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Freedom Versus Contraception Coverage

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  • Freedom Versus Contraception Coverage

    By Dr. Chuck Missler
    Koinonia House Online
    2 Feb 2012




    The Obama administration shocked the Catholic Church last Friday by requiring that religious organizations offer their employees contraceptive services, including sterilization and abortion-inducing drugs, as part of their health plans. While churches themselves are exempt, religiously based businesses, including colleges and hospitals, will be required to violate their beliefs in obedience to the new law. In response, Catholic churches across America read a letter on Sunday in protest.

    The Department of Health and Human Services announced in January that church-linked groups will be required to abide by new health insurance requirements that mandate coverage for contraception, sterilization, and drugs that induce abortions—not only to cover them, but to offer them without out-of-pocket costs. Religious organizations have one year to get on board.

    This is equivalent to requiring all health food stores, even those run by vegans, to offer a dairy section because it's healthy and people might want eggs and milk. It's like demanding all delis, even kosher ones, to offer bacon because non-Jews might come shopping, and to offer that bacon for free. The Catholic Church is up in arms at the government's interference and disregard for the strongly held religious beliefs of millions of Americans.

    In a letter of protest, Catholic churches in parishes across the country read variations of a letter which declared in part:

    "[T]he Obama Administration has cast aside the First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, denying to Catholics our Nation's first and most fundamental freedom, that of religious liberty… We cannot—we will not—comply with this unjust law. People of faith cannot be made second class citizens. We are already joined by our brothers and sisters of all faiths and many others of good will in this important effort to regain our religious freedom. Our parents and grandparents did not come to these shores to help build America's cities and towns, its infrastructure and institutions, its enterprise and culture, only to have their posterity stripped of their God given rights…"
    The decision is not just a disappointment to Catholics. The National Association of Evangelicals had also lobbied against the requirement on religious grounds. Tom McClusky of Family Research Council Action condemned the law in a statement, saying,
    "Despite the fact that certain drugs and devices approved by the FDA can work after conception to destroy a newly developed baby, the Obama Administration mandate still forces all insurance plans to carry these drugs and devices even if employers are morally opposed."

    By directly and specifically mandating that religious groups put aside their moral beliefs, the government has placed the opinions of its agents over the values of the people and has therefore violated the First Amendment. "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof…"
    The rule does exempt churches themselves, but church-affiliated universities, schools, and hospitals are not exempted, even though the same belief systems apply. On Friday, HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius gave religious institutions a half-hearted boon by offering a year grace period, as though giving religious groups a year to violate their consciences was a good compromise.

    On the other hand, family planning groups were pleased with the decision. "This is good news for millions of women whose access to contraceptive services under this new benefit was being questioned," said Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.).

    The issue is not whether millions of women will be forced to bear children when they would rather not. Contraceptive services are still available across the country. The issue is that those religious groups that believe certain forms of contraception are wrong should not have to pay for them.

    Michael Walsh ranted about the matter on National Review Online, pummeling the Catholic Church for not considering its options to be more than "either violate our consciences, or to drop health coverage for our employees." He wants the Catholic Church to say that they refuse to recognize the law's moral authority and simply ignore its provision. Referring to Poe's short story, "The Cask of Amontillado," Walsh chides, "Once Montresor's got you inebriated and chained to the wall, and is just about to cement the last brick in place, it's way too late to figure out that you're in big trouble. And here you thought he was your friend and neighbor…"

    Yet, it is not the end of religious freedom as we have known it. The Supreme Court just recently ruled in favor of religious institutions in the case of Hosanna-Tabor Church v. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (2011), in which the justices unanimously gave religious groups the freedom to hire and fire whomever they wanted without the same danger of discrimination cases feared by other employers.

    "The interest of society in the enforcement of employment discrimination statutes is undoubtedly important," Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. wrote in a sweeping, broad decision. "But so, too, is the interest of religious groups in choosing who will preach their beliefs, teach their faith and carry out their mission." It isn't the government's job to interfere in such matters, the justices said.

    On one hand, the very purpose of most religious institutions is to care for people, to provide for them and give them assistance and provision as sources of help and comfort in an often hostile world. When the government dictates to religious groups how to accomplish these goals, contrary to their moral codes, the job of the people is to tell the government, "You've overstepped your bounds. You need to step back."

  • #2
    If this is not overturned, the Catholic Church will have to violate their conscience or stop offering Health Insurance and; therefore. face penalties. If they fail to provide health insurance, the people who won't have health insurance - because of the injustice of this law - will have to pay to provide procedures and medications, etc. that are totally contrary to their beliefs.

    The difference between this injustice and the health food store allegory is that: eating meat doesn't kill innocent babies.

    I know this is an unpopular stand in today's culture of death, but those who are pro-life should not be forced to participate in this healtcare nightmare.
    "God loves us so much, He gave us friends!" Amen! http://roundersonline.org/core/images/smilies/smile.png

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    • #3
      I agree totally, Val. Never thought it would come to this in the U.S. A life is precious thing, and there are few reasons to take one.

      Comment


      • #4
        In response to an e-mail I sent to him, Senator Lindsey Graham, responded: "As we continue our work in the 112th Congress, I look forward to supporting our troops in the War on Terror, repairing our economy and creating jobs, strengthening Social Security, lowering the tax burden on American families, and making the federal government more accountable and efficient."

        My response to his reply:

        Congress needs to look at Obamacare (ObamaDOESNOTcare) and the deliberate betrayal of our constitutional rights! The War on Terror must be fought against Planned Parenthood and all who would kill our unborn babies and mislead our young people into thinking abortion, contraception and safe-sex are the answers to pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases.

        I care about all those things you listed in your reply; however, fighting for the restoration of the RIGHT guaranteed, by the Constitution, to ALL people (including the unborn!) to LIFE, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, is much more important. It truly is a sad time for America because of the horrific misunderstanding of the intent of our forefathers - that we should have the Freedom OF Religion and not Freedom FROM Religion.

        I hope that choosing life and not taking away our Freedom of Religion is important to Congress also!

        Valerie J. Cadarr
        "God loves us so much, He gave us friends!" Amen! http://roundersonline.org/core/images/smilies/smile.png

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        • #5
          What's readlly distressing is that this seems to have become only a "Catholic" issue when Freedom of Religion is a human issue.
          "God loves us so much, He gave us friends!" Amen! http://roundersonline.org/core/images/smilies/smile.png

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          • #6
            The only issue I have with the Catholic Church on this is that they don't believe in contraception. If someone can point out to me in the Bible where you can not use it please do, the only reference that anyone can give me is the guy who "spilled his seed on the ground" being struck dead, but if you read the entire context is wasn't the act it's self but the reason behind it. Jewish law required that if a man died without children that his younger brother had to have a child with the widow in his name, thus the child became the heir, the younger brother wanted what the man owed so refused to provide the heir, so for his GREED he was struck dead.

            So I'm against abortion but for contraception.

            Comment


            • #7
              Catholic doctrine holds that God created sexual intercourse to be both unitive and procreative. The Catholic Church teaches that an act which deliberately attempts to divorce the unitive and procreative meaning of the marital act is opposed to God's plan for life and love in the order of creation. "[A]ny action which either before, at the moment of, or after sexual intercourse, is specifically intended to prevent procreation—whether as an end or as a means" is opposed to this order and is therefore forbidden according to orthodox Catholic teaching. Thus, artificial birth control methods are forbidden, as are acts intended to end in orgasm outside the context of intercourse (e.g. masturbation or oral sex that is not part of foreplay). At the same time, not having sex at all (abstinence) is considered morally acceptable.

              Engaging in marital relations at an infertile time in a woman's life (such as pregnancy or post-menopause) is also considered acceptable, since the infertile condition is considered to be created by God, rather than as an act by the couple. Similarly, under Catholic theology, it may be morally acceptable to abstain during the fertile part of the woman's menstrual cycle. Increasing the postpartum infertile period through particular breastfeeding practices — the lactational amenorrhea method — is also considered a natural and morally unobjectionable way to space a family's children.

              The Catholic Church acknowledges a potential benefit of spacing children and use of NFP for this reason is tolerated. Humanae Vitae cites "physical, economic, psychological and social conditions" as possibly compelling reasons to avoid pregnancy. Couples are warned, however, against using NFP for selfish, immoral, or insincere reasons. A few Catholic theologians argue that couples with several children may morally choose to avoid pregnancy, even if their circumstances (emotional, physical, and economic) would allow for more children. More commonly, Catholic sources extol the benefits children bring to their parents, their siblings, and society in general, and encourage couples to have as many children as their circumstances make practical.

              Catholics believe in Natural Family Planning. It is not harmful to the woman, encourages active participation by both spouses and doesn't interfere with the sexual act.
              "God loves us so much, He gave us friends!" Amen! http://roundersonline.org/core/images/smilies/smile.png

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