No tax, no blessing: German church insists on levy
BERLIN — The road to heaven is paved with more than good intentions for Germany’s 24 million Catholics. If they don’t pay their religious taxes, they will be denied sacraments, including weddings, baptisms and funerals.
A decree issued last week by the country’s bishops cast a spotlight on the longstanding practice in Germany and a handful of other European countries in which governments tax registered believers, then hand over the money to the religious institutions.
In Germany, the surcharge for Catholics, Protestants and Jews is of up to nine percent on their income tax bills, or about $72 a month for a single person earning a pre-tax monthly salary of about $4,500.
For religious institutions, struggling to maintain their congregations in a secular society where the Protestant Reformation began 500 years ago, the tax revenues are vital.
The Catholic Church in Germany receives about $6.5 billion annually from the surcharge. For Protestants, the total is just above $5.2 billion.
Donations, in turn, represent a far smaller share of the churches’ income than in the United States.
With rising prices and economic uncertainty, more and more Catholics and Protestants are opting to save their money and declare to tax authorities that they no longer are church members, even if they still consider themselves believers.
“I quit the church in 2007,” said Manfred Gonschor, a Munich-based IT consultant. “It was when I got a bonus payment and realized that I could have paid myself a nice holiday alone on the amount of church tax that I was paying on it.”
Gonschor added that he was also “really fed up with the institution and its failures.”
Such defections have hit the Catholic Church especially hard; it lost about 181,000 tax-paying members in 2010 and 126,000 in 2011, according to official figures. Protestants, who number about 24 million nationwide, lost 145,000 registered members in Germany in 2010, the most recent year from which figures are available.
But the figures include some people who still want to baptize their children, take communion on major religious holidays, marry in a religious ceremony and receive Christian burials.
The group We are Church, which claims to represent tens of thousands of grassroots Catholics, said many Germans stop paying the tax because they disagree with the church’s policies or simply want to save money, not because they have lost their faith.
“I haven’t quit because I still think that I might want to get married in a church one day, even though I know that’s absurd,” said Anna Ainsley, 31, a banker and a Protestant from Frankfurt. “But when I see my tax declaration, then I think every year that I should finally quit.”
Those are the people who Germany’s Catholic bishops had in mind when they decreed on Sept. 20 that stopping the payment of religious taxes was “a serious lapse,” and those who did so would then be excluded from a range of church activities.
“This decree makes clear that one cannot partly leave the church,” the bishops said in a statement. “It is not possible to separate the spiritual community of the church from the institutional church.”

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