It is very sad that the religious freedom of our country has become a partisan issue. Somehow the spin artists have tried to make it a women’s issue rather than a religious freedom issue. This is not about women’s rights; it is about religious liberty and freedom of expression of conscience for everyone. I cannot believe that the U. S. Senate Democrats are too blinded by politics to see this. I believe that Cardinal Dolan has expressed the issue well in this quote:
Religious freedom is a fundamental right of all. This right does not depend on any government’s decision to grant it: it is God-given, and just societies recognize and respect its free exercise. The free exercise of religion extends well beyond the freedom of worship. It also forbids government from forcing people or groups to violate their most deeply held religious convictions, and from interfering in the internal affairs of religious organizations.
Recent actions by the Administration have attempted to reduce this free exercise to a “privilege” arbitrarily granted by the government as a mere exemption from an all-encompassing, extreme form of secularism. The exemption is too narrowly defined, because it does not exempt most non-profit religious employers, the religiously affiliated insurer, the self-insured employer, the for-profit religious employer, or other private businesses owned and operated by people who rightly object to paying for abortion inducing drugs, sterilization, and contraception. And because it is instituted only by executive whim, even this unduly narrow exemption can be taken away easily.
In the United States, religious liberty does not depend on the benevolence of who is regulating us. It is our “first freedom” and respect for it must be broad and inclusive—not narrow and exclusive. Catholics and other people of faith and good will are not second class citizens. And it is not for the government to decide which of our ministries is “religious enough” to warrant religious freedom protection.
This is not just about contraception, abortion-causing drugs, and sterilization—although all should recognize the injustices involved in making them part of a universal mandated health care program. It is not about Republicans or Democrats, conservatives or liberals. It is about people of faith. This is first and foremost a matter of religious liberty for all. If the government can, for example, tell Catholics that they cannot be in the insurance business today without violating their religious convictions, where does it end? This violates the constitutional limits on our government, and the basic rights upon which our country was founded.
From the letter by Cardinal Dolan to the Catholic Bishops dated Feb. 22, 2012
One reply on “Senate vote is very misguided”
[…] Excerpted Recommended PASTOR LEADERS article FROM http://www.kirkvillewesleyan.org/pastorsdesk/2012/03/senate-vote-is-very-misguided/h148(); […]