Tax resistance in the “Peace Churches” → Mennonites / Amish → Mabel Amstutz & Sem Sutter

This is the twentieth in a series of posts about war tax resistance as it was reported in back issues of The Mennonite. Today we reach 1973.

The Paris Peace Accord is about to be signed, beginning the eventual withdrawal of U.S. troops from Vietnam. Will the growing war tax resistance movement in the General Conference Mennonite Church be able to sustain its momentum as anti-war urgency slackens?

The Mennonite

Of all the varieties of tax resistance, the pay-taxes-but-complain method seems the least likely to satisfy or impress. But some people do seem to like it. For example, a letter from Sem and Mabel Sutter to the Commissioner of the IRS, dated explained that they were paying “the two-thirds of our federal income tax which is budgeted for military purposes… under protest.” Because “the money is already in your hands in the form of withholding tax, we have no recourse but to pay it, while stating that it violates our conscience to do so.” The typical complaints about “the wholesale destruction of human life” and the opportunity costs of military spending followed, along with a patient explanation of the Mennonite point of view on “resistance to war.” Finally the letter concluded that “until such time as legislative provision is made for conscientious objection to war tax, we shall pay our tax under protest.”

The issue included a letter from Steven G. Schmidt. Similarly anguished about the Vietnam War, he suggested something a bit stronger than paying-under-protest:

I would like to suggest one further action to people who follow Christ and to people who believe in God. Income tax money is due soon. Most of that money will go to disrupt and destroy lives. Perhaps church people would serve God best by sending this money to nonmilitary agencies or to local charities or the church. I, for one, pledge my support to you — and I know others who do, too. Let me know if we can help you in any way, for it takes courage to follow conscience.

As Joshua put it (24:15), “Choose ye this day whom you will serve… as for me and my house, we shall serve the Lord.” We at our house have come to believe that putting the money that would have gone to IRS into life-giving investments is serving the Lord.

A letter from David Janzen, dated , hoped to keep the war tax resistance momentum going as the anti-war movement’s urgency was being deflated by the withdrawal of the United States from the Vietnam War:

Tax resistance

Dear [The Mennonite editor] Larry [Kehler]: I have been asked by a number of friends, “Now that the war is over in Vietnam, will you end your war tax resistance?” Since most of my friends read The Mennonite, I wanted to share my answer here, hoping it may be helpful to others.

No, I will not pay the telephone excise tax (now 9 percent); I will do my best to owe no income tax and will refuse to pay whatever I do owe.

I am glad that the United States has finally agreed to withdraw all troops from Vietnam and exchange prisoners with Hanoi, but… the war is not over and U.S. complicity in it has not ended. Our bombers in Indochina have not been brought home, rather they are raining destruction on Cambodia and Laos in in unprecedented levels. The victims of these bombs are not my enemies. Why should they suffer for the sins of their rulers, or mine?

Furthermore, the President has requested a $4.7 billion increase in the Pentagon’s budget, and this in supposed peace time. What is the purpose of all this war spending that consumes 60 cents of every income tax dollar? It is, it seems to me, getting ready to put down with massive violence, the next threat to the American empire, or worse, to win the nuclear showdown of World War Ⅲ. By contributing to this kind of terror politics, I do not demonstrate God’s nature nor bring his peace. So, for the foreseeable future, I plan to reinvest my war taxes into works of mercy.

If anyone wants information on how to refuse taxes for war, even if you are in a withholding situation, write me or War Tax Resistance, 912 E. 31st St., Kansas City, Missouri 64109.

I haven’t really looked into the question of whether Canadians are doing more good than evil by paying their taxes. C.J. Hinke of 918 Center St. South in Whitby, Ontario, is apparently the only open tax resister in Canada, and would be glad to share his reasons with inquirers.

Walton Hackman, executive secretary of the Mennonite Central Committee’s “Peace Section” noted that war tax redirection to support that Section’s work had increased:

Taxes-for-peace fund new channel for witness

During the past year the MCC Peace Section has received $4,000 in contributions made in lieu of tax payments. This was a new phenomenon. In previous years only several hundred dollars were contributed in this way. The contributions were unsolicited; they were made by individuals whose consciences would not allow them to pay taxes which were used for war purposes.

Since a substantial number of individuals from the MCC constituency are looking for an alternative way to use tax monies otherwise collected for war purposes, the Peace Section took action at its meeting to establish a taxes-for-peace fund to which such contributions could be made.

Some of the funds contributed last year were contributions made in lieu of the 10 percent (now 9 percent) telephone excise tax which, according to Wilbur Mills, chairman of the United States House ways and means committee, is a tax needed to pay for the Vietnam war. Other funds contributed in lieu of tax payments came from individuals who withheld part of their federal income tax. Contrary to what many people hoped, the end of United States military action in Vietnam does not mean a reduction in military spending. The proposed budget increase for the Pentagon next year is $4,200,000,000.

Those who have made contributions to the Peace Section in lieu of tax payments during past years are not, as some might suspect, the young activists, but include businessmen, medical doctors, teachers, farmers, and administrators representing a good cross section of the Mennonite brotherhood.

Young people, especially students who are not in earning situations of paying taxes, contributed very little in lieu of tax payments. Most of the contributions came from people over thirty.

The taxes-for-peace fund, as it is being called, is being established for persons whose conscience against war and killings will not allow them to pay the portion of their taxes that goes for war purposes. It should be clearly understood, that contributions made to this fund will not satisfy the Internal Revenue Service. It will, however, provide individuals with a receipt proving that their intentions were not to defraud, but that their withholding some portion of their tax monies was a matter of conscientious objection to war and militarism.

The monies contributed to the fund will be used for the work of the Peace Section and will be a small effort toward waging peace rather than war.

With the need for manpower in the armed forces greatly reduced and with the use of more sophisticated remote-controlled technical weapons, it is increasingly difficult to express one’s conscientious objection to war. Mennonites have traditionally withheld their bodies as a protest against war. Now few bodies are needed and many more dollars are needed for the development and maintenance of expensive war machinery.

Contributions to the taxes-for-peace fund may be one tangible way in which conscientious objectors can positively express peace through their tax dollars.

A letter by Gus Konkel, dated , shows the first sign of backlash for some time. Excerpt:

It seems to me the whole question about war taxes is a prime example of utter question begging. In the final analysis all the taxes go in and out of the same pot. Tagging a name to any particular tax doesn’t really mean anything. I don’t ever expect to live under a government that has no defense system, be it capitalist or communist. How directly I support that defense system through the tax dollar doesn’t seem to me to be of any great import one way or the other.

The edition reported:

American Telephone and Telegraph reports that 22,000 people refused to pay the telephone excise tax in protest against the Vietnam War in , up from 17,000 in and 12,000 in . The Internal Revenue Service wants AT&T to disconnect all those phones, but AT&T says tax problems are IRS’ business. Apparently IRS wants as little to do with 22,000 prosecutions as AT&T wants to do with the $200,000 a month it would cost to disconnect protesters’ phones.

The edition reported on three anonymous donors, young people from Goshen, Indiana, “with an average income of $4,000” had together donated $5,000 to a fund for financially-needy Goshen College students. “They have decided to give away their earnings,” the article reported, “rather than keep them and pay federal taxes, much of which goes for war.”

The edition gave a second example of a Mennonite organization practicing war tax resistance corporately (see for the first example):

Minneapolis congregation refuses telephone excise tax

Faith Mennonite Church in Minneapolis, Minnesota, has recently voted to withhold payments of the 9 percent federal excise tax on its telephone bill “in protest against the Vietnam War and U.S. militarism.”

The church council had discussed the issue in and and had recommended that the tax issue be brought up at the annual business meeting . On , the issue was debated during the Sunday school hour and voted on at the annual meeting in the afternoon.

“There was not complete consensus in our case,” said Pastor Donald Kaufman. “But a significant group feels that this is an important Christian witness.”

Congregational moderator Richard Westby drafted a letter to Northwestern Bell to be sent with each month’s phone payment. The letter reads in part:

“The Faith Church has traditionally opposed war and continues to pay for war (although tax withholding does not have a long tradition within our history.) This contradiction between profession and practice within our congregation is now being changed so that we are more consistent in our faith. We are opposed to war and do not want our tax payments to support, endorse, or pay for U.S. war efforts.

“As a church organization, we realize that we have a responsibility to our country and government for services rendered. We support our government except when it contradicts Christian morality and conscience… We feel obligated to challenge our government’s reckless and immoral military deeds. By our small action we join with many other moral people in strongly urging our government to change its priorities and reduce its dependence upon the military. Without money, modern warfare could not be fought…”

The telephone tax, formerly 10 percent, was restored by President Lyndon B. Johnson in , during the escalation of the Vietnam War. Beginning this year, it will be decreased 1 percent annually until it disappears in .

The edition carried a brief news item about the the strange AFSC lawsuit in which they were trying to have the withholding taxes they had already paid for their conscientiously-objecting employees refunded to them. (See for more about that suit.)

The edition included a tribute to Mennonite professor Benny Bargen, who had died . It touched briefly on his war tax resistance, saying: “His opposition to war had led him to request that his salary be held at a level that would not require him to pay taxes.”


War tax resistance came up in other contexts in The Mennonite in as well.

An letter from Mabel Amstutz Sutter and Sem Christian Sutter of Chicago to the Internal Revenue Service was reprinted (this was essentially the same pay-under-protest letter as was printed in a 1973 edition). An letter from Jacob T. Friesen also announced a pay-under-protest lack-of-resistance strategy.

The edition noted that Michio Ohno’s war tax resistance group in Japan, Conscientious Objection to Military Tax, had launched a new publication — Plowshare. “The fifth and latest issue of the four-page paper includes an account of the first Japanese tax resister whose bank account has been seized by the government, an article on whether military forces are really effective in national defense, an article on poverty as a reason for enlisting in the military, and a guide for filing tax returns.”

Also mentioned in that edition was a letter from someone in Colorado to the MCC that read in part: “Enclosed find a check for $40 for world hunger. Rather than paying income taxes, we are sending this check so that we may help to build peace and support causes that help our troubled world.”

In the edition, Don Blosser wrote about wrestling against the powers and principalities of this world and about the devil’s many devices of temptation, such as “to separate us from the consequences of our actions”:

[I]f I were to take a gun and shoot someone, that would be sinful. I would be punished for my evil actions. If I were to pay someone else $500 to take a gun and shoot the person, I would still be considered sinful and would still be liable for punishment. But when I give that $500 to the government and have them hire the person to do the shooting, it becomes good and I am no longer evil. It is only when I refuse to kill by proxy through nonpayment of war taxes that many people (Christians among them) once again see me as evil.

Once again the principalities and powers have moved the consequences of evil away from us, so that we do not see the direct connection between what I do and the resulting evil and suffering which is caused. We are lulled into thinking we are righteous, when in actual fact, we are participating in the works of the devil.

Don Kaufman gave the keynote address at the conference of Iowa peace churches: “Our taxes buy wars? The peace church heritage.”

He traced the history of the three denominations’ struggles over whether Christians can pay for war when they refuse to participate in it. Some early church leaders in America advocated not offending the government and thus paying all taxes. In other groups, especially among Friends, members were disciplined for supporting war in any way.

A letter-to-the-editor from “A. Jantzen” complained that the church had become too political, and cited Don Blosser’s article as an example:

“Jesus took direct action in the temple with the money-changers.” Yes, and I’m sure he is grieved at some of the activities with which we crowd real worship out of our places of worship — but I don’t read of his organizing a protest march on Herod’s palace.

We read so much these days about withholding war taxes, but I’m not convinced this is right — and not because there is anything right about war! Paul lived in a time when taxes were used to support a system that fed innocent people to lions in full view of a bloodthirsty crowd of spectators, yet he advised Christians in his day to submit to the authorities — no word about withholding taxes.

A statement from the MCC Peace Section was submitted as testimony when the U.S. House of Representatives’ ways & means committee considered the “World Peace Tax Fund Act.” It read in part:

The debate among us as Mennonites is on the question of whether we must, in order to faithfully follow the way of peace taught by our Lord Jesus Christ, break the law by refusing to pay part or all of our federal taxes since a high proportion is used for war.

We do not want to break any laws, but some of us feel compelled to do so on the tax matter because of a growing conviction that in our modern time we are not living out our conscientious objection to war if we pay federal taxes used for military purposes. We urge you to provide a way for us and for many others of similar convictions to obey both the law and our convictions by enacting the World Peace Tax Fund Act.

A notice about a week-long “study vacation seminar at Camp Colorado” in promised that “war taxes” would be among “the issues to be studied.”