As readers may know, the Obama administration’s Department of Health and Human Services is proposing to require every health insurer in the land to pay for, and thus to be complicit in, the provision of contraceptives, including some that would be more accurately described as abortifacients. The rule offers a potential exception on religious grounds, but this “exemption,” as previously discussed by Christopher T. Haley, Ryan Anderson, and others on this website, is exceedingly narrow and inadequate. It extends only to the most narrowly defined “religious employers,” to include only those primarily devoted to inculcating religion, primarily hiring their own co-religionists and serving the same, and fitting other narrow legal criteria under the tax code.
In addition to a chorus of bishops and lay leaders, two university presidents (Father John Jenkins of Notre Dame and John Garvey of Catholic University) have now spoken out forcefully about this rule. Father Jenkins, in a September 28 letter to HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, pleaded with her to rewrite the rule using an alternative, broader definition of “religious employer,” so that Notre Dame will fit within its protective ambit. Otherwise the university will be required “to offer our students sterilization procedures and prescription contraceptives, including pills that act after fertilization to induce abortions, and to offer such services in our employee health plans.”
Father Jenkins rightly demands recognition of a broader notion of religious conscience rights than the administration has yet been willing to recognize. But in an unfortunate lapse, he has nothing to say about the injustice of forcing other employers, insurers, workers paying premiums—whether any of them is Catholic or not, or religious in any way—to be complicit in the provision of abortions. Of course he is concerned chiefly about Notre Dame, but this was a missed opportunity to say more.
Several times Jenkins refers to “the Church’s moral teaching,” or its “social teaching,” or what “the Catholic Church finds morally objectionable.” Yet he never pauses to clarify whether the precise concern at issue here implicates moral norms held by the Church to be particular to itself, or norms universally applicable to all moral agents, whether Catholic or not.
If this is not clear, consider the kosher laws that are binding on Jews. They forbid the eating of pork. But no Jew holds that by virtue of the kosher laws, gentiles are forbidden to eat pork. The kosher laws establish moral norms particular to the Jews, not universal norms to be obeyed by everyone. It is probably no coincidence that the kosher laws were vouchsafed to the Jews directly by divine revelation: there is nothing about them to suggest that they are the conclusions of unaided reason about the morality of human conduct.
Unfortunately, Father Jenkins seems to treat the Catholic teaching on abortion as something like the Jewish kosher laws. “We Catholics,” he seems to be saying, “in our Catholic institutions, must not be forced to underwrite any behavior that our Church forbids to us.” But the message of Catholic teaching on abortion is a message to the whole world: abortion is the taking of innocent human life, a grave evil that can be known to be so from premises available to every rational person, whether he or she is Catholic or not. It is not true that abortion is wrong for Catholics because the Church teaches it is wrong. It is true that the Church teaches its parishioners that abortion is wrong because it is wrong, for everyone.
President Garvey of Catholic University published a Washington Post op-ed on October 2, making very similar arguments. But he too missed an opportunity to teach the broader lesson. And he even gave an unintended rhetorical gift to the other side in this debate. The pivotal passage in his article is this:
I understand, as do the leaders of other Catholic organizations, that not all citizens share the views that the Catholic Church holds about contraception and sterilization. It is particularly sad that not all Americans share our conviction that abortion is gravely wrong, even in the earliest stages of pregnancy. But in objecting to these regulations, our university does not seek to impose its moral views on others. All we ask is respect for the religious beliefs we try to impart to our students.
By disclaiming any interest in “imposing” his moral views on anyone else, Garvey unwittingly slips into the relativism of abortion’s defenders, who say that “choice” is the governing principle because no view is “privileged” over any other. But of course this is really a fraudulent relativism. What abortion supporters truly want is precisely to impose their views on others. The proposed HHS rule is proof of it, as it would require everyone in America to become complicit in the prescription of abortifacient drugs.
Garvey, like those who defend abortion, should want to impose his view, because he truly believes it. But rather than explode the falsehood that “we shouldn’t legislate morality,” he writes here as though he accepted it instead.
Contrast the responses of Jenkins and Garvey with the approach taken by the late Congressman Henry Hyde, responsible for the well-known Hyde Amendment, attached annually to federal appropriations to ban the expenditure of federal funds on abortions. The Hyde Amendment lays down a clear marker that no taxpayer will be made to be complicit in the evil of abortion. The amendment attempts no distinction between those who are conscientiously opposed to abortion and those who are not. Thus the Hyde Amendment is more than merely defensive of some Americans’ consciences; it takes the offensive as well, and it has helped keep the abortion regime at bay for more than a third of a century.
In the spirit of Henry Hyde, a more thoroughgoing response to the HHS rule came from the Witherspoon Institute’s Task Force on Conscience Protection, and from the Alliance Defense Fund on behalf of eighteen Catholic colleges and other interested parties.
Father Jenkins and President Garvey admirably defend the institutional conscience rights of their universities, and that is rightly their foremost concern. But by not going on the offensive against the basic immorality of the Obama administration’s rule, they backed into a purely defensive stance. The Obama administration may not budge from its rule as proposed. But one danger is that it will accept a “Jenkins-Garvey” solution, expanding the “religious employer” exemption in the HHS rule and then trumpeting the administration’s “reasonableness.”
Meanwhile, countless other Americans opposed to abortion, and marooned outside the ambit of the rule’s exemption, as insurers, employers, and employees, will be coerced to buy and sell health insurance that covers abortifacient drugs on demand. And the nation will stand, for the first time since the Hyde Amendment was enacted in 1976, foursquare on the side of the grave evil of abortion in both its fiscal and its regulatory policy. The point that must be hammered home is that the whole nation—not just Catholic and other religious institutions—is having its conscience anesthetized by the Obama administration.
Matthew J. Franck is Director of the William E. and Carol G. Simon Center on Religion and the Constitution at the Witherspoon Institute in Princeton, N.J.
RESOURCES
Christopher T. Haley, Creating a Catholic Ghetto
Ryan T. Anderson, Protected in Law, Cared for in Life
Letter from Fr. Jenkins to Kathleen Sebelius [PDF]
HHS’s birth-control rules intrude on Catholic values
Helen Alvaré, Gerard V. Bradley and O. Carter Snead, Conscience, Coercion, and Healthcare
Letter from Alliance Defense Fund [PDF}
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Comments:
I joined a Dominican parish, Blessed Sacrament Church in Seattle, Washington, over 20 years ago because I believed an Order of Preachers would oppose abortion, an opposition then and now in my eyes fundamental, for abortion is a sacrifice of the most innocent, and why their sacrifuce is most pleasing to Satan. But it turned out the pastor was pro-abortion and refused my daughter baptism because I, in being opposed to abortion, and therefore opposed to women, was unfit to catechize my daughter.
The title is apt and has to lead one to wonder what is the intent of those who want the country led more into this dhimmitude of uncontrolled , demeaning passions and the offer of unhealthy choices to deal with same that are promoted as 'preventive care ' !
The sight of a dying Europe and overtake by those who promote the choice of larger families alone as the only real choice - are the same powers with its vast sums of wealth and influnce really behind the poison care that is being forced down upon this country !
Just like the 'pagan spirit ' that influenecd a whole country , through Hitler - is there a Judasic spirit that is set against The Church and Christian values that has been unleashed amidst us and may be the leader of same , not even aware that a familial antiChurch spirit is what is behind much that is moving those under its control !
Hope many of us are moved to warfare prayers in earnest , asking The Father , in the mighty name of our Lord Jesus , under protection of His Precious Blood , in union with prayers of all angels and saints , to rebuke the spirit of Judas , the spirits against life and purity , that many be set free ,in repentance , to be filled with The Spirit of Life , to be persons of truth , in awareness of their dignity , to live peaceful, moral lives so that this nation beand each of us , be a source of goodness !
Technological progress might come to our aid too - just like studies have shown how cells of babies live in the mother indefinitly , tests might show how all the
evil influnced practices have profound effects on the body and psyche that is behind much of our maladies and such an awareness then could cut down the incidence of the mental problems too so that the viewers of Islamic T.V would not be laughing about the high incidence of menatl illness in the West and the poison care would not coninue to drain health care budgets brought on by these 'choices' - it is hard to believe that those who are promoting this are not really aware how they are intentionally leading the public into long term health and social risks !
Then again, this too only need to help us to know what 'spirit' is in charge - the 'spirit ' that closed its eyes or made it possible , for the Fed , to 'loan' 16 trillion ! - interest free to the banks and brokerage firms , since 2007 !
http://www.catholicanada.com/catholic-news/vatican-newsva/29616-letter-32-money-the-root-of-all-evil.html
And the present 'preventive' care strategies are there only to promote this spirit of greed and lust , in one form or another !
May the good angels be there , to help us all !
Catholics and Orthodox Jews largely agree on the matter of abortion, but disagree about an abortion to save the life of the mother. For Catholics, a direct abortion even to save the life of the mother is absolutely forbidden. For Orthodox Jews, a direct abortion to save the life of the mother is at the very least permitted, and some would even say it's mandatory.
When it comes to abortion to save the life of the mother, it would seem that Catholics, in order to be consistent, would have to consider a Jewish woman having a life-saving abortion no different from any other case of abortion. In actual fact, it is highly unlikely that no matter how powerfully Catholics influence the pro-life movement, and no matter how successful the pro-life movement becomes, abortions to save the life of a mother will ever be banned. But in principle, should pro-life Catholics argue that the Catholic view of when life (that is, full personhood) begins is *the* correct view, and Jewish women should have no legal right to a life-saving abortion, no matter what their religion on their consciences permit or dictate?
Similarly, Catholics, it would seem, should argue that no pharmacist should have to invoke a right of conscience to fill prescriptions for contraceptives, because contraceptives simply should not be on sale in the first place.
Where do rights of conscience and freedom of religion come in? Only when dealing with issues like kosher food, where the religious issue is one of religion-specific ritual and not one of morality?
[As an aside, see Acts 15:28-29. According to the authority of the Holy Spirit and the Apostles, certain rules regarding kosher food would seem to be applicable to Christians, although virtually no Christians follow them.]
And to be honest I think in a pluralistic society there are many things we're going to have to accept can only be protected as "Catholic things" even if as Catholics we view them in larger terms. Birth control, even morning-after pills, are not going to be deemed wrong by everyone. It's just not going to happen. Getting others to accept that some of us believe they're wrong is probably the most we can get in a religiously diverse society.
The underlying premise of this article is that this administration has determined that in order to be able to mandate those values this administration believes must be condoned and affirmed, they must anesthetize America's Conscience to the point where we no longer realize that our Right to practice our Religion in private and in public has been compromised.
Peace !
Pres. Jenkins and Pres. Garvey are primarily speaking out not as public intellectuals but as the guardians of their institutions. That makes a difference to what their responsibilities are.
To argue, for example, that no one should be forced to cover contraception is a worthy thing, but that particular argument will have ZERO effect on the current regulations. An appeal for conscience protection, by contrast, might have an effect. And at this particular juncture, Jenkins's and Garvey's duty isn't to make a theoretical point, but to have a practical effect.
Different people have different responsibilities. Philosophers and theologians and the like can and should argue the general case about the wickedness of these regulations. That doesn't mean that it's wrong for people with more specific responsibilities--e.g., university presidents--to make narrower arguments.
It's not as if the appeal for conscience protection is inconsistent with the general argument. It's just a question of who is obliged to make which argument when.
(One last point: Garvey's letter doesn't say that Catholic University wouldn't seek to impose its views. It says that it isn't doing so *in objecting to these regulations*. This is simply an accurate statement of fact. In other words, he's just pointing out that whether or not it's OK to impose one's views, that's irrelevant to the precise point at issue.)
†
I second your sentiment that "God save our children", but also affirm that we must help Him do so. The older I get, the more I realize the tremendous respect God has for our free will. He won't force himself on us--even if doing so would be for our own good.
He won't do for us what He wants to do with us, and the war for the lives of our children will never be won until enough of us take up the fight.
I wasn't going to but that train of thought segues too perfectly to Fr Jenkins', Doug Kmiec's, Kathleen Caveny's unbelievable blindness about Obama and his threat to the Church. The treatment of Prof. Mary Ann Glendon was abysmal.
As a Catholic high school teacher I can't tell you how cruel these so-called leaders of the church are to young people searching for confident Catholics solidly counter cultural in their identity. These so-called Catholic leaders spiritually enervate the church and it is the young people who get thrown to the wolves of global money pop-culture hedonism.
I am very sorry to hear about your experience at Blessed Sacrament 20 years ago. We move around so much that I can't tell you who was pastor there 20 years ago, and I have no way of knowing what happened.
However, I encourage you to visit again one day. I think you may well will be pleased with the quality and message of the preaching and teaching!



The difference is not that those are small minorities and Catholics are one-fourth of the population. Because Catholics who care about Church doctrine are now a tiny minority too.