In the aftermath of the Nov. 6 elections, the U.S. bishops stressed
that they will push ahead with defending religious liberty from the
Obama administration’s contraception mandate, which cannot be lived with
as it stands.
"Currently the HHS mandate is on the books," said Archbishop William E.
Lori of Baltimore, who leads the bishops' ad hoc religious freedom
committee. "That's what we actually concretely have to deal with now."
"And as it stands, certainly we would not be able to live with it," he
explained, "especially the four-part definition of what Church activity
is."
"That's just not who we are, and we don't find it appropriate for any
government to draw lines in our mission where we don't draw them,"
Archbishop Lori said.
The archbishop explained that Church leaders are monitoring and engaged
in the ongoing federal rule-making process that will determine how
religious organizations are accommodated under that mandate, and as that
continues, "our range of options will probably become a little
clearer."
Archbishop Lori spoke at a Nov. 12 press conference during the U.S. bishops' fall general assembly in Baltimore.
He and other panelists reacted to the outcome of various ballot
measures in the Nov. 6 election.
The bishops explained that the Church
does not identify with any one political party because Catholic social
teaching transcends party agendas.
And Catholic teaching should not be seen as divided, added Archbishop
Salvatore J. Cordileone of San Francisco, who leads a conference
subcommittee on defending marriage.
He called it unfortunate that "a lot of our people view these issues politically, rather than through the lens of the Gospel."
If Catholics saw societal issues through the lens of the Church’s
social teaching and the common good, Archbishop Cordileone said they
would see "the consistency among all these issues," including life, the
economy and immigration.
The San Francisco archbishop said he was disappointed at the outcome of
referenda in Maryland, Maine and Washington state that approved a
redefinition of marriage, as well as the rejection of a constitutional
amendment to protect marriage in Minnesota.
"But rather than being a cause for giving up, it is a call to intensify efforts to strengthen and defend marriage," he said.
The archbishop observed that "this election is a symptom of a much
larger problem," namely, that many people do not understand what
marriage is.
"Marriage is not a matter of two consenting adults simply coming
together for the state to ratify their romantic relationship," he said.
"Rather, marriage is the only institution that unites a man and a woman
to each other and to any children born of their union."
"It's child-centered, and its meaning is written in our nature,"
Archbishop Cordileone told the press. "It's either this, or it's nothing
at all."
He stressed the need to continue working to increase educational
efforts and to "build a renewed culture of marriage and the family."
Archbishop Lori applauded the passage of a referendum upholding the
Dream Act in Maryland, allowing undocumented students to pay in-state
tuition in schools throughout the state.
Although the measure met with significant opposition when it was first
introduced into the legislature, the archbishop noted that "there was a
change in the public's perception" after a public education campaign
helped people understand how the law would benefit society.
He observed that this law continues in the Catholic Church's "long
heritage of offering educational opportunities for the disadvantaged."
Cardinal Seán O'Malley of Boston expressed gratitude to the diverse
coalition that came together to inform voters about the negative
consequences of a Massachusetts ballot initiative to legalize physician
assisted suicide.
The measure was narrowly defeated.
With the cooperation of medical organizations, newspapers, religious
groups and disability rights advocates, he said, "we were able to stop
this terrible assault on human life."
"At the same time, this calls us to be more focused on the fact that we
must do more to promote good palliative and hospice care at the end of
life," he added.
Noting that the Church has always been committed to compassionate
end-of-life care, he offered examples of ways that dioceses can work to
improve the quality of such care.
"We are called to comfort the sick, and not to help them take their own lives," Cardinal O’Malley remarked.