As the U.S. government shutdown continues, lawmakers are being urged to
authorize the celebration of Mass by contract priests, who could
otherwise face arrest for their routine ministry on military bases.
“Until the Federal Government resumes normal operations, or an exemption
is granted to contract and (government services) priests, Catholic
services are indefinitely suspended” at many military installations
served by these priests throughout the world, warned John Schlageter,
general counsel for the U.S. Archdiocese for the Military Services.
Lawmakers’ failure to reach an agreement on federal spending and the
health care law prompted a shutdown of many government agencies that
were not deemed “essential,” beginning Oct. 1.
In addition to affecting federal workers and participants in federal
programs, the shutdown has impacted military bases throughout the world,
where many Catholic service members rely upon contract priests for
Sunday Mass and other sacraments and ministries.
In an Oct. 3 op-ed, Schlageter warned that non-active duty Catholic
priests have been banned from carrying out their ministry on military
installations during the government shutdown, meaning that some military
personnel will be forced to “go without Mass.”
He explained that there is “a chronic shortage of active duty Catholic
chaplains,” with only 234 active-duty priests serving the some 275,000
Catholic members of the military.
To help ease the burden, he said, government service and contract
priests are employed by the government to “ensure that a priest is
available when an active duty Catholic Chaplain is not present.”
However, the government shutdown means that many of these priests on
military bases across the globe “are not permitted to work – not even to
volunteer.”
“During the shutdown, it is illegal for them to minister on base and they risk being arrested if they attempt to do so.”
Shortly after his op-ed was released, a resolution was introduced in the
House of Representatives to allow religious services to continue on
military installations during the shutdown.
The resolution “recognizes that the performance of religious Services
and the provision of ministry are protected activities under the First
Amendment of the United States Constitution.”
It asks Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel to “permit the performance of
religious services on property owned or maintained by the Department of
Defense” and to allow military chaplains to perform their ministry to
the same extent that they did before the shutdown.
The resolution was passed by the House in a 400-1 vote on Oct. 5 and has now been sent to the Senate.
Military Archbishop Timothy P. Broglio applauded the resolution as a way
to ensure that men and women in uniform can practice their faith as
they serve their country.
“Military personnel enjoy, like all Americans, the First Amendment
guarantee of the ‘Free Exercise’ of religion,” he said in an Oct. 5
statement. “In the current political climate, however, nothing can be
taken for granted.”
The archbishop thanked the House of Representatives for supporting the
measure and voiced hope that the Senate will also “act decisively” to
support the First Amendment.