L
losh14
Guest
The morning show on EWTN (I don’t recall the name, the affiliate recently changed lineups) was interviewing Ginger Rue and talking about the response to the HHS mandate. The conversation was very similar to most of the conversations I hear, which tells me that progress isn’t being made in D.C., but the question that came up was what should be our response if HHS stands and Catholic organizations are forced to pay for immoral behaviors and Catholic hospitals are forced to offer them.
Ginger hoped that the bishops would have the courage to close the hospitals, which is not the first time I’ve heard the sentiment. I wonder if it’s the right approach.
My fear is that if we shutter the hospitals, for-profit institutions would step in, and the only lesson taught by the Satanic press would be “Catholics walked away from sick people.” If the charities simply shut down, the devils who serve our godless political leaders would write “Catholics gave up on the poor.” Shuttering institutions would certainly keep Catholics from being in proximate evil to acts of contraception and abortion, but it would push our Gospel mission out of thick of life where it needs to be.
Would it not be better to keep the hospitals open but refuse to comply with an unjust law? I’d rather see Catholics swarm the American consciousness than withdraw completely from it. I’d rather see bishops finally start excommunicating disobedient Catholics who are political leaders (Pelosi and Sebelius, for starters). I’d like to see charities continue to provide their assistance and refuse to pay the extortionary fines.
I realize this is not possible without numbers. There are a handful of workers at Our Lady’s Inn in South City at any one point in time - by refusing to comply with the HHS mandate, the government could issue a cease-and-desist order against the charity (which has saved hundreds of babies by giving their mothers a reason and ability to not have an abortion), enforceable by City police. That order would be harder to carry out with 100 Catholics praying in a cordon around the building.
I’m talking massive civil disobedience rather than massive ecclesiastical retreat.
Ginger hoped that the bishops would have the courage to close the hospitals, which is not the first time I’ve heard the sentiment. I wonder if it’s the right approach.
My fear is that if we shutter the hospitals, for-profit institutions would step in, and the only lesson taught by the Satanic press would be “Catholics walked away from sick people.” If the charities simply shut down, the devils who serve our godless political leaders would write “Catholics gave up on the poor.” Shuttering institutions would certainly keep Catholics from being in proximate evil to acts of contraception and abortion, but it would push our Gospel mission out of thick of life where it needs to be.
Would it not be better to keep the hospitals open but refuse to comply with an unjust law? I’d rather see Catholics swarm the American consciousness than withdraw completely from it. I’d rather see bishops finally start excommunicating disobedient Catholics who are political leaders (Pelosi and Sebelius, for starters). I’d like to see charities continue to provide their assistance and refuse to pay the extortionary fines.
I realize this is not possible without numbers. There are a handful of workers at Our Lady’s Inn in South City at any one point in time - by refusing to comply with the HHS mandate, the government could issue a cease-and-desist order against the charity (which has saved hundreds of babies by giving their mothers a reason and ability to not have an abortion), enforceable by City police. That order would be harder to carry out with 100 Catholics praying in a cordon around the building.
I’m talking massive civil disobedience rather than massive ecclesiastical retreat.