Cheryl Roggensack, a member of Holy Family Catholic Church in Brentwood, Tenn., says the Pledge of Allegiance during the"Stand Up for Religious Freedom" rally on the steps of the Tennessee State Capitol in Nashville March 23. Behind her are members of th e Dominican Sister of St. Cecelia based in Nashville. (CNS photo/Rick Musacchio, Tennessee Register)
On
August 1, 2011, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the
Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) issued the guidelines and
regulations for women’s “protective services,” and finalized them on February
10, 2012. The final rulepopularly dubbed “the contraceptive mandate”requires all
group health plans and health insurance issuers to provide the full range of US
Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved contraceptives/sterilizations (and
associated counseling) as part of the “preventive services” for women mandated by
the Affordable Care Act (ACA). These FDA-approved contraceptives include potential
abortion-inducing or “emergency” contraceptive drugs and intrauterine devices, as
well as surgical sterilizations, all to be made available without co-pays from employees
or their dependents.
The
HHS mandate narrowly defines a religious employer as someone who: (1) has the
inculcation of religious values as its purpose; (2) primarily employs persons who share its religious
tenets; (3) primarily serves persons
who share its religious tenets; and (4) is a non-profit organization. Thus,
most, if not all, religious institutional and individual employers, as well as
religious insurers, are not exempt and, under this mandate, will be subject to
violations of their religious liberty.
The
HHS mandate spawned a tsunami of debate. On one side stands the mandate’s Democratic
and feminist proponents; on the other, its detractors, the US Catholic bishops
(and like-minded religious and secular leaders). Here, we critique five myths that,
like flotsam and jetsam, have washed up on the shores of this national controversy.
Myth
#1: Catholic bishops’ opposition to the HHS mandate constitutes a “war on
women.”
Wrong, on
several counts. First, the Catholic bishops have repeatedly made it clear that their
objection to the HHS mandate is not a debate over whether women ought to have access
to contraception or sterilization. The bishops are not attempting to
criminalize the use of contraception; they know women are legally free to
obtain and use it. Nor are the bishops trying to make oral contraceptives (OCs)
difficult to get or expensive; they know they’re cheap and easy to obtain. In
short, the Church’s opposition to the HHS mandate is not contesting women’s
freedom to access contraception or sterilization or associated counseling. The
Church is upholding the principle of religious liberty as guaranteed by the US
Constitution’s First Amendment. In a nutshell, the bishops contend that the Affordable
Care Act’s final rule forces religious persons and institutions to provide/pay for
these reproductive services despite the fact they contravene the moral convictions
of conscience.
Second, we have volumes of evidence to
support the argument that it is the HHS-mandated national coverage of oral
contraceptives for female employees and their dependents that constitutes the real war on women. Consider the use of
hormonal contraception for contraceptive purposes. The November 2006 issue of Obstetrics and Gynecology reports that its
review of 23 studies demonstrates that greater access to emergency
contraception increased rather than
decreased the incidence of unintended pregnancy and abortion rates. The sad
truth, then, is that the surge in contraceptive use has resulted in more
unplanned pregnancies, which have resulted not only in the increased “backup-contraceptive”
choice of abortion, but also in its devastating post-abortion
psychological/spiritual sequelae. And, lest we forget: the highly effective “contraceptive
rate” of the FDA-approved drug ella, included in the HHS-mandated “preventive
services,” could only be attributed to its abortifacient mechanism.
Third, hormonal contraceptives can actually
cause disease. If we examine the therapeutic
use of birth control pills, we discover the pill is, well, not very
therapeutic. When OCs are taken to treat any of a panoply of gynecologic
anomaliesendometriosis, polycystic ovaries, dysmenorrheathey mask the
underlying anomaly, treat symptoms only, and fail to address the woman’s real disease.
And all this at the expense of sabotaging the normally functioning ovulatory
and menstrual cycles and the woman’s gift of fertility.
As for the alleged health benefits of
contraceptionfrom the lower risk of endometrial cancer, ovarian cancer,
colorectal cancer, polycystic ovary syndrome, osteoporosis, and anemiait’s of paramount
importance that female patients get the whole picture. Not only does the World Health
Organization classify the OC as a carcinogen, but also warnings from package
inserts of many OCs specify that the pill “may increase risk of breast cancer and cancer of the reproductive
organs.” Take the claim that the OC lowers the risk of ovarian cancer. Again, what
women need to knowwhat their doctors need to be telling themare the specific
risks and benefits of the pill. For example, compared to a woman not using
hormonal contraception, it is true that the woman who uses the combined OC for
five years incurs the benefit of a 40 percent decreased ovarian cancer
mortality risk. But here’s the tradeoff: the same woman faces increased risks from the use of that
same OC over the same five-year perioda 100 percent increased risk for venous
thromboembolism, a 24 percent increased risk of breast cancer, and at least a
100 percent increased risk of myocardial infarction. The evidence proves OCs are
a major player in the war on women; they cause rather than prevent disease and they
produce sterility or infertility (a diseased state) over fertility (a condition
emblematic of a healthy gyn-ecology).
Fourth, does the pill truly provide
women with a “better quality of life,” as proponents of the HHS mandate claim? Well,
not if you listen to commonly heard complaints from a host of women on the
pill. Besides the serious health risks just described, pill-using women also experience
a coterie of milder, but debilitating, symptoms: bloating, breast tenderness,
headaches, irregular bleeding, mood changes, and nausea. And as for the pill’s
contribution to a woman’s spiritual/moral malaise, we encourage women to
investigate Catholic teaching on the meaning of human procreation and the
morality of using natural methods of family planningwith all of its pro-woman,
pro-family and pro-culture consequencesto discover a healthy alternative to
contraception that comprehensively improves the woman’s quality of life. (Natural
methods of family planningas you’ve probably guessedare not included in the
HHS-mandated coverage.)
Myth
#2: Catholic bishops’ opposition to the HHS mandate forces Catholic morality on
the rest of society.
Not true. In fact,
this entire critique proves just the opposite. With this HHS mandate, it’s the
federal government that’s forcing its dogma on the Church and the rest of society.
Here are the facts: the state, not US Catholic bishops, has imposed a mandate
that: forces religious insurers to write policies that violate their
beliefs, forces religious employers
and schools to subsidize and facilitate coverage that breaches their morals,
and forces conscientiously objecting
employees and students to purchase coverage that contravenes their consciences.
The Church, on the other hand, is merely looking for a religious exemption from,
or a rescission of, this unjust federal ruling.
Myth
#3: Catholic bishops’ opposition to the HHS mandate makes a religious liberty
claim that exceeds that guaranteed by the First Amendment.
False. The Establishment
Clause (“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion”)
is the head of several pronouncements in the First Amendment of the US
Constitution that, together with the Free Exercise Clause (“or prohibiting the free exercise thereof”), comprise what are
called the “religion clauses.” Thus, our Constitution enshrines the principle
that religious organizations and their membership must be able to practice their faithnot just to worship,
but also to live out their religious beliefs and values in daily life according
to their consciencefree from government interference. That important term
“free exercise thereof” clarifies that our constitutionally-guaranteed freedom
of religion in America respects the right of religious persons to take the
fruit of their worship into the public squarewhere it can work for the common
good of all Americans.
Myth #4: Opposition to the HHS mandate
is only a Catholic “fight.”
Absolutely
fallacious. This statement would be true only if it were describing the opposition
as “small-c” catholic, that is, as universal. As Governor Huckabee quipped: “In
these matters [governmental suppression of religious freedom], we’re all
Catholics.”
A palpable esprit de corps was in evidence when, almost immediately after
Sebelius’ February announcement finalizing the HHS mandate, representatives of
many religious traditions ralliedjoining hands, minds, and willsin calling
the “preventive care” mandate a serious infraction of religious freedom for all
denominations. Recognizing the writing on the wall, 2,500 Protestant, Evangelical,
Jewish, Catholic, and other religious leaders signed a February letter to
President Obama censuring the mandate as a “severe blow to religious liberty”
and calling the administration to “reverse this decision and protect the
conscience rights of those who have biblically-based opposition to funding or
providing contraceptives and abortifacients.”
In that same month, the president of
the Lutheran Missouri Synod, Matthew Harrison, and Rabbi Meir Soloveichik of
Yeshiva University appeared with Catholic Bishop William Lori and others before
the Congressional Committee on Oversight and Government Reform. Rabbi
Soloveichik, representing the sentiments of all attending religious leaders, sagely
opined: “benefiting from two centuries of First Amendment protections in the
United States,” the Jewish “children of the stock of Abraham” must speak out
when conscience rights of their fellow Americans are threatened and when the
very definition of religion is changed by governmental fiat.
A USCCB letter, highlighting protest
from other religious denominationsthe National Association of Evangelicals,
the Assembly of Canonical Orthodox Bishops of North and Central America, and the
Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of Americawas subsequently signed by
300 academics, dozens of religious leaders, leaders of religious organizations,
and journalists. The common argument behind this religious/secular protest
objects to a “naked public square”bereft of religious arguments and persons of
faithand envisions, instead, a civil public squarean American public square,
if you willwhere all citizens, believers and non-believers alike, can participate
and make a difference working together for the common good. The state’s refusal
to exempt religious employers from the HHS mandate harms everyone by
threatening the continued existence of essential public services on which many
Americans, secular and religious, Democrat and Republican, rich and poor, depend.
Myth
#5: If the Supreme Court strikes down the HHS mandate, our concerns about threats
to religious freedom are over.
Would that
were true. Unfortunately, even if the US Supreme Court strikes down the HHS
mandate or its relatives (the respective “employer” and “individual” mandates)
there are many other serious attacks on religious liberty demanding our
unrelenting vigilance and informed action. Consider these troubling scenarios:
First, several states have passed laws that forbid so-called harboring of
undocumented immigrants. According to an Alabama statute, for example, illegal
immigrants are forbidden to attend adult Scripture study groups or Sunday
school classes. Priests are barred from baptizing, administering the sacraments
of confession or anointing of the sick or offering pre-Cana instructions to illegal
immigrants. This state statute even goes so far as to prohibit Catholics
parishioners from encouraging undocumented immigrants to attend Mass or from transporting
them to Mass.
Second, in 2009, the Judiciary
Committee of the Connecticut legislature proposed a bill that would have forced
Catholic parishes to be restructured after a congregational model, reminiscent
of the 19th century trusteeism controversy, granting government the right to redefine
“religious minister” and “religious employer.”
Third, for the first time in its 100-year
history, University of California Hastings College of Law denied student-organization
status to the Christian Legal Society, because the group required its leaders
to be Christian and to abstain from pre- or extra-marital sex.
Fourth, after Catholic Charities of
the Archdioceses of Boston, San Francisco, and Washington and the state of
Illinois refused to place children with homosexual or unmarried heterosexual
couples, the respective municipal/state governments drove the respective Catholic
Charities out of the adoption business by revoking their licenses, ending their
government contracts, or both.
Fifth, New York City passed a rule
that prevented the Bronx Household of Faith and 60 other small churches from renting
public schools on weekends for their worship services, all the while allowing
secular groups to rent the same facilities for a myriad of activities.
Sixth, the federal government refused
to renew their contract with the USCCB’s Migration and Refugee Services for
their work on behalf of human trafficking victims, since the latter
conscientiously declined to provide, or refer the victims for, contraceptive
and abortion services.
Busting
the myths surrounding discussion of the HHS mandate is of paramount significance.
For if, today, the government can, with no counter-arguments from its citizenry,
invade our most fundamental freedomto worship and to live as our conscience
and faith dictatewhat will be next?