Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Trump backs off his decision to tax Bibles
Trump backs off his decision to tax Bibles
Dec 1, 2025 6:49 AM

Is President Trump finally beginning to understand how tariffs harm Americans?

On Tuesday Trump said he was backing off his September 1 deadline for 10% tariffs on some Chinese imports. “We’re doing this for Christmas season, just in case some of the tariffs would have an impact on U.S. customers,” Trump told reporters. “Just in case they might have an impact on people, what we’ve done is we’ve delayed it so that they won’t be relevant to the Christmas shopping season.”

Before yesterday Trump had consistently denied economic reality by claiming the Chinese would pay the full price of his tariffs. Perhaps he’s finally learned a lesson about how tariffs work. If so, the lesson is only half learned at best: the Trump administration still plans to impose 10% tariffs on thousands of Chinese food, clothing, and other consumer electronics products.

The Trump administration has also lifted the absurd tariff on Bibles. In June I reported on how the president’s tariffs were affecting the Christian book and Bible publishing industry since the overwhelming majority of Bibles in the U.S. are printed in China. “Bibles and other religious literature are among the items removed from the tariff list and will not face additional tariffs of 10 percent,” the US Trade Representative told Christianity Today.

Some Christians groups are praising the change while still wondering why the tax was ever imposed. Russell Moore, president of the Southern Baptist Convention’s Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission said,

Whatever one thinks about trade policy, the Bible should never have been a subject of this sort of taxation. As Christians, we believe the Bible is the Word of God, and is thus central to our lives and mission. With as many Bibles as are printed in China, the news that they will not be subject to such tariffs is ed news for LifeWay and other publishers of God’s holy Word. Even still, it is concerning that trade books and educational materials—also vital to the lives of Christians and churches—are still subject to a tariff. My hope is that this too will be addressed promptly.

Ben Mandrell, president and CEO of LifeWay Christian Resources, mented on the change:

For the past several months, there has been great concern among the Christian munity that our important work would be threatened by proposed tariff schedules. Today’s announcement by the U.S. Trade Representative has given us hope that the administration has heard our concern. Nevertheless, I am troubled that the Word of God would ever be taken hostage in an international trade dispute. These past months have strengthened our resolve to get Bibles to the people who need them. Our mandate is built on obedience to Christ, regardless of any policy proposal from Washington, D.C.

We should be thankful the taxes were removed on Bibles and other religious resources since they would make America materially and spiritually poorer. But as Christians we should not be satisfied with a crony carve-out for the items that most affect us. We should oppose all of Trump’s unnecessary and foolish tax increase before it pushes us into a recession and harms our neighbors across the world.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Right-to-Work Legislation Showing Solid Gains
It may not be the silver bullet for every financial challenge facing states at the present, but those states adopting right-to-work (RTW) legislation are ing petitive. In your writer’s native Michigan, for example, RTW was signed by Gov. Rick Snyder in December 2012, and the results have been impressive. The American Legislative Exchange Council’s recently released 2014 “Rich States, Poor States” report places the Great Lakes State 12th out of 50. ALEC’s 2013 report placed Michigan at 25 between 1999...
A Constitutional Amendment Against Little Platoons
The great British statesman Edmund Burke claimed that “to love the little platoon we belong to in society is the first principle (the germ as it were) of public affections.” Burke was referring to the mediating social institutions that that lie between the individual and the state. These “little platoons” include not only the family but our churches, labor unions, charity organizations, and other voluntary associations. Since the dawn of modernity, intellectuals and politicians have been hostile to mediating structures...
Let’s ‘Derecognize’ Colleges That Discriminate Against Christians
To be a Christian requires, at a minimum, that a person subscribe to certain beliefs (such as that Jesus is God). For an organization to be labeled Christian would therefore imply that the members (or at least the leaders) also subscribe to certain beliefs. InterVarsity Christian Fellowship (IVCF) is, as the name implies, a Christian organization, so it isn’t surprising that it requires it leaders to subscribe to Christian beliefs. Sadly, it’s also not surprising that some people are offended...
Finding Hope: Protecting Religious Freedom In Prison
“Prison is a hopeless place.” That’s how one former inmate describes it. What can give hope? The freedom to practice one’s faith, even behind bars and barbed wire. In October, the Supreme Court will hear the case of Holt v. Hobbs, which involves the following: Abdul Muhammad, an Arkansas inmate, has been denied the ability to grow the ½ inch beard his Muslim mands—even though Arkansas already allows inmates to grow beards for medical reasons, and Mr. Muhammad’s beard would...
Ending Slavery Made America Richer
There is a near universal agreement that America’s experience with chattel slavery, where people are treated as the chattel or personal property of an owner and are bought and sold as if they modities, was one of our country’s gravest moral horrors. But some people seem to believe that the despicable institution aided the nation’s prosperity. That’s not the case, explains economist Scott Sumner, who points out that countries with free labor tend to be more prosperous: Between 1850 and...
Is Religious Freedom Good for Economic Growth?
In the United States, we’veonly begun to see how impediments to religious liberty can harm and hinder certain businesses and entrepreneurial efforts. Elsewhere, however, particularly in the developing world, religious restrictions and hostilities have long been a barrier to economic growth. To identify theserealities, Brian Grim of Georgetown University and Greg Clark and Robert Edward Snyder of Brigham Young University conducted an extensive study, “Is Religious Freedom Good for Business?,” which concludes that “religious freedom contributes to better economic and...
‘Atlas Shrugged 3: Who is John Galt?’ screening in W. Mich.
Those of you in West Michigan with a taste for libertarian cinema may want to to join local restaurateur Tommy Brann for a special screening of “Atlas Shrugged 3: Who is John Galt?” Brann is hosting the showing at Celebration Cinema North at Knapp’s Corner tomorrow (Sept. 12) at 7 p.m. Tickets are $7.75 and email [email protected] to reserve your seat. Before you go, read Rev. Robert A. Sirico’s essay “Who Really Was John Galt, Anyway?” published at in 2011....
How Common Core Will Increase Poverty
In his Epidemics, Hippocrates, the father of western medicine, wrote that the physician has two special objects in view: to do good or to do no harm. That same principle should be the special object of every educator. While they may not always know what is required to do good, the least they can do is to do no harm. By applying that standard, it es inexplicable why educators are pushing for Common Core standards. A study released last year...
Can A Text Message Save a Human Trafficking Victim?
The Polaris Project is one of the most highly-respected human trafficking organizations in the nation. Based in Washington, D.C., the Polaris Project (named after the North Star that guided slaves to freedom in the 1800s) is home to the National Human Trafficking Hotline. The hotline is able to receive calls or texts 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. Does it work? Apparently so. Jennifer Kimball was monitoring calls and texts at the hotline a few months ago. In...
Audio: Kishore Jayabalan On The OCED’s Economic Forecast
Vatican Radio reports that the Organization for Cooperation and Economic Development is adjusting its economic forecast for major developed economies downward, with growth in the Eurozone projected to be only 0.8% in ing year. Along with this forecast, the OCED is encouraging the European Central Bank to engage in a program of stimulus to offset the negative effects of such weak levels of growth. For analysis on this story, Vatican Radio turned to Kishore Jayabalan, Director of Istituto Acton in...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved