Questions
& Answers
Last updated in May 1999
by Christopher Haahs
Any
More Questions?
This page is created to answer common questions frequently
received.
Funding, Taxes,Licenses,
Health
Laws
FINANCIAL SUPPORT:
SHES SUPPORT: At this time,
SHES is totally supported by gifts and donations. Our funds are so short
that we can no longer afford to send out a newsletter. We hope to keep
in touch over the NET. We have a tradition of donations at the time ministers
are ordained and certified spiritual healers and diplomats of earth stewardship
are appointed. There is also a tradition of donations from those who wich
to receive a copy of the ministers handbook that costs us about $8.00 just
to reproduce and mail. Some may want to also donate when they register
their congregation. As certificates are issued to all the trusted servants
and are available for the congregations, and as all of these matters are
recorded on the data base and in file folders, each of these activities
is an expense. The WEB site and e-mail are expenses. If we are to have
larger meetings and make the organization more accessible, this will involve
further expense. So we are always happy to receive donations. We ask that
those being ordained or appointed certified spiritual healers or diplomats
of earth stewardship consider making a minimum donation of $10.00 for each
certificate requested, and the same request is made of congregations wanting
a certificate acknowledging it as a current member of the SHES assembly,
and for any request for a minister's hand book. We ask all interested persons
to consider some contribution on an annual or more frequent basis to help
us defray the costs of making this religious community available.
TAXES:
SHES was not formed to be a tax haven. Anyone who is seeking
to obtain good tax advice concerning non profit institutions should consult
a good CPA, Lawyer or registered Tax representative who regularly deals
with both the state and federal or national tax consequences of income
and gifts to non-profit organizations. While the International Assembly
of Spiritual Healers & Earth Stewards Congregations is recognized by
the U.S. IRS as a 501c(3) status non profit institution (tax letter February
2, 1990) it does not form or provide any tax umbrella for any church members
or any ministers, spiritual healers or earth stewards ordained or appointed
by the assembly. SHES is not involved with nor does it support any programs
or policies of tax avoidance of any lawful taxes. Following the traditions
of a number of religions, SHES might remind those interested, as the Christians
do, render unto Caesar what is Caesar's.
LAWS AND LICENSES:
We are not a mail order ministry and we do not license
ministers. In the United States, both the states and the federal government
are forbidden to license ministers because of the constitutional provisions
separating church from state. Other countries may require some sort of
registration or licenses. However, even in the United States, where the
civil authority has laws that recognize relationships, such as marriages,
anyone who performs a marriage that can be binding under those laws must
also comply with the requirements of that civil authority. Therefore, before
one conducts a marriage, it is important to consult with the civil authority
that issues marriage licenses to see what is required to perform the marriage.
In some jurisdictions, a form of registration is required. It is up to
each minister to determine if she or he is performing that service in compliance
with local law.
SHES does not issue "minister's licenses." Nor does SHES
register new minister's names with any state or national authority. SHES
is a religious organization totally separate from any civil government.
SHES provides a system whereby persons nominated by a member congregation
can be ordained as ministers and/or appointed as Certified Spiritual Healers
or Diplomats of Earth Stewardship.
HEALTH LAWS:
We are often asked about spiritual healing and health
laws. In the United States this is a delicate area. At one time we could
have felt assured that our healers and ministers were protected by the
first amendment to the United States Constitution's first amendment that
restrains the government from passing any laws that prohibit "the free
exercise" of religion. So long as our ministers and Certified Spiritual
Healers were practicing their spiritual beliefs in their healing works
in accordance with our basic principles of not placing those who seek our
help in harms way they should have been protected by that restriction on
the government's authority. However, the United States Supreme Court has
greatly reduced the protections of the right of actual religious practice
and it has even prohibits Congress from passing laws protecting those rights,
where those rights conflict with any 'religiously neutral law.' So those
who now want to restrict religious practices are invited by that court
to couch their attempts to exercise governmental authority to restrict
the free exercise of religious practices in "religiously neutral" language.
While healing has often been part of the tradition of
many religions in the world, in many states civil authorities have sought
to regulate the most minute aspects of the healing professions under the
guise of protecting the public's health and welfare. So it is questionable
whether the United State's Supreme Court might ever protect the right of
any religion to exercise any healing practices or work if it might conceivably
violate any health law because that court might consider all health laws
religiously neutral.
The question we are continually faced with is would hands
on healing, even in the tradition of Christ and his disciples, now violate
the law or be governed by such laws as the local massage license laws?
What are we to make of special dietary laws that any of our individual
congregations, like other religions or sects, could adopt? We cannot give
any positive answer. Some states still enforce, under their state constitutions,
religious liberties that would protect these religious healing practices.
We would hope that all religions would come together to fight for these
principles should any State authority seeks to attack them. But we don't
know the answer. It is very frustrating. Like Congress, we consider the
U. S. Supreme Court's retreat from religious liberty a severe threat to
the basic freedoms of the United States and indeed of the world. Unfortunately,
we have no war chest to wage any war for these rights.
|