Now that the USCCB and dozens of bishops have sounded off against the
Obama administration's outrageous contraceptive mandate, I think it's
safe to say that the question on the mind of many Catholics is: "When
will the bishopany bishop!deal directly with the donkey in the room?"
If you just returned from a vacation in northern Iceland or just
awoke from a post-Super Bowl coma induced by an overdose of overly spicy
chicken wings and ten gallons of Mountain Dew, here's the latest: Nancy
Pelosi, self-described "serious Catholic" and the House Minority
Leader, said the following last week
about the contraceptive mandate: "I am going to stick with my fellow
Catholics in supporting the Administration on this. I think it was a
very courageous decision that they made, and I support it..."
The chutzpah of the woman would be astounding except this is how she
has acted for years. And, besides, she has yet to be taken to task
publicly for her open and arrogant disdain for Catholic doctrine and
Church authority. She is the bratty, snotty seven-year-old daughter of
your second cousin and his wife who tears your house to shreds,
terrorizes your pets, and verbally abuses your kids while his parents
sit and talk with a maddening obliviousness about the weather, their
second house on the beach, and the price of green tea at Trader Joes.
But, of course, this is far, far more serious as Pelosi's brazen
disregard for truth and clear Catholic teaching on the sanctity of life
is beyond angering or even scandalous; it is downright evil.
Yes, I'm very happy to see the long list of bishops (almost 170 so far)
who have made statementsmost of them remarkably pointed and
firmagainst the mandate. Fabulous. But I'm convinced that all of these
responses and strong rhetoric will be dry grass in the blowing wind if
some concrete actions don't take place. And a public reprimand and
excommunication of Pelosi would be a big, necessary step in the right
directionnot as a "political statement" (as such an act would
undoubtedly be portrayed by the media), but, first, as the proper and
legitimate means of showing her the need to repent of her blatantly
sinful stance on abortion and, secondly, to really show the faithful
that a real stand is actually going to be made. Finally. Dr. Ed Peters makes the case well, as he has many times before:
It’s now
February of 2012, and nothing in Pelosi’s conduct over the last 23
months suggests any emendation of her attitudes toward killing unborn
babies, etc., etc., etc. Indeed her recent call for Catholics qua
Catholics to unite behind, of all things!, President Obama’s plan to
impose immoral policies on private medical insurance planswhich call
provoked this moving cri de coeur from Fr. Zuhlsdorfsuggests that Pelosi’s views, like Pharaoh’s heart, have only hardened with time.
Canon 915, as I and others have explained many times,
is not about impositions on individual conscience, it’s about public
consequences for public behavior. It’s about taking people at their word
and acknowledging the character of their actions. It’s about not pretending that people don’t really mean what they repeatedly say and what they repeatedly do.
Nancy Pelosi obviously means exactly what she says, and she regularly backs up her words with deeds. She deserves to be taken seriously. Very seriously.
As a canon lawyer, my view is that Nancy Pelosi deserves
to be deprived of holy Communion as the just consequence of her public
actions; as her fellow Catholic, my view is that Nancy Pelosi deserves
to be deprived of holy Communion to bring home to her and to the wider
faith community the gravity of her conduct and the need to avoid such
conduct altogether or, that failing, at least to repent of it. Quickly.
In the words of Fr. Z:
Pelosi,
as a highly public figure, there are few more visible. She is
committing the mortal sin of scandalizing the faithful in a matter
which unquestionably grave matter. There has been all manner of
discussion concerning her and the issues of abortion, contraception,
when life begins, etc. She can’t plead ignorance of the Church’s
teachings. She continues to be openly, publicly, scandalous in these
matters.
Now, she is taking an open stand against
the American bishops in favor of a manifest attack on the Catholic
Church by the most aggressively pro-abortion President we have ever
seen.
Your Excellency? Your Eminence? How much longer does this have to go on? What else does she have to do?
Exactly right. If the bishops do not stand up to Nancy Pelosi soon, I
can only conclude that they will not, in the end, really stand up to
the unjust actions of the HHS and the entire Obama administration. You
cannot talk about clearing the room of unjust laws and immoral coercion
while leaving the donkey in the middle, tearing the furniture to shreds.
Oh, and let's not forget the other key Catholic in this most serious
drama (as reported today by Bloomberg):
Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius,
a Catholic and a two-term governor of Kansas, was joined by several
female Obama advisers in urging against a broad exemption for religious
organizations. To do so would leave too many women without coverage and
sap the enthusiasm for Obama among women’s rights advocates, they said,
according to the people, who spoke about the deliberations on condition
of anonymity. ...
Sebelius was backed by adviser Valerie Jarrett, Tina Tchen, the first lady’s chief of staff, and Melody Barnes,
then director of the Domestic Policy Council, the people said. Among
the ideas considered and discarded because of legal objections was an
option modeled on a Hawaii law that provides broad exemptions for
religious agencies while requiring private insurers to offer
contraceptive coverage to the employees.
Read the entire piece. And stay tuned. Much, much more to follow, without a doubt.