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Military Chaplains Instructed Not to Read Letter Against HHS Mandate (2138)

Archbishop Timothy Broglio says the Army defied his rights and chaplains' rights to free speech and free exercise of religion.

02/07/2012 Comments (8)
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The archbishop who oversees global Catholic military chaplains claims the U.S. Army violated his rights by stifling a pastoral letter condemning the Obama administration’s contraception mandate.

Archbishop Timothy Broglio stands “firm in the belief, based on legal precedent,” that the Army defied his rights to free speech and free exercise of religion, according to a Feb. 3 statement from the Military Archdiocese.

U.S. Catholic military chaplains around the country were initially told to disobey their archbishop’s instruction to read a pastoral letter from the pulpit at all Sunday Masses on Jan. 28-29.

Although an agreement was eventually reached allowing the letter to be read, a key passage urging Catholics to avoid complying with the “unjust law” was removed.

On Jan. 20, the Department of Health and Human Services announced a new mandate that will soon require virtually all employers to purchase health insurance coverage that includes contraception, sterilization and drugs that cause abortion.

The announcement sparked protest around the country, as Catholic leaders and religious organizations argued that they were being coerced to violate their religious beliefs.

Although a religious exemption to the mandate exists, it does not apply to organizations that are willing to serve or employ members of other faiths. As the mandate stands, most Catholic schools, hospitals and charity organizations would be excluded from the exemption.

More than 150 Catholic bishops across the country have spoken out against the directive, saying that it violates the First Amendment’s guarantee of religious freedom. Several have called for civil disobedience in response to the new regulation.

On Jan. 26, Archbishop Broglio joined many of his fellow bishops around the country in issuing a pastoral letter on the mandate to be read from the pulpit at all Sunday Masses throughout the following weekend.

The pastoral letter argued that the mandate violated the religious freedom protected in the U.S. Constitution and called on Catholics to resist it.

However, according to the archdiocese’s statement, the Army’s Office of the Chief of Chaplains sent out an email instructing that the letter “not be read from the pulpit.”

The email said that the letter could instead be mentioned in the Mass announcements and distributed at the back of the chapel, but that it had not been coordinated with the office and should not be read during Mass.

After a discussion between Archbishop Broglio and Secretary of the Army John McHugh, “it was agreed that it was a mistake to stop the reading” of the letter.

However, the line, “We cannot, we will not, comply with this unjust law” was removed from the letter by the archbishop at the prompting of Secretary McHugh, who believed that it “could potentially be misunderstood as a call to civil disobedience.”

According to the archdiocese, Archbishop Broglio believes the move violated both his rights and “those same rights of all military chaplains and their congregants.”

The archdiocese did not give any indication that it intends to pursue legal action over the incident. It said that it “did not receive any objections to the reading of Archbishop Broglio’s statement from the other branches of service.”

 

 

Filed under contraception mandate, hhs, military chaplains

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Is this headline needlessly inflammatory?  This issue has been resolved, an apology was made and the archbishop agreed to take out that Lorne because he agreed that it could be construed as calling soldiers to civil disobedience by the authority of the church.  The HHS Mandate has NOT been resolved and it weakens our case to expend incendiary rhetoric on things that are already resolved.  Let’s keep our eye on the ball.

Another example about how this Administration will stifle freedom of speech and freedom of conscience in the name of supporting its agenda on abortion, contraception, and homosexual “rights.”  Time to make sure this Administration is challenged frontally, vigorously, directly, and painfully by America’s Catholics as long as it is in office, and after November 8 is OUT OF OFFICE.

the uh, modern, all volunteer, drug addled, gang infested, queer, and corrupt officer and nco corp. military, makes me feel oh so safe…

Thank you Archbishop Broglio for standing strong!  Thank your for being a leader of your people who leads courageously!

Military disobedience is one thing…Civil disobedience is another.  I also contend any military order in this matter is unlawful and must be disobeyed.  This is outside military law.

God Bless you, Archbishop Broglio and others.  Stand strong…Be not Afraid!!!

Archbishop Broglio’s rights were violated. Nothing should have been changed.

“Render unto Caesar…”  Couple this tyrannical order with the repeal of “Don’t Ask Don’t Tell”.  I am reminded of the mutiny of Catholic soldiers in the Mexican-American War due to the army’s desecration of Churches.

Why don’t you mention that the Army Chief of Chaplains is a Catholic priest? It was a Catholic priest—CH (MG) Donald Rutherford, the highest ranking priest in the chaplaincy—who had an issue with reading the letter from the pulpiet. It was he who suggested it would be better referring to it in announcements and then handing it out. This makes a difference. Why didn’t Broglio call him up and talk to him about it? Was he deliberately trying to embarrass his own most senior chaplain?

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