Hoffer, Stephanie R.2021-02-012021-02-0120109 Washington University Global Studies Law Review 595https://hdl.handle.net/1805/25127This Article compares the modern-day German church tax to church taxes levied by the American colonies and early states and concludes that, unlike its American counterparts, the German church tax is not wholly a "church" tax. Rather, it is largely a form of decentralized local taxation, the jurisdiction of which is determined by voluntary group affinity rather than geography. As such, it is a crucial part of the German taxing landscape that should not be abandoned but should instead be retained and extended to qualifying secular organizations. In that context-secular rather than sectarian-the tax may also serve as the starting point for developing a model of non-geographically bounded taxing jurisdictions.en-USCaesar as God's Banker: Using Germany's Church Tax as an Example of Non-Geographically Bounded Taxing JurisdictionArticle