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What Are the Sacerdotal Duties?

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    Religious Meaning

    • Sacerdotal duties are the spirituality-related work tasks performed by clergy, ministers, or other recognized leaders of any religious affiliation. Different religions throughout time have defined sacerdotal duties in varying ways. The most common religions today define sacerdotal duties to include performing baptisms, weddings, communions, baby-naming ceremonies, religious instruction, spiritual counseling, administering religious organizations, and conducting services of worship.

    IRS Regulations

    • IRS regulations allow specialized treatment of a minister's income, including considering a minister's pay to be self-employment income, and permitting housing allowances for clergy to be excluded from claimed income. In determining application of these regulations, the IRS looks to whether the minister is ordained, commissioned, or licensed by his religious organization, and then whether the income was generated through to that minister's service to the religious organization in exercise of his ministry.

    Misconceptions

    • Public controversy has arisen over the misconception that the IRS requires ministers to perform specific sacraments related only to certain religious sects in order to qualify for tax treatment reserved for clergy. IRS tax regulations at 26 Code of Federal Regulations Section 1.1402(c)(5) specify that whether a minister's actions constitute sacerdotal duties "depends on the tenets and practices of the particular religious body constituting his church or church denomination." The word "church" as used by the IRS is not restricted to Christian churches, but means all institutions or places of worship, including mosques, synagogues and temples.

    Interpretation

    • IRS regulations regarding what constitutes sacerdotal duties are interpreted through IRS private letter rulings and though court decisions. Private letter rulings should not be relied on as general precedent, as they are only controlling in the case for which they were requested. Court cases regarding the IRS definition of "minister" confirm that whether particular actions will be considered sacerdotal duties depends on the actions performed, the tenets of that faith, and the requirements of that minister's superiors in the religious organization.

    Effects

    • IRS consideration of whether certain acts constitute sacerdotal duties only affects income tax treatment of a clergy member's income and housing allowances; it does not affect any IRS ruling on whether the church or religious organization is entitled to tax-exempt status as a religious entity. IRS recognition of a religious organization as a tax-exempt entity takes into account numerous factors, and the lack of a clergy or designated sacerdotal duties will not preclude an organization from being considered a church for tax purposes. The IRS states in its guiding publications that it "makes no attempt to evaluate the content of whatever doctrine a particular organization claims is religious."

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