Written by Bridgette Dunlap for RH Reality Check. This diary is cross-posted; commenters wishing to engage directly with the author should do so at the original post.
The recent Huffington Post article by Sister Mary Ann Walsh of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops tells us quite a bit about the veracity of the USCCB’s claims that religious freedom is under attack in the United States.
Sister Walsh portrays Catholic institutions as just wanting to be able to give away services as acts of charity without government interference. But the truth is Catholic institutions (or those who claim to speak for them) are demanding they be able to participate in the market without having to adhere to the same standards as anyone else selling products or services, and to do it with government funding to boot.
The idea that some religious organizations should not have to meet the general standard has been widely accepted, but Sister Walsh finds the resulting exemption to the contraceptive coverage mandate, “miserly.” As the USCCB has told us repeatedly, the issue isn’t contraception, but religious freedom. The problem, they claim, is just that too few Catholic-affiliated institutions are exempt from the HHS regulation.
As Bishop William Lori, of the USCCB’s Ad Hoc Committee for Religious Liberty put it to Congress:
This is not a matter of whether contraception may be prohibited by the government. This is not even a matter of whether contraception may be supported by the government. Instead, it is a matter of whether religious people and institutions may be forced by the government to provide coverage for contraception or sterilization, even if that violates their religious beliefs.
Now, there is a first-grader in plaid somewhere inside of me who hesitates to say this, but: this is a big lie. I know this is a lie because I read the USCCB’s Statement on Religious Freedom.
In the Statement, the Bishops quote Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr, who wrote that, “[a]n unjust law is no law at all.” I’ve found the frequency with which opponents of the contraception mandate quote Dr. King very odd, given that he supported family planning and once accepted an award from Planned Parenthood, but I didn’t comprehend what was going on until I read the Statement, in which the Bishops go on to say:
It is a sobering thing to contemplate our government enacting an unjust law. An unjust law cannot be obeyed. In the face of an unjust law, an accommodation is not to be sought, especially by resorting to equivocal words and deceptive practices. If we face today the prospect of unjust laws, then Catholics in America, in solidarity with our fellow citizens, must have the courage not to obey them. (emphasis mine).
The core of the bishops’ opposition to the contraceptive mandate is not that the exception is too narrow and will thus force Catholics to violate their beliefs. Rather, the law is unjust in and of itself because no one should use birth control. The Bishops keep quoting Dr. King because, to them, government regulation of even completely secular institutions aimed at making birth control more accessible is akin to a law enforcing racial segregation. Birth control is that bad, so an exception from a law making it more available will not do.
The stories behind Sister Walsh’s claim that “Catholic foster care and adoption services were forced to close” illustrate this point as well. Bishops in Illinois refused to negotiate for an exception to the state law banning discrimination against same-sex couples because, as one Bishop put it, “It would have been seen as: We’re going to compromise on the principle as long as we get our exception.” The problem wasn’t that Catholic agencies might have to serve gay couples – it was that any agency would.
Furthermore, Catholic agencies in Boston and San Francisco placed children with same-sex couples voluntarily until the Bishops made them stop. What the end of Catholic adoption services tells us is not that religious freedom is under attack, but that Bishops want to impose their will on the general population and don’t respect the religious freedom of Catholics working on the ground.
The Bishops may reject the choices made by voters and their elected representatives and lament that Catholics use birth control and form families in violation of their commands, but this does not mean their religious freedoms are being violated. Catholic bishops have increasingly looked to shape the law to control behavior through coercion where they have lost their power to persuade, but the ability to impose religion on others is not a right the First Amendment protects.
Sister Walsh may be correct, however, when she suggests the USCCB’s “religious freedom campaign” may ultimately be good for our nation. The “campaign” is showing Catholics, and the one in ten Americans who consider themselves ex-Catholics, just how powerful the hierarchy that claims to speak for us is. It is showing us the bishops’ views are often extremist, lacking in compassion and disconnected from our values. From the Nuns on the Bus to Melinda Gates we are hearing from other voices more and more.
I’m starting to think there’s some kind of Catholic awakening going on.




6 Comments

I’ve been perplexed at the obvious divergence between the church’s hierarchy, and the laity.
It seems from my perspective that the church hierarchy is moving in tandem with the other forces of right-wing authoritarianism as if they were all convinced that this was their last chance.
I fail to see how they can expect this sort of despicable behavior to do anything other than damage the church’s standing with a flock committed to going in the opposite direction.
The divergence? What a judicious choice words. The laity has been walking away from the “heirarchy” for my whole life.
Maybe the forces of right-wing authoritarianism are moving in tandem with the heirarch of the Church of Rome. Rome invented right-wing authoritarianism, after all. And yes, thank god, it is their last chance. You can tell by their lunatic frenzy. Actually I think their last chance has passed.
I fail to see how anybody (anywhere) can continue to support the structure while recognizing that the heirarchy has chosen to dig in its heels and stop the 20th century in its tracks (not to mention the 21st). They can by the simple expedient to what we call lip-service, they say I’m Catholic, if asked, but they go to midnight mass on Xmas or maybe take the kids to the easter-egg hunt at the church, and nothing else.
There is however one group that definitely should be governed by the Catholic Church’s position on abortion: priests.
I really really never want to hear again of how a priest seduces a young teen age girl, gets her pregnant and then has her have an abortion. In order to protect his reputation.
That group of pedophiles should definitely have to be bound by the position of the “Holy Mother Church” on this matter.
Oh, and I should point out, re: reply 3 above: I am a “recovering” Catholic.
Well there’s your problem. When you read a tabloid, you can expect tripe. And the USCCB is just barely close enough to contemporary society to have “US” in it’s name.
Draw and quarter the offending priest if you must, but don’t make the poor girl carry the baby (in accordance with church’s position.) Of course she may want to, which decision should be between her, her doctor and her family (however she defines that group.) Definitely not the USCCB.