So, Joel Osteen did a Joe Osteen thing and found a way to get more money in the name of Jesus, this time from the federal government.
Now, Twitter is filled with the perpetually enraged calling for Catholic Churches to be taxed.
Let's talk this through, shall we?
One of my parishes is among the largest in our diocese, with one of the largest budgets in the diocese.
With that,If we were a business, we still wouldn't qualify for taxes. Why?
Because we don't make money.
We pay our employees, care for the poor and nothing is left afterward.
When the quarantine happened, we couldn't take collections.
Because we couldn't take collections, we couldn't pay our over 100 employees.
Even with this, we doubled down our commitment to help the poor & vulnerable.
The PPP loan allowed us to pay our employees, who then didn't go
on government assistance, all while we continued to feed the poor, pay their heating/electric bills, advocate with them in housing disputes, etc.
As a priest, I pay taxes. So do my employees.
None of us would've been able to do so without the PPP loan.
People half educated on the topic tend to fall back on slogans, rather than really diving into it.
And some "Catholic" outlets don't help; exploiting people's anger with salacious headlines that got them clicks & subscribers.
So, let me help with this example:
On average, in Catholic Churches in the US, 4% of the people provide 80% of the Churches funding.
Catholics come to Church in need. Even many of those crapping on the Church because of Osteen will come to the Church in grief, mourning, sickness, etc.
We will be there for them.
But we will be there with a budget that no secular company could run on.
That no public school could run on.
Why? Because money is tight.
People don't give to Churches like they used to, but rely on Churches more than ever.
Every dollar we get goes to help us do our job.
What's our job in this regard?
Pay our employees.
Take care of the poor & vulnerable.
Educate kids.
The collection of individual Catholic Churches in the US remain the largest provider of free assistance in this country.
We get it done and we do it on a dime.
So, while "tax the Churches" might be a fun slogan to type when you are angry, it won't help.
The poor Churches will pay, Joel Osteen and his ilk won't. They'll still be millionaires for Jesus while the Churches bleeding to help will just get more broke.
I hope this helps.

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More from @Joeinblack

5 Dec
Death is a significant part of my life; I'm around it everyday. When someone dies, your time with them on earth is done; you cannot have it back.
The wounds death brings on those left behind can be soothed, but never healed.
With that, I offer this:
Call or visit your parents. Particularly if they are in a nursing home, make contact with them. Notes on their room window, singing to them from outside, whatever it takes.
If they are home, call them, text them, visit them. Thank them, honor them, love them. Treasure them.
If you are in a contentious situation with a sibling or parent, take a moment and ask yourself what you would feel if they died today and then respond accordingly.
Not all relationships should be reconciled, I totally get that, but those situations are rare.
Read 5 tweets
26 Jul
Earlier, I posted a tweet about the pain many of my parishioners have endured mourning their sick or dying family without being able to be present.
I posted it as a response to yet another video of tens of thousands of people gathering in protest.
The responses shocked me: lots of retweets & favorites, some death threats, even numerous notifications that people were attempting to access my passwords.
Some people politely disagreed, some people not so much.
Some people exuberantly agreed, others obnoxiously so.
I’m deleting it now because of the violence that’s begun to seep into the responses: people actually threatening each other.
At some point, if we don’t figure out how to disagree and dialogue, our Republic will die.
Read 5 tweets
28 May 19
To my little bro @FrGoyo -
One of the toughest parts of being a priest is moving. You give the entirety of yourself to God’s people where you are assigned and then, like Abraham, God calls you to “Go to a land you know not.”
I’ve changed communities 12 times in 20 years
and I was devastated almost every time.
I will pray for you and, if I may, offer advice to you and any younger priest going through this transition.
First, don’t let the heartbreak cause you to give the less the next time.
The pain you feel is the price of love and we should always be willing to pay whatever price love requires.
Second, you have to let go: Do not return to your former assignment for a minimum of one year.
Read 5 tweets
2 Feb 19
Thank you for this brother. I'd like to share my opinions on what we as priests can do and it centers on the way we lead as priest and the pastorship model we practice.
For 20 years, I have watched the way we Pastor and I've become a veritable collecting point for horror stories of priests with too much power. Simply put, there is no accountability for a priest being a pompous jerk, power oriented or treating his parish as his personal fiefdom.
I have first hand watched priest build fantastic rectories for themselves, make unbelievably poor decisions regarding finances, treat people with contempt and then get "rewarded" by the Bishop with a bigger, better parish to destroy when they are done with the first one.
Read 10 tweets

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