Friday Jan 16, 2026

The Fine Line Files: Holy Exemptions: Faith, Power, and America’s Most Untouchable Tax Break

What if one of the largest, wealthiest sectors in America never had to file a tax return?

In this episode of The Fine Line Files, Dominique Molina takes listeners inside one of the oldest—and most controversial—features of the U.S. tax system: church tax exemption.

From its origins in the Roman Empire to a bombshell 2025 IRS decision allowing churches to endorse political candidates from the pulpit, this episode unpacks how religious organizations became some of the most protected—and least scrutinized—entities in the tax code.

This is not an attack on faith.
It’s an investigation into power, money, history, and the rules that govern them.

🔍 In this episode, we explore:

  • Why churches have been tax-exempt for nearly 1,700 years

  • How federal income tax exemption for churches became law in 1894

  • The unique tax privileges churches enjoy today—including automatic 501(c)(3) status and no Form 990 filings

  • The parsonage exemption and why clergy housing is treated differently than any other nonprofit leader

  • The 2025 IRS pivot that now allows churches to endorse political candidates during religious services

  • A dramatic case study: Scientology vs. the IRS and the 25-year legal war over tax-exempt status

  • Why taxing churches would not fix the federal budget (and what the numbers really say)

  • The strongest arguments for and against church tax exemption

  • Where the real “fine line” lies between religious liberty and government subsidy

⚖️ The central question:

Is tax-free status a constitutional shield protecting religious freedom…
or a mask that sometimes hides behavior we’d never tolerate in any other sector?

As always, Dominique invites listeners to question assumptions, follow the money, and decide for themselves where the line should be drawn.

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