Tag Archives: religion

Op-ed: Faith and Works

Faith and Works: Religious Liberty Essential for Both
by Joshua Mercer

The Bishops are using this year’s Fortnight for Freedom to remind Catholics that we cannot be just a service agency nor can we be a church focused only on worship and teaching.

Our Catholic faith calls us to more. We must be united in faith and work: Our outreach and service to others must be motivated by our faith and must be conducted in keeping with our faith.

As Scripture reminds us:

What good is it, my brothers, if someone says he has faith but does not have works? Can that faith save him? If a brother or sister has nothing to wear and has no food for the day, and one of you says to them, “Go in peace, keep warm, and eat well,” but you do not give them the necessities of the body, what good is it? So also faith of itself, if it does not have works, is dead.” (Jas 2:14-17)

We are called, therefore, to integrate our Catholic faith into all the good that we do.

As Archbishop William Lori of Baltimore explained in his homily on June 21, the first Sunday of the Fortnight: “The Church does not have two wings: a ‘faith-and-worship’ division on the one hand, and a ‘service’ division on the other. Quite the contrary. We cannot claim to love God without loving our neighbor. What we believe and how we worship gives rise to a life of service.”

And yet, our federal government seems to be trying to drive a wedge between the faith aspects of a church and the services aspects of a church, as though the two can be separated.

Under the traditional definition of religious freedom, a church and its affiliated institutions all have religious-liberty protections. A church is free to act according to its teachings and its moral conscience, not only in how it worships but also in how it manages its ministries and institutions.

The Obama administration, however, has already argued in front of the U.S. Supreme Court for a new definition of religious freedom. It seeks to define religious freedom much more narrowly as a mere “freedom of worship” which, while still protecting the four walls of a church insofar as it conducts religious ceremonies, does not extend that religious freedom to its hospitals, schools, universities, adoption agencies, soup kitchens, and other such institutions.

The Supreme Court pushed back 9-0 against this extremely narrow definition in the Hosanna-Tabor v. EEOC decision, but that didn’t stop the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services from imposing its mandate, issued under the Affordable Care Act, requiring employers to offer health insurance plans covering sterilizations and contraceptive drugs, including some that can cause abortions. The mandate provided for an exemption for religious employers, but one so narrowly defined that “[o]nly those organizations that hire their own, serve their own, and exist primarily to inculcate their own doctrine qualify for this exemption,” as explained on the U.S. bishops’ website. Such a definition might exempt a local Catholic parish that employs an all-Catholic staff, but it would not exempt a faith-based Catholic ministry that hires and serves both Catholics and non-Catholics.

Particularly for the institutions of the Catholic Church, which teaches that artificial contraceptive, elective sterilizations, and abortifacient drugs are morally objectionable, it goes against our moral conscience to be forced to provide or facilitate such “services” through employee health-benefits programs. Many other faith groups that do not share the Catholic view on contraception nevertheless support the fight against the HHS mandate, either because they oppose the coverage for abortion-causing drugs or because they simply recognize the HHS mandate as a serious encroachment upon religious freedom.

Despite repeated public calls from the Catholic bishops and a record deluge of public comments to HHS, the Obama administration has continually refused to offer religious-liberty protections to the vast majority of religious-affiliated institutions. Its much-touted “accommodation” is a sleight-of-hand measure that does nothing to satisfy the objections of the Catholic dioceses and organizations that have filed suit against the government to block the mandate.

Such an intervention into a church’s internal affairs by the federal government flies in the face of some of the basic freedoms for which our Founding Fathers worked and so many of our men and women of the armed services have fought and died.

As Archbishop Lori said in his homily:

Let’s be clear. The efforts of the government to divide the Church into a worship wing and a service wing do not spring from a theoretical interest in how churches are organized. It is part of a broader movement to limit religious freedom to freedom of worship — to accord a fuller degree of religious liberty to houses of worship but a lesser degree of religious freedom to charities, hospitals, and universities.

As chair of the U.S. bishops’ Ad Hoc Committee for Religious Liberty, Archbishop Lori knows exactly what is at stake in this fight. He and his brother bishops seem determined to fight this oppressive HHS mandate all the way to the Supreme Court, if necessary, to win.

“If left unchecked,” said Archbishop Lori, “this tendency will continue to diminish the influence of religion in helping to shape the character of our country, not only by our words but above all by the way we conduct our ministries of service.”

If the federal government can succeed in taking away the right of a Catholic school or hospital to operate in accordance with our Church’s teachings, then we will have lost a cherished right.

If we want future generations to enjoy freedom on the Fourth of July, then let’s join in solidarity with our Bishops in prayer, education, and action — both during this Fortnight for Freedom and beyond. Find out how by visiting http://www.Fortnight4Freedom.org.

Joshua Mercer is Director of Communications and co-founder of CatholicVote.org, a grassroots organization that provides a voice in politics for hundreds of thousands of lay Catholics. Previously, he served as Chairman of Students for Life of America and also Washington Correspondent for the National Catholic Register.

From catholicpulse.com and the Knights of Columbus

Pope’s Mass and Angelus for the Feast of Sts. Peter and Paul

(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis marked the Solemnity of Saints Peter and Paul with Mass in St Peter’s Basilica, during which he imposed the pallium on thirty-four of the metropolitan archbishops installed over the past year. The pallium is the white, shawl-like woolen liturgical vestment worn over the shoulders of a metropolitan archbishop, which is the peculiar sign of a metropolitan’s office: it specifically symbolizes authority and union with the Holy See. Each year on the feast, the Metropolitan archbishops installed during the course of the preceding year travel to Rome to receive the vestment. The solemnity is also one of the two days in the liturgical year in which the ancient bronze statue of St Peter in the basilica is symbolically vested in an ornate red silk cope and crowned with the triple tiara. Read more.

The Concho Padre

Solemnity of the Birth of John the Baptist – June 24

Grant,
we pray, almighty God,
that your family may walk in the way of salvation and,
attentive to what Saint John the Precursor urged,
may come safely to the One he foretold, our Lord Jesus Christ.
Who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit,
one God, for ever and ever.
– Amen.

Fortnight for Freedom

As we begin the Fortnight for Freedom, one can hardly ignore today’s Feast of St. Thomas More.

Here is a Litany in his honor.

Litany of St. Thomas More,
Martyr and Patron Saint of Statesmen, Politicians and Lawyers

V. Lord, have mercy
R. Lord have mercy
V. Christ, have mercy
R. Christ have mercy
V. Lord, have mercy
R. Lord have mercy
V. Christ hear us
R. Christ, graciously hear us

V. St. Thomas More, Saint and Martyr,
R. Pray for us (Repeat after each invocation)
St. Thomas More, Patron of Statesmen, Politicians and Lawyers
St. Thomas More, Patron of Justices, Judges and Magistrates
St. Thomas More, Model of Integrity and Virtue in Public and Private Life
St. Thomas More, Servant of the Word of God and the Body and Blood of Christ
St. Thomas More, Model of Holiness in the Sacrament of Marriage
St. Thomas More, Teacher of his Children in the Catholic Faith
St. Thomas More, Defender of the Weak and the Poor
St. Thomas More, Promoter of Human Life and Dignity

V. Lamb of God, you take away the sin of the world
R. Spare us O Lord
V. Lamb of God, you take away the sin of the world
R. Graciously hear us O Lord
V. Lamb of God, you take away the sin of the world
R. Have mercy on us

Let us pray:

O Glorious St. Thomas More, Patron of Statesmen, Politicians, Judges and Lawyers, your life of prayer and penance and your zeal for justice, integrity and firm principle in public and family life led you to the path of martyrdom and sainthood. Intercede for our Statesmen, Politicians, Judges and Lawyers, that they may be courageous and effective in their defense and promotion of the sanctity of human life – the foundation of all other human rights. We ask this through Christ our Lord.

R. Amen.

The Concho Padre

Twelfth Sunday in Ordinary Time

Grant, O Lord,
that we may always revere and love your holy name
for you never deprive of your guidance
those you set firm on the foundation of your love.
Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son,
who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, for ever and ever.
– Amen.

Pope Francis: “the grace not to speak ill of others.”

(Vatican Radio) May the Lord grant us the grace to watch our tongues and be careful of what we say of others, because through our weakness and sin, we often find it easier to insult and denigrate than say or do good. This was the lesson at the heart of Pope Francis’ homily Thursday morning at Mass, which he celebrated in his native Spanish. Greeting the men and women who work at Argentina’s embassies and consulates to Italy and the UN Food and Agricultural Organization in Rome, Pope Francis noted “It’s the first time I have celebrated Mass in Spanish since February 26th!, adding “it feels good!”. Read more in the report from Vatican Radio.

The Concho Padre

Francis continues Benedict XVI’s work against child sex abuse

After this morning’s mass in St. Martha’s House, the Pope encouraged the Pontifical Gregorian University’s Hans Zollner, head of the Center for the Protection of Children, to “move ahead with the commitment against child sex abuse.”

Fr. Zollner told Vatican Radio that “after the mass, we had a chance to greet the Pope. There were three of us from the Gregorian University Center for Child Protection. We presented the project to the Pope. I was joined by our Polish representative and the person who is helping me prepare the canonical and theological education units for the long-distance learning program we want to introduce worldwide. The Pope listened very carefully, stressing on a number of occasions how important our work was.”

The encouragement given by Francis for the anti-pedophilia efforts to continue, follows on from Benedict XVI’s work. Francis himself sent out a message during the Angelus prayer last May 5, inviting us to work for the good of the most vulnerable and children.”

This is in continuity with Benedict XVI’s work in the field. Four months ago we presented him with the proceedings of the symposium we celebrated at the Gregorian University in February 2012. The symposium was attended by bishops’ conferences from all around the world, who discussed ways to prevent crimes against children.”

The Concho Padre, from various sources