Archbishop Charles J. Chaput of Philadelphia says Americans need to
awaken to threats against religious freedom given the new revelations
about IRS targeting of religious groups and the continued burdens of the
HHS mandate.
“The day when Americans could take the Founders’ understanding of
religious freedom as a given is over. We need to wake up,” Archbishop
Chaput said in his May 24th column for CatholicPhilly.com.
“Selective IRS pressure on religious individuals and organizations has
drawn very little media attention. Nor should we expect any, any time
soon,” he said.
“But the latest IRS ugliness is a hint of the treatment disfavored
religious groups may face in the future, if we sleep through the
national discussion of religious liberty now.”
Although the IRS controversy initially focused on allegations the agency
selectively targeted conservative-leaning “tea party” groups with
burdensome demands, more incidents against other groups and individuals
have been brought to light.
Anne Hendershott, a Catholic professor and writer, has said her Internal
Revenue Service audit focused on her writings critical of President
Obama and the 2010 health care legislation. She said the audit
discouraged her from criticizing the president.
The IRS asked pro-life groups to provide large amounts of paperwork. The
agency asked the groups to promise not to protest Planned parenthood or
to say whether they planned to educate the public about both sides of
the abortion issue. An IRS employee in 2012 allegedly leaked a
confidential donor’s list from the National Organization for Marriage to
the Human Rights Campaign, a backer of “gay marriage” whose president
was named national co-chair of the Obama campaign.
Archbishop Chaput said the mandate from the Department of Health and Human Services similarly pressures religious groups.
Although the Catholic bishops have long supported access to adequate
health care coverage, he said, “health care has now morphed into a
religious liberty issue provoked entirely – and needlessly — by the
current White House.”
He said the Obama administration, despite “a few small concessions,”
refuses to withdraw or “reasonably modify” the mandate requiring
insurance coverage for sterilizations, contraceptives and abortifacient
drugs. Archbishop Chaput said the mandate “violates the moral and
religious convictions of many individuals, private employers and
religiously affiliated and inspired organizations.”
He said the mandate “can only be understood as a form of coercion.”
“Access to inexpensive contraception is a problem nowhere in the United
States,” the archbishop said. “The mandate is thus an ideological
statement; the imposition of a preferential option for infertility. And
if millions of Americans disagree with it on principle – too bad.”
He said that these controversies show that the debate on issues of
sexual morality needs “a parallel and vigorous defense of religious
freedom.”
The U.S. bishops’ conference will hold another Fortnight for Freedom
from June 21-July 4. Like last year, it will feature public rallies,
prayer vigils and Masses for the defense of religious freedom.