Not being a politician, I don’t know enough to say how the healthcare plan and what HHS are interrelated. I imagine that they have to be, because HHS is the agency that has to make it work.
If this kind of regulation is a direct product of the healthcare plan, then the plan needs to be either reworked, if it can be salvaged or scrapped and go back to square one.
I don’t claim to be an expert but from what I know, Obamacare, like most laws, empowers the administration to fill in certain details, among them the definition of “preventive care” and who qualifies for what exemption. (Sort of like defining marriage to be whatever is fashionable at the moment.)
As for the Church viewing health care differently, I don’t see how differently she can view it. For centuries she has viewed healthcare as a human right. States exist to protect those rights. As to the mechanics of how we provide for the sick, that is something that has to be worked on by everyone, not just the State or the Church. The Church has a great deal of experience to contribute, if the State would listen, instead of piling on regulation after regulation to the point that faith communities can no longer afford to provide healthcare as we once did.
I agree that it will require a long and deep reevaluation.
But more importantly, I must take issue with the very idea that the state will
ever listen to the Church in the way that you expect. If anything, states are
less inclined to listen to the Church than ever, not only in America but also in Europe. Nothing better demonstrates this than the current predicament which, really, is just the state crossing yet another line, this time one that the bishops cannot tolerate.
On the other hand, as you yourself documented, the Church has proven very capable of providing health care and other services for the poor for
far longer than it has viewed health care as a right to be guaranteed by the state.
So the Church can either commit it’s energies toward trying to tell the state how to regulate health care or it can lend it’s energies to providing that health care more directly in the way that it should be provided while guaranteeing itself the freedom to do so.
You know where I stand on that choice.