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If you are a pastor and performing religious duties, then you are self-employed for income tax purposes and you should not have social security and medicare taxes withheld. You will still receive a W-2 as a common law employee but boxes 3-6 will be blank. If they are not blank, then your employer is treating you as a regular employee (like a secretary or maintenance person) who does have SS and medicare tax withheld even when working for a church.
If you check the box in turbotax for religious wages, but you have box 4 and box 6 taxes, turbotax will get confused and not do your taxes properly.
Your church may be paying you as a lay employee even though your title is "pastor." Titles are not important, what makes you a clergy person for IRS purposes is a 4 point test; you administer the sacraments, are considered to be a religious leader by your church, conduct worship services, and have management responsibility in the control, conduct, or maintenance of your congregation. You don't have to meet all 4 tests strictly, but those are the factors. If your church is paying you as a lay person, then don't check the religious wages box. You would subject to the normal tax rules for ordinary workers instead of the special clergy rules.
See this for clergy tax issues. Then check with your church treasurer, or denominational tax expert, or a tax professional who understands clergy wages, if you need clarification. http://www.ecfa.org/PDF/2016-Preparing-Tax-Returns-For-Clergy.pdf
I wouldn't worry about that. Technically, the entire amount is income but then when figuring the SE tax, you get a partial deduction that accounts for the amount that a regular employee has paid on their behalf. So just reporting the income without the counter deduction will result in you overpaying.
I also don't know how the church could fix since, even if they filed amended form 941 or 944 to remove the withholding and got a refund from the social security administration, any money they refunded to you would be income in 2018 under the cash basis accounting rules.
For 2017 I would just stick with the W-2 as written and pay SE tax on the housing allowance only. Make sure the church fixes the issue in 2018 -- they may not have even filed the first quarterly form 941 yet and even if they did it's much less complicated to amend that and refund the 2018 withholding to date.
If you really want to try and have the church correct the 2017 filings, you will need the help of a CPA who deals with churches and you probably need to file an extension on your personal tax return while things get straightened out. I'm not sure it's worth it.
If you receive a W-2 from the church where you work, then you are considered a common-law employee, and social security tax is withheld from your wages.
The box that you're asking about shouldn't be checked if your W-2 has Social Security tax withheld (Box 4) and Medicare taxes withheld (Box 6).
For more guidance, see this from the IRS.
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