Reform charity laws

Reform charity laws

Page 16 of 42: All charities, religious or not, should be held to the same standards.

Many religious charities do fantastic work.

But many others fail to provide a public benefit and some cause harm.

It's time to end religious privilege in charity law.

Charity work carried out by people of all faiths and none should be recognised and celebrated. Much of the work of religious charities, such as helping the poor, is secular in nature and beneficial to society.

But there are religious organisations which exploit the privileged status of religion in charity law to conduct activities that do not fulfil a genuine public benefit, and only serve to further religious ideology.

In the worst cases, religious charities may harm society and individuals.

Registered charities must serve a purpose recognised as "charitable". Charity laws specify a list of "charitable purposes," one of which is "the advancement of religion".

Charities must also demonstrate that they provide a genuine public benefit. But guidelines are vague on what constitutes a public benefit, particular in relation to religious activities. There is still an assumption in the charity system that religion is inherently beneficial. This view is not supported by evidence and implies those without a religion are somehow less moral or charitable.

The inclusion of the advancement of religion within charitable purposes gives religion a privileged position in the charity sector. It enables religious organisations to acquire all the benefits of charitable status, including tax relief, gift aid and public respectability, simply by "advancing religion".

It also includes religious organisations that cause harm to society. This includes charities which facilitate religious genital cutting, support the non-stun slaughter industry, and promote extremism, hatred and intolerance of other people.

The NSS believes all charities, religious or not, should be held to equally high standards. That's why we campaign for "the advancement of religion" to be removed from the list of charitable purposes, and for religious charities to be held to the same equality laws as all other charities.

Take action!

1. Write to your MP

Tell your MP it's time for "the advancement of religion" to be removed as a charitable purpose. Enter your postcode below to find your MP and send a letter to them.

2. Share your story

Tell us why you support this campaign, and how you are personally affected by the issue. You can also let us know if you would like assistance with a particular issue.

3. Join us

Become a member of the National Secular Society today! Together, we can separate religion and state for greater freedom and fairness.

Latest updates

NSS refers Christian charity to regulator for anti-vaxx memes

NSS refers Christian charity to regulator for anti-vaxx memes

Posted: Wed, 9 Feb 2022 10:21

The National Secular Society has referred a Christian charity to the regulator after finding anti-vaccine and homophobic posts on its Facebook page.

East Kilbride Christadelphians made dozens of posts on its Facebook page that may undermine public health messages, despite charities being required to serve a public benefit.

East Kilbride Christadelphian Ecclesia is registered with Scottish charity regulator OSCR under the purpose of "the advancement of religion".

A video posted in December implies that vaccines are similar to a biblical story in which God punished people for worshipping a cow statue because "the word vaccine originates from the Latin word vacca, which means 'cow'."

It adds: "The consequences of not repenting of the medications are more plagues, which are listed in Revelations 16. We are currently living in the time of these plagues. It's time to repent of our sorceries before it's too late."

A cartoon (pictured) also posted in December shows people worshipping a cow statue labelled "Covid Vaccine".

Some content appears to encourage defying government guidance on social distancing. A cartoon posted in November 2020 shows a picture of a coronavirus and a church, with the words: "We all get tested to see if God is first in our lives".

Another meme posted in October 2020 implies Covid-19 is a hoax. It displays pictures of the coronavirus next to the Bible quote: "God will send them strong delusion, that they should believe the lie".

Another meme posted in May says "Uncover Your Face" and quotes a Bible verse about "unveiled faces".

The NSS also raised concerns about posts with homophobic content.

One meme posted in March shows a depiction of the destruction of the biblical cities Sodom and Gomorrah with the words "teach kids LGBT history". According to some interpretations, God destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah as punishment for homosexual activity among their inhabitants.

Another posted in March shows a picture of a wolf in rainbow sheepskin, with the words "it's OK, we only want equality".

NSS comment

NSS head of policy and research Megan Manson said: "It is extremely disturbing to see a registered charity apparently discouraging the public from getting a Covid-19 vaccine or following social distancing guidelines, as well as promoting homophobia.

"These harmful messages are clearly being posted under the charitable purpose of 'the advancement of religion'.

"If this charitable purpose can allow charities to easily promote messages that undermine public health and well-being, it must be called into question.

"We hope OSCR will make it clear that 'advancing religion' isn't a license to spread harmful conspiracy theories and homophobia."

The Scottish government has also criticised the charity. A spokesperson said: "Deliberately spreading misinformation about the vaccine is irresponsible and reckless, and people should seek out accurate information from recognised sources."

Notes

  • In a 2019 report the NSS argued that 'the advancement of religion' should be removed as a charitable purpose.
  • The Christadelphians are a Christian sect founded in the 19th century. They state their beliefs are based wholly on the Bible.
Playing whack-a-mole with religious charities isn’t working. Time to reform charity law.

Playing whack-a-mole with religious charities isn’t working. Time to reform charity law.

Posted: Wed, 26 Jan 2022 09:16

The Charity Commission for England and Wales has a lot on its plate. It regulates over 185,700 charities, and actively seeks to register more – including more religious charities.

It's therefore laudable that despite its heavy workload, the commission is keeping its ambitions high in its 2021-22 business plan. The plan's aims include "keeping charity relevant" and continuing to "put the public interest front and centre of our approach to regulating charities".

The National Secular Society, which campaigns for religious and non-religious charities to be held to equally high standards, naturally supports these aims. But without fundamental reform to charity law itself, the commission will be unable to truly realise its objectives.

According to charity guidance, charities must serve a public benefit and must not promote extremism. But over the years, the NSS has reported dozens of charities to the commission for promoting extremist ideas, including homophobia and misogyny, through their websites.

What do these charities have in common? They're all registered under the charitable purpose of "the advancement of religion". The harmful ideas they promote are rooted in the particular religion each one is advancing.

Out of all these cases, only two appear to have resulted in significant action from the commission. After the NSS reported them for serious failings, the commission appointed interim managers to Kingdom Church GB and Islamic Research Foundation International, which now puts the future of those charities in question.

However, in all other cases, the charities remain in operation and no significant action appears to have been taken.

To the commission's credit, in the majority of cases most of the harmful content we reported was removed from the websites.

But is this sufficient? For many of these charities, the website is only a minor part of their communication. Most of their public engagement will be via a place of worship. Unless the charity routinely records and publishes its sermons, there is no way to know whether the extremism, homophobia and misogyny purged from its website continues to be repeated in its church or mosque. And that's before we consider the books, pamphlets and other materials charities produce or distribute – all virtually tax-free, of course – that may also contain these ideas.

And in a few cases, intervention from the commission has not led the harmful material being removed.

For example, in 2019 we reported the Afghan Islamic Culture Centre (AICC) in London to the commission after discovering its website hosts an ebook that condones the death penalty for Muslims who don't pray enough or who leave Islam. Its homepage also links to another website, Ask Imam, which condones the execution of gay men and apostates.

Although AICC has launched a new sanitised website that doesn't feature this content, the old website is still live (and still solicits donations) and none of the content has been removed.

What's more, no lessons appear to be learned. The NSS monitors all charities that register under 'the advancement of religion' every month, and we continue to find new charities with content on their websites that flies in the face of the public benefit duty. The most recent example is Utrujj Foundation, which registered as a Charitable Incorporated Organisation in December, and had an article on its website written by one of its trustees about how and when men may beat their wives according to Islam.

That article has recently been removed after the NSS reported it to the commission, but why should it fall to NGOs to play charity watchdog? And why do these kinds of charities keep being registered in the first place, with all the tax benefits and public trust such status provides? The 'whack-a-mole' approach to regulation is inefficient and ineffective – as one bad charity is hammered down, more pop up in its place.

The fact is, the Charity Commission, and its equivalent regulators in Scotland and Northern Ireland, are hamstrung by archaic charity laws that give special privilege to religious charities.

As highlighted in the 2019 report For the public benefit? , 'the advancement of religion' charitable purpose is no longer compatible with the public benefit requirement, the need to promote equality and diversity in charities, and the need to keep charities relevant.

'The advancement of religion' is based on an assumption that it is inherently 'good' for people to have a religion – a highly outdated and prejudiced assumption in a country that is increasingly non-religious. And this assumption, evidence suggests, enables religious charities to promote extremist ideas that non-religious charities would be unlikely to get away with.

The uncomfortable truth is many religions at their core are homophobic, misogynistic and intolerant by 21st century British standards, reflecting the values held by the ancient societies where those religions originated. It's therefore unsurprising that charities set up to advance orthodox interpretations of these religions will end up advancing ideas that are homophobic, misogynistic and intolerant.

There are and will continue to be religious charities that really do good work. They have no need of the charitable purpose of 'the advancement of religion' to continue; they'll find their mission easily aligns with other charitable purposes such as 'the relief of poverty'.

We cannot reasonably expect the commission to vet the websites of every single charity it registers for dodgy content. But we can crack down on the common factors that make a charity more likely to promote such content in the first place. The charitable purpose of 'the advancement of religion' is a glaring common factor.

For as long as 'the advancement of religion' remains on the list of charitable purposes, the commission, hardworking though it is, cannot hope to achieve its objectives under the current system.

If the commission is to achieve "keeping charity relevant" and putting "public interest front and centre", charity law must be changed to ensure only religious organisations doing genuine good, without any extremism attached, can benefit from our charity system.

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