Washington D.C., Nov 2, 2011 / 01:50 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, the U.S. bishopsâ pro-life committee chairman, urged the Health and Human Services Department to respect religious beliefs as it considers finalizing a mandate that would require health insurance providers to cover contraception.
âCatholic organizations committed to their moral and religious teaching will have no choice but to stop providing health care and other services to the needy who are not Catholic, or stop providing health coverage to their own employees,â said Cardinal Daniel DiNardo of Galveston-Houston.
âThis is an intolerable dilemma, and either choice will mean reduced access to health care.â
The Health and Human Services department announced federal rules on Aug. 1 that could require nearly all new health plans, including those of most religious agencies, to cover all government-approved! methods of contraception as well as surgical sterilization.
The mandate comes with a religious exemption that narrowly defines religious employers as those who employ and serve members of their own religion for the purpose of teaching religious doctrine.
âJesus and the apostles would not be âreligious enoughâ under such a test, as they served and healed people of different religions,â Cardinal DiNardo said on the eve of a hearing by the U.S. House of Representatives on conscience protections.
In a Nov. 1 letter to subcommittee chairman Rep. Joseph Pitts (R-Penn.), the cardinal outlined his support for the Respect for Rights of Conscience Act and other moves to address potential problems with health care reform.
He noted that the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act âexcluded longstanding protections for conscience rights on abortion, by failing to apply the annual Hyde/Weldon amendment to the billions of dollars newly appropriat! ed by the Act.â
âAnd it created new open-ended mand! ates for âessential health benefitsâ and âpreventive servicesâ to be included in almost all private health plans, without any provision for individuals or institutions that may have a moral or religious objection to particular items or procedures,â he added.
Cardinal DiNardo stressed that a lack of conscience protections would ultimately lead to more harm than goodâ"not only because less people would receive the basic health care that religious groups provide but because the fundamental right to religious freedom would be violated.
âIs the drive to maximize contraceptive coverage, even among those who do not want it, such an urgent national priority that it transcends concerns about religious liberty, our nationâs âFirst Freedom,â as well as concerns about womenâs health and about access to basic health care for men and women alike?â he asked.
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