The big news today is
the
coordinated filing of 12 lawsuits by 43 Catholic dioceses and institutions across
country, all challenging the HHS contraception-coverage mandate. A complete
list of the plaintiffsincluding the Archdioceses of Washington and New York,
the University of Notre Dame and the Catholic University of America, and numerous
Catholic hospitals, charitable organizations, and schoolscan be found
here.
A
statement about the lawsuit from the Archdiocese of Washington, DC stresses
that it “is not about whether people have access to certain services; it is
about whether the government may force religious institutions and individuals
to facilitate and fund services which violate their religious beliefs”:
The HHS mandate that all employers
provide abortion-inducing drugs, contraceptives and sterilization includes only
a narrow exemption for certain organizations that the government deems
sufficiently “religious.” … This radical and narrow definition of what
constitutes a “religious employer” attacks religious freedom by defining it
away: by extending religious freedom protection only to houses of worship,
HHS’s exemption reduces religious freedom to the freedom of worship.
The Archdiocese of Washington also has posted a
video message from its chancellor, Jane Belford, explaining the reasons behind
the lawsuit.
Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York said
regarding his archdiocese’s suit: “We have tried negotiation with the
Administration and legislation with the Congress, and will keep at it and
there's still no fix. Time is running out, and our precious ministries and
fundamental rights hang in the balance, so we have to resort to the courts
now.”
At National Review Online, George
Weigel describes the lawsuits as taking the battle between the Catholic
Church and the Obama administration into “the second quarter”:
While the media’s attention to this
battle has typically focused on the U.S. bishops’ conference and the
administration, with Cardinal Timothy Dolan (the conference president) in one
corner and President Obama and HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius in the other,
the number and character of the litigants now challenging the administration’s
mandate ought to make it clear that this is not “the bishops vs. the
administration” during an election year; it is the administration vs. the
Catholic Church on an issue of first principle. That one of the litigants is
the University of Notre Dame, which in 2009 gave President Obama an honorary
doctorate of laws and invited him to address its commencement ceremony, ought
to underscore the point that the mandate is regarded as a threat to religious
freedom far beyond the boundaries of the bishops’ conference.
As Weigel points out, Notre Dame’s president, Father John Jenkins,
has stated, “This filing is about
the freedom of a religious organization to live its mission.” In
his email to Notre Dame faculty and staff explaining the school’s decision,
Jenkins continued, “For if one Presidential Administration can override our
religious purpose and use religious organizations to advance policies that
undercut our values, then surely another Administration will do the same for
another very different set of policies, each time invoking some concept of
popular will or the public good, with the result these religious organizations
become mere tools for the exercise of government power, morally subservient to
the state, and not free from its infringements.”
Law professor Helen Alvarewhose open letter to the administration
opposing the mandate has been signed by 28,000 women in the last three monthswrites
in the Washington Post that those who see a “war on women” in the objections
to the HHS regulations should consider the fact that women are more likely than
men to practice a religious faith. “So when you undercut religious
freedom, you undercut women,” she argues.
The editorial board of Our
Sunday Visitorwhich is among the entities suing the governmentdescribes
the HHS mandate as “an enormous violation of religious liberty, forcing
Catholic organizations to fund medical procedures and drugs that the Church
teaches are morally wrong”:
In opposing the HHS regulations, the Church is also defending the
religious liberty of all believers guaranteed to us in the Constitution. Even
those who may not be inclined to agree with the Church’s position on issues
like contraception and sterilization recognize that once this precedent has
been set, once the guarantee of religious liberty has been breached, other
governments and other elected officials will find it much easier to impose
their standards and their priorities on our Church or others.
Today, Our Sunday Visitor stands proudly with our fellow Catholic
apostolates and with our bishops in resisting this challenge. We ask all of our
readers to stand with us in charity, praying first and foremost for
conversions of heart; in civility, arguing the facts of this case without
recourse to bitter partisanship or political rhetoric; and in solidarity,
knowing that whatever sacrifices we bear and whatever challenges we endure, we
are only doing what is our responsibility as American citizens practicing our
faith in the public square.
“All
of this probably makes the
New York Times’ analysis of how Obama will win Catholic
votes little more than wishful thinking,”
writes
Ed Morrissey at Hot Air. “This oppressive move may well cast Catholics off
from the Democratic Party for a generation. This will be a ‘come to Jesus’
moment for many Catholics, and a wake-up call to the USCCB about the nature of
government mandates in general.”