Tax resistance in the “Peace Churches” → Brethren → Mary Blocher & Ralph E. Smeltzer

After a flurry of interest in war tax resistance in the early 1960s, things simmered down a bit just as the focus of the tax resistance movement shifted from conscientious objection against nuclear-era militarism to protesting against the U.S. war in Vietnam.

Church of the Brethren: Messenger

A letter from Mary Blocher Smeltzer and Ralph E. Smeltzer to the Director of the IRS, announcing their tax resistance, took up a page in the issue of the Messenger (source):

We are filing our Income Tax Return with our District Director of Internal Revenue, but we are refusing to pay the $21.83 balance of the tax due, for reasons of conscience.

During the years it has been our practice to accompany our return with a statement protesting and strongly opposing the use of any of our tax money for military purposes, for war, and for preparation for war, and requesting that it be used only for the peaceful nonmilitary activities of our government.

Last year we also refused to pay the balance of the tax due, for reasons of conscience.

We are both Christian pacifists. One of us is a minister employed by the General Brotherhood Board of the Church of the Brethren. The other is a public school teacher.

We enthusiastically approve and support the constructive services and peaceful programs of our government. But we conscientiously object to war and preparation for war by reason of our religious training and belief. We especially oppose our country’s present program of producing and stockpiling nuclear, chemical, biological, and other weapons of mass destruction which are now capable of destroying the human race. We equally oppose similar programs by all other nations.

We would like to designate all of our income tax for the purposes of disarmament and preparation for disarmament, for increasing the constructive services and peaceful programs of our government, and for increasing the constructive and peaceful programs of the United Nations. But the Internal Revenue Code makes no provision for such designations. We are urging our legislators to work for such provisions and amendments in the code.

Most of our income tax has been withheld by our employers and forwarded to you. We have had no control over this action by our employers who in turn must follow this procedure by law.

However, as individuals we retain the choice as to whether we will pay the balance of the tax called for by the government, or whether we will not. We have decided to protest the use of our income tax for military purposes by refusing to forward the balance of our tax called for.

We recognize that the United States government may impose penalties upon us for not paying this portion of our income tax. We are prepared to accept the consequences of our Christian conscientious objection to the payment of our tax, at least seventy-five percent of which now goes for military purposes.

We do not desire to receive any personal privilege or gain from this refusal to pay the balance of our tax. We are contributing an equivalent amount to the Brethren Service Commission… for its program of peace and relief at home and abroad. A receipt for this contribution is enclosed.

The issue brought this news:

Taxes and conscience

A roster of 360 persons, among them professors, scientists, writers, doctors, clergymen, and entertainers, made public their refusal to pay voluntary part or all of their federal income taxes.

As critics of U.S. policy in Vietnam, the signers declared that American forces there are “clearly being used in violation of the U.S. Constitution, international law, and the United Nations Charter.”

Their statement, published in newspapers this spring, deplored “the spectacle of the United States with its jet bombers, helicopters, fragmentation and napalm bombs, and disabling gas, carrying on an endless war against the hungry, scantily armed Vietnamese guerrillas and civilians” and compared such action to Italian atrocities in Ethiopia and Russia’s intervention in Hungary. It further drew parallels between “the indifference of Americans to the crimes being committed in their names, by their brothers and with their tax money” and the indifference of most Germans to the slaughter of Jews.

Two of the signers, Ralph and Mary Smeltzer, Elgin, Ill., have refused to pay voluntarily the unwithheld portion of their federal income tax for four years, opposing the use of tax moneys for military purposes. The outcome has been the government’s attaching the balance in wages.

“While only the unwithheld portion of the tax is all we have control over, we protest the sixty percent of every tax dollar used for military purposes,” said Mr. Smeltzer, who is Brotherhood director of peace and social education. “At the same time we voice approval and support for the constructive and peaceful programs of the government.

“If enough people express themselves a change in the law may be made allowing people to designate how their income tax will be used.” Mr. Smeltzer added, “or the program and policy of military expenditures may be reduced.

“Whether our actions do any good or not, we have to do what we conscientiously feel.”

This open letter from Russell F. Helstern appeared in the issue:

“I Confess I Am Deeply Troubled”

It’s tax time again! Tax paying is a privilege and a responsibility of every American citizen. To my knowledge I have never voted against a bond issue or a tax levy, nor have I ever been delinquent in the payment of my taxes. Good government and the needed community services can be secured and maintained only through the willingness of citizens to assume this civic responsibility.

Right now my desk is cluttered with income tax forms, family ledgers and accounts, scribbling paper, and a box of aspirins within easy reach. The aspirins are not alone for eyestrain and headache from long hours of juggling elusive figures but serve more as an opiate for a troubled conscience. As a Christian and a responsible world citizen I am genuinely disturbed as I sit here ready to write my income tax check.

For many years I have met the dilemma of conscience by sending with each income tax return and check a letter of protest for paying that portion of my tax that would be used for military purposes and requesting that it be allocated to humanitarian and legitimate constructive areas of service but at the same time knowing it would all go into the same till.

With poised pen ready to write the check, I become suddenly aware that last year’s income tax check helped to purchase the bombs that fell on Hanoi, tearing huge, gaping craters in residential areas quite remote from military targets, as Harrison Salisbury of the New York Times has informed us by photos and news dispatches. It was my income tax check of last year that helped purchase napalm bombs that were dropped indiscriminately on areas of South Vietnam, inflicting unimaginable suffering and death on innocent and helpless women and children who, by the remotest stretch of imagination, could not be held responsible for any part of this conflict.

It was my income tax check of last year and the year before that helped pay the cost of the defoliation of the Vietnamese rice fields and croplands, accentuating the problem of hunger and starvation in a world much of which is already locked in a grim race with death from mass starvation.

The pen is still poised and I am deeply troubled. I stand before almighty God, who holds me individually responsible for the use I make of the resources he has placed at my disposal. (The Nurenberg war criminal trials taught us that!) I am not absolved of guilt for crimes committed at my country’s insistence. And so as a Christian and one who tries to be a responsible world citizen I confess I am deeply disturbed.

I’m not sure what’s going on here. After years of frequent coverage of war tax resistance inside and outside the church, now the magazine retreats to reprinting some timid hand-wringing about being “deeply disturbed” about paying taxes for war crimes without even alluding to resistance as an option.

War tax resistance came up at the Annual Conference in as the Church voted to issue “A Call for Peace in Vietnam” (source):

One specific step urged for congregations proved to be the subject of some debate. It was a proposal that congregations should oppose legislation which would increase taxes designed specifically to support the war. One delegate was eager to have this sentence eliminated from the statement, but his amendment failed. Another delegate proposed that a sentence be added that would urge members to consider seriously whether they should continue to pay income taxes that might be used for the support of the war. This amendment also failed to gain support.

In a later issue, remarks of a Catholic observer of the Brethren conference were summarized this way: “[he] summed up the Brethren statement on Vietnam and recounted a plea by a Midwest minister urging members to consider whether they should pay income tax in light of its heavy use for war purposes. ‘The assembly listened politely to the young man and then defeated his amendment.’ ” (source)

The issue included a “Special Report” on phone tax resistance as an option for people who wanted to resist a “war tax”:

“The act is small but the meaning is large. It clearly says that this war is not our war.”

The Campaign to Hang Up on War

In its “Call for Peace in Vietnam” (see [above]) Annual Conference in urged congregations to oppose legislation which would increase taxes designed specifically to support the war in Vietnam.

One such tax already enacted (though not mentioned in the Annual Conference statement) is the ten percent federal excise tax on telephone charges. The tax, which once had been reduced to three percent and was due to be dropped entirely in , was reinstated in . Rep. Wilbur D. Mills (D., Ark.), who managed the tax legislation in the House, is quoted in the Congressional Record () as saying: “It is clear that the Vietnam and only the Vietnam operation makes this bill necessary.”

War protest: In protest to the Vietnam “operation” — particularly the mass bombings, napalming, support of the Ky government, and other aspects of U.S. military involvement — a group of several hundred persons have begun boycotting the telephone tax on the grounds that it is singularly a war tax. The refusal is treated by phone companies as a matter between the individual and the government, and phone service has not been interrupted. In fact, according to some sources, the telephone company has rather welcomed the protests, for it has long opposed the excise tax, though for a different reason.

At Staten Island, New York, the telephone company reportedly reminded a tax-refusing customer that she had neglected to withhold the tax in one payment, and it credited her account with the amount of the tax.

Sponsor: Promoted by the Committee for Non-Violent Action (5 Beekman Street, Room 1033, New York, N.Y. 10038), the campaign of telephone tax refusal has been dubbed, “Hang Up on War!” According to CNVA staff member Valerie Herres in New York, some 800 persons have made known their refusal to CNVA. Colleague Karl Meyer in Chicago says the actual number of telephone tax protesters likely exceeds 2,000, including members of at least two Church of the Brethren congregations.

In withholding the excise tax from payments, individuals are urged always to include a note explaining the omission. The CNVA asks also that protesters inform them of their stand.

In , after the Chicago Daily News carried a front-page story on the campaign, the district director of Internal Revenue within two weeks sent to the withholding parties first notices of direct assessment. However, for most of the recipients no actual collection was yet made several months later.

The CNVA makes clear to tax refusers that in the severest application of the law, under the criminal penalties act, one who “willfully fails to pay” the phone tax could possibly be charged with a misdemeanor, under Section 7203 of the Internal Revenue Code, and be imprisoned up to a year and fined up to $10,000. It is also possible that one could be charged with attempt to “evade or defeat” the phone tax, under a section carrying a stiffer penalty.

On the record: Testimony of Internal Revenue Service officials on the matter before the House Subcommittee Hearings on Appropriations for the Departments of Treasury Post Office, and Executive (as quoted in Peacemaker magazine ) went as follows:

Mr. Robison (congressman).
That is income tax. Unpaid excise taxes will be pretty small per individual, however, unless it accumulates over a period of years.
Mr. Cohen (IRS director).
If necessary we collect small amounts, and we have. I think it will be less convenient for them than it will for us.
Mr. Bacon (assistant director).
We have about eighty-five cases pending in Illinois and above thirty-five in Ohio. It is a nuisance situation because the tax is small.
Mr. Cohen.
But we do not intend to sit by. People cannot pick and choose which laws of the United States they will obey and those which they will not.
Mr. Robison.
I agree wholeheartedly, but I want to know what your policy is.
Mr. Cohen.
We intend to vigorously follow up any of these cases and collect the tax. We may let several months accumulate and do it all at once.

Exaggeration? In reflecting on the above testimony, Karl Meyer of the Chicago Workshop in Nonviolence commented to Messenger:

“This exaggerates somewhat the vigor of their determination. I have been refusing for over a year (and income taxes for seven years), and they have yet to collect a cent from me. To my knowledge they have thus far collected from only two or three of the Illinois refusers, and in those cases only the initial couple months of unpaid tax. In two cases the taxes were taken from bank accounts after unsuccessful visits from IRS agents. In one case a bank charged a fee of $10 for handling this transaction, and in the other case a bank charged $5. In a third case the tax was collected by attachment against a paycheck. Agents have visited several other refusers and have sometimes made threats of serious action, but in the three cases cited the serious action turned out to be no more than collection by seizure.”

Toward what end? What is the point of refusal? Mr. Meyer put it this way:

“The future will be different only if we change our lives. The act is small, but the meaning is large: This war is not our war, and we are willing to struggle to be on the side of life.”

From some Brethren involved in the telephone tax “hang up” came the explanation that it is one direct means, small yet tangible, of dissenting to the United States’ action in Vietnam. “It probably will not change government policy,” one member said, “but it does something to me. It lays my witness on the line.”

In light of the vote by Annual Conference delegates against amending “A Call to Peace” to express support for income tax refusal as a means of peace action, many Brethren likely would be reticent to join in telephone tax refusal.

Still, even the prospect of income tax dissent is up for study by the Brethren Service Commission. Prompted by a request last fall from the Pacific Southwest Conference board, a five-member committee has been named to explore federal income tax alternatives.

In the meantime, for those who choose, telephone tax refusal appears as a modest but viable means of voicing concern over the Vietnam war.

In response, Ethel Weddle wrote in to the issue to say that she didn’t have any reluctance in paying her taxes in spite of her disapproval of the government’s military policy. Civil disobedience is too dangerous, she thought, as it opens the door to all manner of lawbreaking: “giving those people with less than Christian ideals the go-go sign to disobey, rob, destroy, and kill” (source).

Horner M. Eby replied to this in the issue (source). Excerpt:

Ethel Weddle makes some cogent points in her letter… Withholding federal telephone excise tax is a rather picayune gesture. I am doing it. The Internal Revenue Service is not long-suffering. The IRS man has visited our home twice and has levied against our checking account both times, so that we are never more than eight months in arrears on this tiny tax.

If I really meant business, I should reduce my income enough to eliminate my income tax, which is a hundred times greater. Then, of course, I could not give to the church an amount comparable to my income tax, nor to the FOR, the AESC, the ACLU, SNCC, SCLC, SOS, the Chicago Area Draft Resisters, and the DuPage Draft Resisters.


The debate about war tax resistance continued among Brethren in , and for the first time a Brethren church began resisting taxes corporately.

Church of the Brethren: Messenger

In , representatives from Mennonite, Quaker, and Brethren congregations — the “historic peace churches” — met in New Windsor, Maryland to figure out how to be a peace church in the middle of the Vietnam War. According to Messenger coverage of the event , war tax resistance was a footnote (source): “Spurred on by the youth delegates to the consultation, a group at New Windsor prepared a brief statement calling for… ‘counseling on the draft and nonpayment of war taxes for those who need it.’ ”

In (see yesterday’s Picket Line), the Messenger had invited four writers to explain their diverse ways of confronting taxes for war. One, Russell Bollinger, paid his taxes willingly and thought tax resistance was dangerously corrosive of democratic cooperation. That led to a rebuttal from David Coppock in the issue (source). Excerpts:

Mr. Bollinger expresses a fear that no government can exist as long as the people pay taxes only as their conscience guides them. Since I put the conscience first, I am more afraid of a government that does not allow the people to live as their consciences guide them.

Our first concern as Christians should not be to see that our moral inclinations are in harmony with man-made laws. We don’t have to answer to man for our acts if we believe we have been guided by God. We need only to answer to God.

To allow one’s personal convictions to be molded and shaped by society and government is to allow one’s very being to be taken from the hands of God and placed into the fallible hands of man.

Mr. Bollinger states, “All attempts to change the behavior, attitudes, or values of mature responsible persons by force are degrading and destructive to personhood.” When I think about Vietnam, Biafra, race prejudice, and a so-called Christian nation with Dow Chemical and A-Bombs, I ask where are all the mature and responsible people? And by paying taxes don’t you willfully and knowingly give most of that money to a war that is as degrading and as destructive to personhood as anything can be?

He challenges tax withholding on the basis of whether or not it can be universalized. Since he doesn’t believe that it can, he rejects such ideas. Does this mean that he believes that a willful support of the war effort can be universalized into a law for all men?

I certainly want to challenge his last main point. “Our impatience to reconstruct the world after our own particular blueprint must not lead us into betraying noble ends for unworthy means.” The Christian must recognize that America’s blueprint is being felt right now in Vietnam. Our government would have us believe that the Vietnam war is being fought for noble ends — democracy, freedom, end of communism. And since it found no other alternative but war, it would have us believe that this is a worthy means.

The Christian can never accept war as a worthy means. And the Christian must recognize that the noble ends which he seeks are higher than those which the government seeks. Therefore, withholding taxes can hardly be considered an unworthy means when that money would have been used for the most degrading and evil acts of man.

In the issue, Richard G. Young raised a dissenting voice against the attempt to lobby the government to accommodate conscientious objectors to military taxation. “A hard line should immediately be taken against any suggestion to seek tax exemption for pacifists,” wrote Young (source). According to Young, war tax resistance is only a pacifist action if it confronts and resists militarism. “Once the military power accommodates (removes the confrontation of) an action, it is no longer antimilitaristic.”

We can be sure that if all young men eighteen years old demanded alternative service, our government would rescind the conscientious objector alternative. It should be recognized also that our militaristic government embellishes itself with the boast that it offers a conscientious objector alternative in the “true spirit of democracy.” In this manner the antimilitaristic action, well intentioned as it may have been, has ceased to be pacifistic in that the military system has neutralized its effect.

Similarly, any agreement with the government to exempt pacifists from paying war taxes would not be pacifistic. We would not be threatening the military but perhaps adding another plume to its hat.

The edition brought the news that a Brethren church had decided as an institution to begin war tax resistance — the first such example that I am aware of (source):

Both as a witness and as a protest, the Wilmington, Del., Church of the Brethren decided by board action to refuse to pay the federal excise tax on telephones.

In a letter to President Richard M. Nixon from the board of the Richardson Park congregation, Dale W. Good, board chairman, and Robert D. Cain Jr., witness commission chairman, noted that the 10 percent federal telephone tax was restored by Congress in to help pay for the war in Vietnam. They also quoted from the Statement of the Church of the Brethren on War, in which the denomination stated its opposition to the use of taxes for war purposes and called upon congregations and boards to study the issues and press for alternative uses for tax money.

Meaning: “We recognize that the act of refusing to pay this tax is small, but the meaning is large in that it is a direct and tangible means of expressing our dissent to the United States’ action in Vietnam and also a protest to the enactment of taxes for war purposes,” the letter stated.

It further urged Mr. Nixon “to use all resources and power available to you as President of the United States to achieve world peace” and to give consideration to a government provision for an alternative use of tax money for peaceful, nonmilitary purposes.

The decision to take the action followed a recommendation from the witness commission and was voted 8 to 6. Individual members of the parish were asked in turn to consider withholding the excise tax on their personal telephone bills.

The pastor, Allen T. Hansell, said that he personally had been withholding the 10 percent tax on his own telephone bill payments since .

First: Ralph E. Smeltzer of the World Ministries Commission commented that to his knowledge the action is the first taken in the Church of the Brethren by a congregational board. In several areas Brethren individuals have practiced telephone tax refusal for up to two years.

A lengthy interpretation of the action taken by the Richardson Park church board appeared the next day in Wilmington’s Morning News. The article stated the Church of the Brethren believes that its historic opposition to all war “is compatible with good citizenship” and that the church endorses support of “worthy government functions.” But the article also cited Brethren concern over the trend toward a permanent militaristic outlook by the nation.

That news was interesting enough that it was also covered in The Brethren Evangelist , interrupting that magazine’s silence on the issue (source).

In the “General Board” had put together a policy statement on civil disobedience that it hoped the Annual Conference would adopt. The Messenger published it (source). It alluded to “laws which require payment of taxes for war purposes” as an opportunity for “reactive” civil disobedience — conscientious objection — as opposed to “initiatory” civil disobedience, which is designed as a pressure tactic to change government behavior. And it gave favorable mention to “the Christians who refused… to pay taxes to Caesar’s pagan temples”, “Quakers who refused to pay taxes for war against the Indians”, “Henry David Thoreau”, and, within the Church of the Brethren, “refusal to… pay war taxes during the Revolutionary War”. But it did not come down on either side of the question of whether war tax resistance ought to be recommended. It instead recommended a careful process for assessing proposed individual and corporate civil disobedience actions.

Merlin G. Miller wrote in to the issue to say he had avoided paying war taxes legally by means of “an alternative service for that portion of our taxes which would have gone to war purposes.” He explained:

[We] separate our total tax obligation into two parts. That portion required to pay our part of the indispensable, nonwar services of our government as loyal citizens we gladly pay. The part that would go to war purposes, which we cannot conscientiously support, we withhold by making contributions to relief, to the church and her ministries, and to other worthy, nonwar causes — contributions large enough to wipe out our war-tax obligation. If the government takes part of the tax dollars we pay for non-war services and uses them for the war, we can’t prevent that. We couldn’t prevent it if we refused to pay all taxes and went to jail. Our alternative service for tax dollars is a matter of conscientious objection to the war, and we so state on our tax return.

This is not just “tax avoidance.” It is costly. It costs far more than a dollar to divert a dollar from the war. Since the tax rate begins at fourteen percent of taxable income and increases with larger incomes, we have to give away six or seven dollars to withhold one dollar from the war. But wouldn’t you gladly give seven dollars to lessen a little the suffering of a wounded refugee child rather than to pay one dollar to buy napalm to burn more babies?

How much should we withhold? Should we proportion our withholding to the direct cost of the Vietnam war (fifteen percent of the national budget)? Or should it be in proportion to the total defense budget (forty to fifty percent of the total national budget, depending on whose analysis you accept)? One’s own conscience must be the guide. One legal limitation will affect those with higher incomes: deductible contributions cannot exceed thirty percent of total income.

The legal withholding of war taxes by contributions is especially suitable for retired citizens, for most of them have a nontaxable income on which to live. Social Security for a retired couple, both over sixty-five, now is approximately $3,000 a year maximum for those who have been fully employed at average or better-than-aver-age incomes. In addition, there is a nontaxable exemption of $2,400 on any other income they receive from pensions or investments. And Medicare pays major health care expenses. In short, a retired couple who have any income tax at all to pay have a nontaxed income sufficient for a modest but comfortable living. Their income taxes come out of the surplus which they have for hobbies, travel, gifts to family or church, or other good causes. It is out of this surplus that we “lay up treasure in heaven.”

Perhaps we oldsters who conscientiously oppose war should, by choosing alternative service for our tax dollars, prove ourselves worthy brothers to our young men who choose alternative service to the military.

What I was hoping to see in but didn’t was the results of the survey the magazine had sent out the previous year asking readers how they were responding to war taxes.

The Brethren Evangelist

The Brethren Evangelist was again much more reluctant than the Messenger to discuss war tax resistance in .

There was a mention of the Richardson Park Brethren Church’s corporate phone tax resistance decision.

In the issue, Steve Haller addressed “Christian Pacifism”. He mostly reflected on his own experience in Brethren alternative service for conscientious objectors, but also approvingly quoted Larry Kuenning who took the perspective that to a Christian, war is already over, and so:

In a war you have to pay taxes to support the army. But the war is over: you don’t have to pay taxes for war. You can use the money to help the victims of war instead.