and NEVER ask a congregation's permission to call themselves a minister. The decision as to whether or not they are a minister, called of God, not by a Congregation, is theirs alone to make. But NOT SO, says the IRS. The IRS says, in effect, of the ministers of all those Churches out there, "YOU are an employee only of YOUR church, or congregation, under the COMMON LAW. You do NOT work directly for God, therefore YOUR ministry is known to US and declared by US to be UNGODLY." YOU - UNGODLY - YOU! This is contrasted to the ministry of the Roman Catholic Priest or Nun or Monk or Friar who, having taken a Vow Of Poverty (since it IS in fact their own church's original Religious Doctrine), are treated entirely different on the subject of taxes, including both social security, self employment, and income taxes. On pages 3 and 4 of IRS Publication 517 (2001 edition), we discover that the Roman Catholic Priest or Nun or Monk or Friar, having taken their oath or religious doctrinal Vow Of Poverty, thereby making them a different kind of minister than all others religions have, is an "AGENT" (not a common law employee) of the "Religious Order." This same revelation of truth of discrimination is found on page 11 of IRS Publication 525 (2001 edition) as it applies to Nuns who work as Registered Nurses (select Angels of Mercy) in (Holier than all other) hospitals owned by the Roman Catholic Church. You should note that the last word in the paragraph above (on page 11) is Church, not Religious Order. We do not say Roman Catholic Religious Order, yet that is exactly how the Internal Revenue Service has elected to define the Roman Catholic Church, but do not EQUALLY define the Baptist Church as the Baptist Religious Order, do not EQUALLY define the Greek Orthodox Church as the Greek Orthodox Religious Order, do not EQUALLY define the Jewish Church or Synagogue as the Jewish Religious Order, and so on, nor do any of the ministers of any of these other churches or synagogues automatically take Vows Of Poverty as a part of their being elevated into becoming a part of their Religion's Ministry. This position of considering the ministers of all churches to be UNGODLY (or Unholy) is further seen by the discrimination evident on pages 3, 4, and 8 of publication 517 (2001 edition), as well as page 11 of IRS Publication 525 (2001 edition). On these pages you will discover that: A. Ministers must go through the labor of filing a request to be considered approvable for an exemption from having to pay either social security taxes, self employment taxes, or income taxes, but: (1) On page 3, we find that the Roman Catholic Priests and Nuns, etc., (represented there as members of a religious order having taken a Vow Of Poverty) are exempt from paying such taxes; (2) On page 4, we find that the Roman Catholic Priests and Nuns, etc., (represented there as members of a religious order having taken a Vow Of Poverty) do not even have to bother requesting (or filing for) the exemption... seen disclosed by the word TIP on the upper right hand side of the page; (3) On page 8, we find that as concerning the obligation to pay an Income Tax, Roman Catholic Priests and Nuns, etc. (represented there as members of a Religious Order having taken a "Vow Of Poverty") are to consider for obligation purposes, that they are to look to the same guidelines offered on pages 3 and 4, establishing that with the issue of Income Tax as well as the Social Security Tax and the Self Employment Tax are EXEMPTED for this classification of Religious Ministers. You will note that these AGENTS of Religious Orders are actually still recognized as "ministers" on page 6 of IRS Publication 517 (2001 edition), but evidentially not considered to be ministers as employees of the church or congregation under the common law, but having taken a Vow Of Poverty (all that they have belongs to God) are actually EMPLOYEES of God (not the congregation like those - ugh - other ministers - making them GODLY) and only AGENTS of the Religious Order (not being like other churches) that represents God. The Vow Of Poverty, being legally recognized in "the law" of the IRS, connects the Agency on to the "person" to whom the Vow Of Poverty pertains, and the Vow Of Poverty pertains to God! Employer/Principal to Employee/Agent. (4) On page 11 of IRS Publication 525 (2001 edition), we find that certain female ministers of a Religious Order (not a church or synagogue), having taken a Vow Of Poverty, while WORKING as Registered Nurses (excluding all other Registered Nurses who are not members of that Religious Order and not having taken a Vow Of Poverty from being considered as having EQUAL RIGHTS, even if such Registered Nurses might happen to be ministers in a church or synagogue),. . . do not have to worry about paying any kind of social security and Income Tax for the work performed for the hospital (it must somehow belong to God too), but are 100 % EXEMPT on such taxes, since they elect to give 100 % of such earned income to their Religious Order - as required by the Vow Of Poverty doctrine/law taken by them - (not having to have any Income for food, clothing, necessities, etc., since the Religious Order, doubling or serving vicariously for God, gives them all of that - not to be considered as Income for tax purposes though). You will note that the IRS declaration of policy is that a person of any faith or ministry may not give more than 40 % of their income, from whatever source derived, to their church, even if their church were to elect to take care of them in their issues of rent, food, clothing, etc. Only if you are a member of a religious order may the 100 % giving of Income factor be allowed to kick in. All other churches' members trying that must manditorially be hauled off to a nice clean (maybe) PRISON somewhere for the crime of forgetting that they were not Catholic at the time when they gave their all to their own UNGODLY church. Because the Nuns, a recognized female ministry of the Roman Catholic Church, are recognized as having extended that ministry into the employment of "Registered Nurses" but no other form of employment, it would indicate that "Registered Nurses" are also a form of ministry, but not for members of any other faith, religion or denomination. Apparently this is because the Roman Catholic Church Nuns, when functioning as Registered Nurses, serve a GODLY purpose in doing so, although, sadly, discriminatorially, all other Registered Nurses, not working for the same God, are undoubtedly UNGODLY, UNHOLY women, worthy of IRS taxation - without mercy - to these "Angels Of Mercy" as with the more Godly Nuns. (5) On IRS Publication 2105 (2001 edition), used to fortify IRS criminal prosecutions, we find it saying that as to anyone who may have elected, for whatever reason, to take a "Vow Of Poverty," that "taking a Vow Of Poverty . . . is NOT legal." Not legal? you ask. But, what about all of that language in the 2001 editions of IRS Publications 517 and 525? In those publications, again and again, it describes people who have elected to take a "Vow Of Poverty" as members of a religious order . . . . oh, the IRS means that taking a "Vow Of Poverty" is NOT legal . . . unless you are Catholic, because ONLY Catholics taking a Vow Of Poverty would actually be doing that in the service of God, and so everyone else, no matter what religion, formal or informal, or lack of it, must be utterly UNGODLY, or UNWHOLESOME. YOU - UNWHOLESOME - YOU! SO, the IRS really HAS called and IS calling everyone else but members of the Roman Catholic Church as being "UNGODLY." Note. The later or earlier editions of the aforementioned IRS Publications should have the same essential information as provided here, but may be located on other pages than stated here. Provided below are 3 IRS Publications, which you may copy, which give away this legally sickening condition to which our nation's tax laws have been subjected to, in violation to the First Amendment of the Constitution. The forms are in PDF (Acrobat Reader), and were obtained from the official website of the IRS itself, http://www.irs.gov. |
|
(2001 edition) |
(2001 edition) |
(2001 edition) |