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Pelosi
Ridicules Catholic “Conscience
Thing”
by Bob Beauprez
November 25,2011
Nancy
Pelosi frequently likes to
remind us that she is a “devout Catholic,” yet she continually finds
herself at
odds with Catholic doctrine particularly as it relates to innocent
human
life. The Church
has long defended the
right for health care providers to refuse to perform abortions or
provide
contraception devices and procedures as a right of conscience under
First
Amendment protections. As
part of the
Democrats’ seizure of the health care industry with ObamaCare, Pelosi
led the
charge to attack the “Conscience Clause” protections originating in
1973
immediately following the Roe v. Wade decision, updated repeatedly over
the
years by Congress, and further clarified and strengthened in 2008
during the
Bush Administration.
As
the Obama Administration ramps up
for the implementation of ObamaCare, the issue has boiled up several
times. Most
recently, the Catholic
Church and the Obama Administration have spared over a mandate proposed
by HHS
that would require all private health plans to cover sterilizations and
contraceptives, including those that cause abortion, under the broad
definition
of “preventive services.”
Since
the ObamaCare legislation also
requires every citizen to buy health insurance, the government mandate
would
force Catholics to buy health care plans that violate Catholic doctrine. Catholic insurance agents
would face the
additional dilemma of selling a product that violates the moral
teachings of
the Church, or change professions.
The
U.S. Conference of Catholic
Bishops objected to the newly proposed mandate as a violation of
Conscience
Clause protections and the First Amendment.
“Indeed, such nationwide government coercion
of religious people and
groups to sell, broker, or purchase ‘services’ to which they have a
moral or
religious objection represents an unprecedented attack on religious
liberty,”
the bishops said.
As
explained in an official CRS Report
to Congress, the Conscience Clause provides that “public officials may
not
require individuals or entities who receive certain public funds to
perform
abortion or sterilization procedures or to make facilities or personnel
available for the performance of such procedures if such performance
‘would be
contrary to [the individual or entity’s] religious beliefs or moral
convictions.’”
Because
of ambiguities in the language
of the ObamaCare legislation, House Republicans brought forward H.R.
358, The
Protect Life Act, in October 2011 to preserve Conscience Clause
protections for
health care providers and to restate the ban on federal taxpayer
funding for
abortion. The
legislation was consistent
“with the original Stupak Amendment” according to Joe Pitts (R-PA), a
sponsor
of the bill, as well as the co-author of the original Stupak Amendment
offered
in the House during the ObamaCare and supposedly affirmed by Executive
Order
signed by Barack Obama to pacify pro-life Democrats prior to the
passage of
ObamaCare.
The
pro-abortion crowd renamed the
bill the “Let Women Die Act.” Pelosi
characterized the legislation as “savage” and said, “When the
Republicans vote
for this bill today, they will be voting to say that women can die on
the floor
and health-care providers do not have to intervene, if this bill is
passed.
It’s just appalling.” Pelosi
made the
outrageous claim even though H.R. 358 contained exceptions as found in
the
landmark Hyde Amendment for “abortions performed due to the child’s
conception
in rape or incest or to save the life of the mother.”
The
Protect Life Act passed the House
on Oct. 13, 2011 by a 251-172 margin, with just 15 Democrats voting
with the
Republicans. There
are about 90
Democrats in the House that list “Catholic” as their faith, so Pelosi
wasn’t
the only Catholic Democrat that voted contrary to Church teaching. Thus far, Harry Reid has
blocked the Act from
a vote in the Senate.
The
Washington Post recently
questioned Pelosi about the bishops’ concern over the proposed
ObamaCare
insurance mandate to cover contraception and abortion, and offered her
a chance
to back away from her over-the-top criticism of the Protect Life Act. Instead she dug in her
heels and blasted
Catholic teaching yet again.
According
to the Washington Post, the
former Speaker and current Minority Leader of the House Democrats said
the
Protect Life Act amounted to letting hospitals “say to a woman, ‘I’m
sorry you
could die’ if you don’t get an abortion.”
Those who dispute that characterization “may
not like the language,” she
said, “but the truth is what I said.
I’m
a devout Catholic and I honor my faith and love it…but they (Catholics)
have
this conscience thing” that she insists put women at physical risk,
although
Catholic health care providers strongly disagree.
During
the campaign of 2008,
Presidential Candidate Barack Obama was asked by Pastor Rick Warren,
“At what
point does a baby get human rights?”
Obama stoked an already smoldering controversy
by evaded answering
Warren’s question with his dismissive reply, “Answering that question
with
specificity is above my pay-grade.”
The
dodge to Pastor Warren’s question became a campaign issue. And, Pelosi
was
drawn into it when subsequently on Meet the Press, Tom Brokaw asked
Nancy
Pelosi “if he (Obama) were to come to you and say, ‘Help me out here,
Madam
Speaker. When does
life begin? What
would you tell him?”
Pelosi
replied, “As an ardent
practicing Catholic, this is an issue that I have studied for a long
time. And, what I
know is that over the centuries
the doctors of the Church have not been able to make the definition.”
Immediately
Catholic Bishops across
America blasted Pelosi’s falsehood.
Charles J. Chaput, then the Archbishop of
Denver and recently installed
as the Archbishop of Philadelphia, published a condemnation of Pelosi’s
comments the day following her Meet the Press interview. “Abortion kills an unborn,
developing human
life. It is always
gravely evil, and so
are the evasions employed to justify it,” wrote Chaput and Denver
Auxiliary
Bishop James Conley. “Catholics
who
make excuses for it – whether they’re famous or not – fool only
themselves and
abuse the fidelity of those Catholics who do sincerely seek to follow
the
Gospel and live their Catholic faith,” the bishops’ joint statement
adds.
Bishops
Chaput and Conley blow apart
Pelosi’s contention that her “study” of the teachings of Catholic
theologians
had revealed to her that Church doctrine is unsettled on the question
of the
beginning of life. The
Bishops’ explain
that “ardent, practicing Catholics will quickly learn from the
historical
record that from apostolic times, the Christian tradition
overwhelmingly held
that abortion was grievously evil.”
In
the absence of modern medical knowledge, the Bishops acknowledge that
Church
leaders grappled with the question of “animation” of the fetus, or when
it
became “ensouled.” But,
never has the
Church questioned when life began or “the unique evil of abortion as an
attack
on life itself, and the early Church closely associated abortion with
infanticide.”
That
many Catholics, including many in
elected office, take exception with and choose to live outside the
teachings of
the Church is obvious, but that is a far cry from latitude to redefine
and
falsely profess Catholic doctrine.
The
Speaker of the House or even Minority Leader wields considerable power,
but
even these lofty positions don’t include theological credentials.
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