Or at least Constantinianism:

PARIS (Reuters)- Germany's Roman Catholic bishops have decreed that people who opt out of a "church tax" should not be given sacraments and religious burials, getting tougher on worshippers who choose not to pay.Alarmed by a wave of dissenting Catholics quitting the faith, the bishops issued a decree on Thursday declaring such defection "a serious lapse" and listed a wide range of church activities from which they must be excluded.Germans officially registered as Catholics, Protestants or Jews pay a religious tax of 8 or 9 percent of their annual tax bill. They can avoid this by declaring to their local tax office that they are leaving their faith community.The annual total of church leavers, usually around 120,000, rocketed to 181,193 two years ago as revelations about decades of sexual abuse of children by priests shamed the hierarchy and prompted an apology from German-born Pope Benedict."This decree makes clear that one cannot partly leave the Church," a statement from the bishops conference said. "It is not possible to separate the spiritual community of the Church from the institutional Church."

Okay, I'm down with that last sentiment. But the "healthy secularist" American in me, and maybe some little strand of Tea Party DNA, recoils from not just the altar-and-throne system but also its use as a spiritual cudgel. Are the defections from the church and the church tax perhaps interrelated?Or am I wrong here? Aufklrung welcome.

David Gibson is the director of Fordham’s Center on Religion & Culture.

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