Environmental activists and community groups have rallied against a proposed construction project in Maryland's rural Piedmont region, but their opponent is not a typical developer. Silver Spring-based Global Mission Church plans to build a 138,000-square-foot facility in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains to provide a new home for its growing congregation.
"That's the size of a Target or a Nordstrom's," said Dolores Milmoe of the Audubon Naturalist Society, which has joined the grassroots resistance. The church would occupy a clearing on a hilltop overlooking the Sugarloaf Mountain Natural Area.
The case in Maryland seems an odd recasting of the David and Goliath tale, but it's a version that is becoming more common given the tremendous growth of megachurches around the country.
While megachurches are not new to the religious landscape, rapid expansion over the last three decades has brought them onto the public radar. According to Scott Thumma of the Hartford Institute of Religion Research, "90 percent of megachurches are growing, and 25 percent have seen numbers more than double in five years," from 2003 to 2008. The "mega" designation refers to churches with an average weekly attendance of at least 2,000 worshipers.
Thumma said some congregations have been accommodating their growing flocks by creating small satellite locations in theaters or school basements to avoid the legal hassles of construction projects, which often run up against zoning laws in both urban and rural communities. But the prevailing pattern in the last several years, Thumma said, has been for churches to move forward with ambitious building plans under the auspices of the federal Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act.
Luke Goodrich, an attorney with the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, said RLUIPA has leveled the playing field between religious organizations and other land use applicants. "There was concern that counties would allow all sorts of secular uses, like assembly halls, bingo halls, auditoriums and movies theaters, but forbid churches," he said.
The law was conceived to prevent federal, state or local governments from imposing unfair land use restrictions on religious groups. But, it also stipulates that even if a zoning law applies equally to all parties, there must be an indisputable reason to uphold a rule that places a substantial burden on a religious applicant.
Since its passage in 2000, the law has come into play in hundreds of land use cases between religious organizations and communities, paving the way for expansions by giving churches added clout in zoning battles.
While the county planning board in Maryland ruled that Global Mission's church is too big for the agricultural zone, the church's attorney, David Severn, said the proposal complies with the county's building standards. He plans to bring attention to the RLUIPA precedent during an appeal.
"If you are going to impose certain limitations on churches, you need to have a very good reason to do so," said Severn. "You need to put burdens on an applicant in the least restrictive way possible."
Planning board vice chairman Bob White said the county's ruling was based on the scale of the building, not its intended use, adding that RLUIPA "did not say that religious institutional uses should receive special consideration or a 'pass' on county zoning laws."
However, the results of most zoning decisions have favored churches. Lora Lucero, an attorney with the American Planning Association, said the legislation gives churches a substantial boost in the zoning hierarchy.
"That is the biggest beef with this law. Lawmakers are supposed to treat all land users equally, whether an industrial giant or a church," Lucero said.
She pointed to a recent case in Colorado, where a jury decided in favor of the Rocky Mountain Christian Church after Boulder County denied it permission to expand. Lucero said the church had been in the area for years and had undergone several approved renovations. But when the county deemed a proposed addition to be out of scale with the low-density neighborhood, Rocky Mountain sued.
Although Rocky Mountain ultimately won the case under RLUIPA, a jury originally had decided in favor of Boulder County, saying the church's First Amendment rights had not been violated. While Goodrich said the outcome shows RLUIPA is necessary because of the difficulty of proving discrimination in zoning decisions, Lucero said the case demonstrates that the law is unconstitutional.
"You have to treat [churches] as more special than a regular land use applicant or you will end up violating RLUIPA."
Constitutional issues aside, the lengthy and complicated legal battles can impose real financial burdens on a community. "Under the RLUIPA, if a church challenges, then they can force the local government to pay their attorney fees," said Lucero.
In many cases, money is a factor from the beginning.
Because religious organizations are exempt from paying income taxes, they are often consciously zoned out of prime retail areas, church advocates say. Goodrich of the Becket Fund said this limits options in congested urban areas where small congregations might operate in storefronts. "The city wants to generate tax revenue, and churches don't bring in enough business."
He said the Becket Fund has been involved in an ongoing dispute in Longbranch, N.J., where city planners with designs to build a "hip downtown entertainment district" denied a request by the Lighthouse Institute for Evangelism to conduct religious services in a building in the area.
Besides zoning and tax issues, conflicts between religious organizations and communities often mask more fundamental tensions. "I've seen aspects of race play out, and I think also we've seen that in expanding areas -- sprawl cities in Texas and Georgia -- churches are painted with same brush that a Walmart might be," said Thumma.
"Sometimes the church is not being nice, and sometimes the community just wouldn't want anything built there. "
Regardless of which party prevails, Thumma said victory has a price. "It can create ill will in the community and, in some sense, bad publicity" for the church, the town and the religious community as a whole.
Having been drawn into many land use disagreements in the past, Thumma said he understands both sides. "It's a complex situation around the country. Rather than take it to court, and spend an enormous amount of money, it's better to compromise." But he noted that in all the cases he has come across -- from California to Texas to New Jersey -- he does not know of a single megachurch that has been turned down.
"RLUIPA is a pretty powerful bill for the protection of religious land uses," said Thumma. "It just doesn't accomplish a whole lot, even if the church wins."
"Zoning the Flock: Are Megachurches the New Walmart?" Are they non union and selling food cheep?
RATE THIS COMMENT: (3)
gvpal52
5:39AM Nov 8th 2009
Well, God is the only way home. Peace is something you own, not something you are in the company off.
RATE THIS COMMENT: (1)
tyrebitre
7:07PM Nov 9th 2009
"gvpal52 5:39AM Nov 8th 2009 Well, God is the only way home."*********
Actually, my GMC and I-10 have been getting me home for years now. If I'm having to haul god around too, he needs to start footing his half of the gas.
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MBED3
6:39AM Nov 8th 2009
This is commercial religion, not community based. Should be subject to heavy taxes and severe government scrutiny.
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Goppy
7:57AM Nov 8th 2009
I agree ...
The Modern American Big Box Church is not a place to worship God ... it's become a place to organize opposition to Children getting Access To Health Care Insurance.
Imagine ... working AGAINST Children.
That doesn't sound like a religion to me. .
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bob
8:34AM Nov 8th 2009
While I too find these oversize congregations a bit impersonal and a tad creepy, I do know people who belong to them and they are sincerely religious folks. I honestly don't see what the big deal is here. Those who hate and distrust religion in general are always going to seem something nefarious in large groups of people gathering to worship what they, themselves, don't believe in. And since those people seem to be having their day of late, I guess I'm not surprised that this has become an issue.
We've made a decision in this country to extend tax exempt status to religious organizations in this country. We don't get to pick and choose which ones we get that status because we support their implied political stance on issues, and those we don't. If it's becoming a problem for some on the left who don't like the "religious right", then perhaps it's time to remove that tax exempt status across the board.
As an aside, there has also been a rise in the number of what might be considered "boutique" churches in gentrified urban areas. Generally, these churches cater to those on the left and tend to be openly active in supporting leftist issues on a community level. Notice that you don't see much call for removal of tax exempt status for those organizations. Which isn't a real shocker, either.
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Goppy
9:24AM Nov 8th 2009
Thank you for your thoughtful comment.
Modern American Big Box Churches do indeed have many religious and good people.
I think the problem arises when some of these churches become politically active ... in such a way as to slap Jesus in the face and throw Him Under the Bus.
I mean ... Jesus was all about Love, Peace, Acceptance, Kindness ... helping the sick, the infirm, the elderly ... and especially ... the children.
How is it even possible to imagine that a movement that works TIRELESSLY to PREVENT Children from getting access to Health Care Insurance ... can be labeled a CHRISTIAN church?
In addition ... considering that 20,000 Americans die each year as a DIRECT result of not being able to acquire Health Insurance ... usually due to a pre-existing condition ... and Christian Churches IGNORE this ... and STILL work AGAINST people ... and FOR Insurance Companies .... that adds to the belief that these are POLITICAL organizations.
That's just a couple of examples.
There's others ... many others ... like fighting against environmental consciousness ... (It IS God's planet after all) ... kicking out members who admit to being Democrats ... (this has happened more than once) ... and ... supporting the invasion of Iraq ... supporting an arbitrary WAR ... over peaceful negotiations.
See?
The Modern Christian Conservative Movement has tipped over into a political movement ... having severed all ties with Jesus Christ ... and His Message. \.
RATE THIS COMMENT: (4)
bob
11:16AM Nov 8th 2009
You and Splash gonna go another round of trying to draw blood with butter knives later? That was kind of entertaining.
Other than that episode, this persona started sprouting blue-green fuzz at least a week ago. Time to disappear for 20 minutes and come back as something else, I think. Your dead horse has achieved the consistency of pate.
RATE THIS COMMENT: (-2)
garry402
8:39AM Nov 8th 2009
Anti-religion bigots and tree hugging enviro-nazis team up in this love fest.
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Goppy
9:00AM Nov 8th 2009
Please ... your perversion of Christianity is disgusting.
If you want to throw Jesus Under the Bus ... that's your right ... but don't come on HERE ... and pretend you are some kind of Christian ... not with HATE oozing out of you like some Modern Republican.
I'll pray for your barren Right Wing Soul ... as you work tirelessly to prevent CHILDREN from getting access to Health Care ....
It's a sick person who perverts Christianity ... shame on you.
.
RATE THIS COMMENT: (-2)
garry402
12:43PM Nov 8th 2009
Huh?
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Dorrall
10:00AM Nov 8th 2009
I don't go in for organized religion where you are expected to worship a certain way just because you are being told that's how its done by one person or a committee. I follow my heart and pray on my own and follow a more Buddist approach. The golden rule is all you really need anyway. I believe everyone should follow their own faith. This is one of the guaratees of our constitution. I do, however, question the big box churches on their policy of having designated seating according to how much you pay into the church. The more you pay the closer you are to god, is their motto. I have close friends who belong to churches like this and they are always striving to be closer to the front and talking about those who can't get closer, or who have had to move back because they can't aford it any longer. All the while, looking at me funny because I don't go to their church. Personally, I think any time you are in a situation where the main focus of discussion is other peoples financial hardships and you are not figuring out a way to help them, you may be keeping bad company.
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Athiest in Seattle
10:33AM Nov 8th 2009
Religion stands on the “faith in the unbelievable" there is no logic to it at all. Having faith in something is fine, but put you faith in you wife, your family, not into something that sounds like it comes out of a science fiction novel. Hell I am surprised that there is no church of Hogwarts for the Harry Potter fanatics (which I am one of), it makes more sense than any bible, Koran, or book of Mormon. Wake up to the advances of science. There is no God!
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eileencarman
11:19AM Nov 8th 2009
Can I get a low, low price on salvation?
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groundspeed
4:54PM Nov 8th 2009
The great thing about faith and religion is it can be anything you want it to be to suit yourself.
God is an evoluationary concept that has yet to evolve. Mega Churches are just religious malls and entertainment centers to dupe the dumb and gulliable.
RATE THIS COMMENT: (-3)
weszgl
8:25PM Nov 8th 2009
God is an evoluationary concept that has yet to evolve. Mega Churches are just religious malls and entertainment centers to dupe the dumb and gulliable.
RATE THIS COMMENT: (-4)
Trish
11:41PM Nov 8th 2009
Be it a Mega Church or a Small Rural Church, if they teach that Yeshua came to devide; the Righteous from the Unrighteous, then they will be blessed. However, if they indoctrine teachings outside this truth, they will suffer in the eyes of God.
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atmame77
6:36PM Nov 9th 2009
Megachurches: Where the Flim-Flam Preachers fleece the flock of their hard earned money. Organized religion should be banned! Drink the "KOOL AID" Americans, don't you know David Koresh and Jim Jones are god's word.