J
JReducation
Guest
Dale, I think that you may be missing two key points here.
First, no constitution, of any nation, has the right to violate the law of God. Therefore, no constitution can protect what God prohibits.
Second, from the standpoint of rights, if you have same-sex marriage or same-sex civil unions, these come with very specific civil rights. One of them being the right to family benefits.
The Catholic Church is one the largest employers in this country. We employ people at all levels and in many programs and institutions. If DOMA falls, these couples will have the right to claim family leave, healthcare insurance and other benefits that are normally given only to married people. Those institutions that refuse these benefits to same-sex couples will be fined for discrimination.
On the flipside, these institutions have to refuse those benefits, because these are not married people or natural families.
The weakside of the Federal Govt’s agenda is that it does not offer the same benefits to heterosexual couples who are cohabiting. In essence, the federal government is involving itself in the redefining marriage, when it’s role is to protect the rights of those who are married, not define marriage. Marriage has already been defined by natural law.
The next problem, besides benefits comes in the area of services. The Catholic Church has not problems providing services for gays, lesbians and transgender people. We do it all the time. Mother Teresa has homes for AIDS victims all around the world and many of these patients are gay. They are not denied services or loving care. We have Courage Ministry to Catholic gay and lesbian people. We have regulations and moral laws that protect the human rights of gay and lesbian people. However, we provide these services to them as individuals, not as couples.
If DOMA is overturned, what happened in Boston and Washington, DC will happen all across the country. We will have close our adoption programs, because we do not place children in the homes of gay couples. We will have to employ gay couples, if they qualify for employment. Currenlty, we employ gay and lesbian women in our institutioins as individuals. But we do not employ couples unless they are married.
Imposing these obligations on religious institutions violates the religious rights of citizens. These religious institutioins are financed and operated by citizens. These citizens have a right to run their institutions according to their religious beliefs as long as these do not violate human rights. That’s when you run into a constitutional problem.
Serparation of Church and State is the greatest myth in the world. The Untied States has never had such a separation and it was never intended. The only thing that was intended was that the Federal Government should not adopt an official religion as did the English government. However, even after the erection of the United States, some of the individual states had a state religion.
Also, the states still use the services of the churches, especially Catholics, Baptists and Jews, because the states cannot meet the demands for healthcare, higher education, services and care for people with disabilities, services and care for seniors or services for its Armed Forces. It is cheaper for the states to pay religious institutions to provide these services than to operate them.
I was stationed in the Archdiocese of Washington. The Archdiocese was the only provider of housing and educational service to adults with mental retardation. The District of Columbia had to pay the Archdiocese, because it could not open its own agency. When the number of clients exceeded the system’s ability to serve, they system turned to the Archdiocese, because the Archdiocese was running Kennedy Institute since the early 1960s very successfully and very economically. The state had to accept that these were Catholic run services, that there was mass every week, there were curcifixes all over the place, there were sisters in habits, there were Catholic chaplains and no non-Catholic chaplains, there was even an office of pastoral care run by Catholics that provided religious services to every client.
When the state could not handle the number of poor children in public schools in the City of Baltimore, it turned to the Daughters of Charity. The Daughters of Charity took the state’s funds and started the school lunch program, which has since the 1800s become a fixture in every public school and is now denied to Catholic schools. Go figure.
There so called separation of Church and state exists in the mind of some people, but not in fact.
Even now, the White House is trying to court the Catholic hospitals of this country to continue to provide services to Medicaid and Medicare patients if this new proposal goes through. It’s not as if the White House is saying that they’re going to pass this proposal on insurance and birth control and they will pick up over five million patients if Catholic hospitals and clinics close. That’s not what they’re saying. They want these hospitals and clinics to remain open.
The current administration went as far as hiring a Franciscan Brother to serve on its medical ethics committee in the hope of gaining support from the religious who run hospitals and clinics. The Brother it hired is a physician, PhD in Philsophy and Doctor of Theology. It has not turned out as well as they hoped. Brother Daniel Sulmasy, OFM has turned the tables on the doctors on that committee and catergorically said that you cannot care for the body and do harm to the mind and soul. They did not expect him to say this. Now they don’t know what to do, because he’s a Presidential appointee and they can’t fire him.
That’s what happens when the government pretends that it does not need the Church and then proceeds to try to use her. It backfires.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF
First, no constitution, of any nation, has the right to violate the law of God. Therefore, no constitution can protect what God prohibits.
Second, from the standpoint of rights, if you have same-sex marriage or same-sex civil unions, these come with very specific civil rights. One of them being the right to family benefits.
The Catholic Church is one the largest employers in this country. We employ people at all levels and in many programs and institutions. If DOMA falls, these couples will have the right to claim family leave, healthcare insurance and other benefits that are normally given only to married people. Those institutions that refuse these benefits to same-sex couples will be fined for discrimination.
On the flipside, these institutions have to refuse those benefits, because these are not married people or natural families.
The weakside of the Federal Govt’s agenda is that it does not offer the same benefits to heterosexual couples who are cohabiting. In essence, the federal government is involving itself in the redefining marriage, when it’s role is to protect the rights of those who are married, not define marriage. Marriage has already been defined by natural law.
The next problem, besides benefits comes in the area of services. The Catholic Church has not problems providing services for gays, lesbians and transgender people. We do it all the time. Mother Teresa has homes for AIDS victims all around the world and many of these patients are gay. They are not denied services or loving care. We have Courage Ministry to Catholic gay and lesbian people. We have regulations and moral laws that protect the human rights of gay and lesbian people. However, we provide these services to them as individuals, not as couples.
If DOMA is overturned, what happened in Boston and Washington, DC will happen all across the country. We will have close our adoption programs, because we do not place children in the homes of gay couples. We will have to employ gay couples, if they qualify for employment. Currenlty, we employ gay and lesbian women in our institutioins as individuals. But we do not employ couples unless they are married.
Imposing these obligations on religious institutions violates the religious rights of citizens. These religious institutioins are financed and operated by citizens. These citizens have a right to run their institutions according to their religious beliefs as long as these do not violate human rights. That’s when you run into a constitutional problem.
Serparation of Church and State is the greatest myth in the world. The Untied States has never had such a separation and it was never intended. The only thing that was intended was that the Federal Government should not adopt an official religion as did the English government. However, even after the erection of the United States, some of the individual states had a state religion.
Also, the states still use the services of the churches, especially Catholics, Baptists and Jews, because the states cannot meet the demands for healthcare, higher education, services and care for people with disabilities, services and care for seniors or services for its Armed Forces. It is cheaper for the states to pay religious institutions to provide these services than to operate them.
I was stationed in the Archdiocese of Washington. The Archdiocese was the only provider of housing and educational service to adults with mental retardation. The District of Columbia had to pay the Archdiocese, because it could not open its own agency. When the number of clients exceeded the system’s ability to serve, they system turned to the Archdiocese, because the Archdiocese was running Kennedy Institute since the early 1960s very successfully and very economically. The state had to accept that these were Catholic run services, that there was mass every week, there were curcifixes all over the place, there were sisters in habits, there were Catholic chaplains and no non-Catholic chaplains, there was even an office of pastoral care run by Catholics that provided religious services to every client.
When the state could not handle the number of poor children in public schools in the City of Baltimore, it turned to the Daughters of Charity. The Daughters of Charity took the state’s funds and started the school lunch program, which has since the 1800s become a fixture in every public school and is now denied to Catholic schools. Go figure.
There so called separation of Church and state exists in the mind of some people, but not in fact.
Even now, the White House is trying to court the Catholic hospitals of this country to continue to provide services to Medicaid and Medicare patients if this new proposal goes through. It’s not as if the White House is saying that they’re going to pass this proposal on insurance and birth control and they will pick up over five million patients if Catholic hospitals and clinics close. That’s not what they’re saying. They want these hospitals and clinics to remain open.
The current administration went as far as hiring a Franciscan Brother to serve on its medical ethics committee in the hope of gaining support from the religious who run hospitals and clinics. The Brother it hired is a physician, PhD in Philsophy and Doctor of Theology. It has not turned out as well as they hoped. Brother Daniel Sulmasy, OFM has turned the tables on the doctors on that committee and catergorically said that you cannot care for the body and do harm to the mind and soul. They did not expect him to say this. Now they don’t know what to do, because he’s a Presidential appointee and they can’t fire him.
That’s what happens when the government pretends that it does not need the Church and then proceeds to try to use her. It backfires.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF