I'm going to offer an analogy that will almost certainly offend a few folks on this board, but I think it's as close as you can get...
Reading the Internal Revenue Code is like reading the Bible.
When you read the Bible, do you:
(1) simply open up the Bible, read it, and interpret it using nothing more than your own understanding of the plain English meaning of the words?
(2) not even bother trying to read the Bible, and rely entirely on the teachings of your pastor and church, because the Bible was written 2000 years ago, in Greek and Hebrew, in a totally different place, and in a totally different culture, and no layperson could possibly understand any of it?
(3) read the Bible yourself, but interpret it with the assistance of the teachings of your church and pastor, and other independent sources, and when something is open to more than one interpretation, you weigh the conflicting meanings, and use your own judgment to reach a conclusion?
Just substitute "IRC" for "Bible," "IRS" for "church," and "The Tax Book" for "other independent sources."
The analogy isn't perfect. Some might argue that we are the pastors, because we hold ourselves out as professionals in the field. Our job is to interpret the tax law for the layperson. That only strengthens my argument that when the law is ambiguous, or when secondary sources provide an interpretation that doesn't quite make sense, we have a professional responsibility to study the text of the law itself, and to determine whether there is more than one reasonable interpretation.
Burton M. Koss
koss@usakoss.net
Reading the Internal Revenue Code is like reading the Bible.
When you read the Bible, do you:
(1) simply open up the Bible, read it, and interpret it using nothing more than your own understanding of the plain English meaning of the words?
(2) not even bother trying to read the Bible, and rely entirely on the teachings of your pastor and church, because the Bible was written 2000 years ago, in Greek and Hebrew, in a totally different place, and in a totally different culture, and no layperson could possibly understand any of it?
(3) read the Bible yourself, but interpret it with the assistance of the teachings of your church and pastor, and other independent sources, and when something is open to more than one interpretation, you weigh the conflicting meanings, and use your own judgment to reach a conclusion?
Just substitute "IRC" for "Bible," "IRS" for "church," and "The Tax Book" for "other independent sources."
The analogy isn't perfect. Some might argue that we are the pastors, because we hold ourselves out as professionals in the field. Our job is to interpret the tax law for the layperson. That only strengthens my argument that when the law is ambiguous, or when secondary sources provide an interpretation that doesn't quite make sense, we have a professional responsibility to study the text of the law itself, and to determine whether there is more than one reasonable interpretation.
Burton M. Koss
koss@usakoss.net
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