What Happens to American Catholics if the HHS Mandate is Enforced?
by
Carson Holloway
For more than a year, Americans have been lauding or protesting the HHS mandate
that requires employers to cover contraceptives, including
abortifacients, in their insurance policies. Since many employers don’t
object to such a policy, the debate has focused on Catholic employers,
who have a moral objection to contraception, and therefore to any
requirement that they directly subsidize it. These employers argue,
quite plausibly, that the free exercise clause of the Constitution
(“Congress shall make no law … prohibiting the free exercise [of
religion]”) entitles them to a religious exemption from the mandate.
This debate is welcome, because in a country that aspires to
constitutional government, it’s important to ask whether its policies
conform to its fundamental law. But this is not the whole inquiry. For
us, the Constitution provides the bare minimum: It establishes certain
rules that we should not violate, but it does not instruct us
comprehensively on what is decent, just, or humane public policy. Put
differently, the American way is more than just our written
Constitution. It is also the traditions and habits guiding the dynamic
between our government and society.
Accordingly, our duty to preserve what is best in America, and to
transmit it to the next generation, requires that we question not only
the constitutionality of public policy, but also its consistency with
the best of our political traditions. We can apply this method to the
HHS mandate by considering its likely consequences for American
society—not just for American Catholicism, but more broadly for the kind
of society we aspire to be.
Under its limited exemption policy, the government does not require
churches to cover contraceptives, but this hardly satisfies the concerns
of many American Catholics. Besides houses of worship, the Catholic
Church runs other institutions such as universities and hospitals, which
should be administered according to Catholic principles but are not
exempted from the mandate. The mandate creates a similar problem for
individual Catholics who seek to run businesses of their own in accord
with basic principles of Catholic moral teaching.
If the mandate remains in effect, it could cause a schism or a break
in the American Catholic Church. It does not take too much imagination
to see how this could happen. It is not a secret that many American
Catholics disagree with the Church’s teaching on the immorality of
contraception. If the mandate is retained and enforced, then Catholic
institutions will confront some hard choices. They can stop providing
any health insurance to their employees, and face fines or additional
taxes imposed by the federal government. They can provide insurance
without covering contraception and pay the penalties that the government
will impose. Or they can try to make themselves eligible for the narrow
exemption. That is, they can restrict their hiring only to Catholics
and provide services only to Catholics.
With such unattractive options, it is hard not to suspect that a few
Catholic institutions, perhaps administered by Catholics who privately
reject the Church’s teaching on contraception, would simply choose to
abide by the mandate. They would be able to keep operating, but at the
same time would put themselves in open rebellion against the nation’s
Catholic bishops. Thus our government will have provoked a schism in the
American Catholic Church by putting regulatory and financial pressure
on it.
At any rate, whether or not such a schism ensues, the mandate
certainly will reduce all faithful Catholics to the status of
second-class citizens. The Catholic Church will be reduced to
second-class citizenship among the nation’s churches. To be sure, it
will be permitted freely to function as a church: The government will
not molest it for preaching the gospel or administering the sacraments.
But if it tries to do more, to do what it has done for centuries and
what other churches still do—provide social services beyond purely
spiritual services—it will face penalties. If it tries to follow a
higher mandate than the HHS mandate—to organize institutions to feed the
hungry, nurse the sick, and educate the ignorant—it will have to pay a
fine to do so. This fine is essentially a steep admittance fee to the
public square for any church that does not accept the philosophy of
sexual liberation.
Catholic laity will face similar challenges. If a faithful Catholic
wishes to start a business, he or she will have to keep the business
small, so as to avoid the reach of the mandate. Or, if the business
grows and employs enough workers to fall under the mandate, the owner
will face the same tragic choices as formally Catholic institutions: Go
out of business, or pay fines and penalties that will drive you out of
business. Under the mandate, America will be a country where economic
sanctions are applied to keep the Catholic Church operating within very
strict limits and to keep Catholic laymen from becoming very successful
in business. The effect of all this is to minimize as much as possible
the social and economic influence of the Catholic Church and faithful
Catholic individuals.
Liberal defenders of the mandate might respond that the mandate
doesn’t really force second-class citizenship on Catholics. Catholics,
after all, would still have the fundamental rights of citizens: the
rights to vote, speak, write, and organize politically. As for the
problems they would incur by not conforming to the mandates, they
represent the just fate of any group that chooses to defy government
policy. Such an argument has some force, but it is very strange on the
lips of American liberals.
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