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“When Blessing the Water Is Not Enough”

October 6, 2020by Josh S. Tatum in environmental, minutes, Ohio, record-keeping, risk management

“When Blessing the Water Is Not Enough” Church Litigation Update summarizes an Ohio case involving a church that faced problems dealing with environmental regulators related to its well water and shares four lessons to learn. Read it here.

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Ten Tips for More Efficient Meetings (LMG Podcast)

3 years ago by Josh S. Tatum 1 min read No comments

Start on time. Identify the meeting’s goals and each agenda…

Tatum’s Ten Tips for More Efficient Meetings

3 years ago by Josh S. Tatum 2 min read No comments

We’ve all participated in meetings where the business drags on,…

FREE WEBINAR: “The Promise and Perils of Religious Arbitration”

3 years ago by Josh S. Tatum less than 1 min read No comments

FREE WEBINAR: “The Promise and Perils of Religious Arbitration: New…

Ind.: “Premises” Means Entire Parcel for State’s Church Liability Shield

4 months ago by Josh S. Tatum 3 min read No comments

Indiana statute protects worshipping communities from claims based on personal injuries sustained on their properties “used primarily for worship services.” The only duty owed to injured persons is to warn of hidden dangers of which it has actual knowledge and not to intentionally harm the person. So if someone gets hurt in a worship space, the religious organization very likely will have a quick exit from any lawsuit brought as a result. But what if the injury occurs elsewhere on property that also has a church building, like next to the parking lot? Is that still part of property used primarily for worship? The Indiana Supreme Court just unanimously answered “Yes.”

“How to Host a Copyright Compliant Church Super Bowl Party”

3 years ago by Josh S. Tatum less than 1 min read No comments

“How to Host a Copyright Compliant Church Super Bowl Party”…

Law Meets Gospel

Law Meets Gospel is Josh Tatum’s online effort to inform faith communities about legal and related issues. Josh is an Indianapolis lawyer who works with faith communities, nonprofits, businesses, and individuals across the country on a variety of legal issues. Josh is a lawyer. But he’s not your lawyer. Law Meets Gospel is for informational purposes and is not legal advice or a substitute for legal advice. It does not create an attorney–client relationship.
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