I read part of it at Mass today: “[T]he government
is refusing to uphold its obligation to respect the rights of religious
believers. Beginning in March 2012, in United for Religious Freedom, we
identified three basic problems with the HHS mandate: it establishes a false
architecture of religious liberty that excludes our ministries and so reduces
freedom of religion to freedom of worship; it compels our ministries to
participate in providing employees with abortifacient drugs and devices,
sterilization, and contraception, which violates our deeply-held beliefs; and
it compels our faithful people in business to act against our teachings,
failing to provide them any exemption at all.
Despite our repeated efforts to work and dialogue toward a solution,
those problems remain. Not only does the mandate undermine our ministries’
ability to witness to our faith, which is their core mission, but the penalties
it imposes also lay a great burden on those ministries, threatening their very
ability to survive and to serve the many who rely on their care.”
The ministries
that suffer are feeding the poor, healing the sick, educating the young. If all the bishops of this
country are correct—and I’d like to think they are—it brings to mind several
questions: What is the hold up? Why has
this persecution been happening for over an year and a half? Are we in denial that a persecution is
actually happening? Maybe this is why
about a year ago Francis Cardinal George of Chicago said: “I will die in my
bed. My successor will die in prison. His successor will be martyred.” Back to the questions that come to mind: Is
religious freedom not important any more?
It was important to our founding fathers.
We
have had a major election since March of 2012 when all this started. If Catholics are such a large voting block, why
are the persecuting politicians still in office? Have we willingly forfeited the very basic
human right of religious freedom in exchange for a promise of handouts of
temporal goods? Is it too abstract? I hope not.
It forces people to pay for the killing of human beings. It forces people to pay for the very things
that have been proven to destroy families over the last 50 years.
There
is Good News: Christ has a plan that
works. The challenge is the same: Christ has a plan that works. The evil one and the culture of death do not want
us to bring about his plan. The Lord
tells us in today’s Gospel: “It will lead you to giving testimony.” The message is countercultural, and Catholic
Christians will have to act in a countercultural way.
I
wanted to preach on vocations today. The
Archdiocese is celebrating Vocation Awareness Week. I love preaching on vocations. However, the more time I spent with this
Gospel, the more I kept coming back to the Special Message of the Bishops. It reminds me of the thing the bishops have been saying over the past year and a half: We didn't ask for this fight. We would rather not be in it. We would rather be in the business of teaching, healing, feeding.
Are
we up to the challenge of the Cross? Are
we up to giving the Christian testimony to the next generation by our example? Christ has set the example for us. Now we are to set the example. Hopefully, the Lord’s words at the end of the
Gospel will be consoling: “By your perseverance, you will secure your lives.”