While
I find it heartening that so many Catholic institutions have risen to
the challenge of the Obamacare contraceptive and abortifacient
insurance mandate forcing every Catholic institution that isn’t
actually centered on an altar to offer these “services”, I am
growing uneasy about the too-narrow grounds upon which they are
basing their legal and Constitutional argument. I fear we are
storing up trouble, the kind that can cost us the war even if we win
this battle.
Of
course it is wrong to force Catholic and other organizations to
subsidize and in effect promote life-destroying technologies that
violate their deepest beliefs. Of course the "exception"
to the rule is drawn so narrowly that one pundit stated that Jesus
himself would not qualify. Of course the "compromise"
offered to indignant pro-life organizations (that they wouldn't pay
for the morally repugnant services, their insurance companies would
-- with the money they got from the pro-life organizations) was a
transparent dodge and an insult to intelligence. Of course these
organizations have the right and the obligation to oppose this
mandate.
However,
the true foundation of the right to oppose this dreadful imposition
is being omitted in all of the arguments in court and in the court of
popular opinion. We cannot afford the risk of leaving it unsaid, so
I'll put it simply and clearly.
We
do not derive the right to oppose this monstrous diktat from our
membership in a Catholic organization, be it the Catholic Church, the
Knights of Columbus, or any other organization. We are not given our
rights by the government, or even the Constitution. We betray the
founding of this nation under God when we think so.
We
are children of God, and from God do we receive our rights of
conscience! The founders of this nation knew this very well. It is
not the purpose of government to grant us rights; it is the
obligation of government to protect our God-given rights from the
impositions of others, even if (perhaps especially if) those
imposing are in the government.
By
not pressing this argument of individual, God-granted rights, we risk
allowing the idea that only groups of people large enough to battle
other groups or the government bulldozer possess rights that our
rulers are bound to respect. (I'm hoping that at least some of my
readers were angered at seeing the word "rulers" in the
previous sentence.)
The
genius of the founding of this republic, a genius that has at times
worn perilously thin in the last 50 years was that an individual's
God-given rights could not be taken away or diminished, even if the
rest of the country were against him. In the classic movie Judgment
at Nuremberg, Judge Haywood (played by Spencer Tracy) speaks of the
value of "a single human life". Here in America, we speak
of a single human's rights. While we must band together to defend
our right to refuse to violate our consciences, no matter who insists
that we must, our rights do not come from numbers. They come from
God.
My
ruler does not abide in Washington or Albany. My only ruler dwells
in Heaven, and it is to Him that I will one day have to answer to.
He tells me that life is the sacred gift of God, and is most
demanding of my defending when it is at its most helpless. He tells
me that His law is above all human law. He says that the unborn
child in the womb, no matter the stage of development, is my brother
or sister in Christ. He says that marriage is, and can only be, a
union under God of one man and one woman. He says that I have rights
from His grace, and not from the "grace" of any earthly
master.
And I believe.
And I believe.
No comments:
Post a Comment