
‘Why in the world does it have 26,000 pages of documents related to the Word of God?’
Bob Unruh
WND News Center
The Internal Revenue Service, during the Barack Obama administration, infamously targeted Christian and conservative groups, denying them tax status so they had to withhold their comments about what was happening to the nation during that election year.
And a recent Newsweek investigation revealed that the FBI has a new classification for those it suspects of harboring “domestic terrorist” components, MAGA supporters, many of whom are Christian.
Now a report from the American Center for Law and Justice reveals that the IRS still is at it, as litigation involving the federal service has revealed it has 345,000 pages of documents “related to targeting Christians.”
In fact, the litigation shows more than 56,000 pages of IRS documents relating to the “Bible,” 115,000 relating to “Christian,” 26,000 relating to “Word of God” and 50,000 relating to “prayer.”
The ACLJ reported, “Just as Newsweek broke the story that the FBI is targeting MAGA supporters of Donald Trump as the 2024 presidential election nears, we unearthed bombshell revelations in our FOIA lawsuit showing that the Biden IRS is also targeting Christians.”
The report explained that Joe Biden and FBI chief Christopher Wray both have a “history of targeting conservatives and Christians, which the ACLJ recently proved in another FOIA lawsuit against the Deep State FBI.”
It cited the Newsweek reporting that confirmed, “The federal government believes that the threat of violence and major civil disturbances around the 2024 U.S. presidential election is so great that it has quietly created a new category of extremists that it seeks to track and counter: Donald Trump’s army of MAGA followers.”
The ACLJ reported, “Such a report by Newsweek is unsurprising because of the Biden administration’s past transgressions of targeting political opposition. The ACLJ knows firsthand about the Deep State’s tactics after the IRS Tea Party targeting and, more recently, from the FOIA lawsuit we filed against the IRS after we found out the IRS was now targeting Christian groups, refusing to grant them tax-exempt status.”
Because of its earlier confrontations with the IRS over the agency’s discrimination against Christian groups, the ACLJ sought a long list of documents.
“We specifically asked for documents related to ‘Word of God,’ ‘Bible,’ ‘Christian,’ ‘Prayer,’ etc., the group said. When the Biden administration refused to comply a lawsuit was filed.
While the case still isn’t resolved, the ACLJ said, “We now know the IRS has 345,000 pages of documents related to targeting Christians. But the list of the terms involved and the sheer volume of documents are shocking. Regarding the term Word of God, the IRS has 26,000 pages of documents, and regarding Prayer, the IRS has over 50,000 pages of documents!”
The organization wondered, “Why in the world does the IRS have 26,000 pages of documents related to the ‘Word of God?’ We have caught the IRS red-handed in its unlawful targeting of Christian groups. We aren’t buying the IRS’s complaints about the volume of documents, so we are going back to court to ensure we receive all the needed documents.”
The report said, “Christians should be outraged to know that their federal government violated religious liberty in such an egregious fashion.”
Also read:
- Evergreen Habitat for Humanity raises funds for 132nd Cottage Homes ProjectEvergreen Habitat’s Taste of Home event raised over $120,000 for 32 affordable cottage homes in Vancouver.
- Commission on Aging to discuss implementation of ADA transportation standards in smaller citiesTransportation engineers from Battle Ground and Ridgefield will address ADA compliance challenges facing smaller cities.
- Letter: Congress quietly advances U.S.-Israel military integration through NDAA – Section 224Justin Forsman calls for public debate on NDAA Section 224 and U.S.-Israel military technology integration.
- AGO memo says ‘realistic possibility’ a wealth tax would be overturnedA March 2025 AGO memo warns a wealth tax’s $50M threshold exemption risks violating Washington’s uniformity clause.
- Opinion: Governor Ferguson warns of upcoming shortfall after years of overspendingWashington’s $80.2B budget grew more than twice as fast as population and inflation combined since 2013.
- Opinion: High stakes, hidden electionFive Washington Supreme Court seats are on the 2026 ballot — shaping income tax law, pension raids, and sheriff authority.
- Opinion: Transportation officials may be pivoting as costs explode on interstate bridge replacementRail’s share of the I-5 bridge budget may be far larger than the 14% figure officials are citing.








