Jun 28, 2012
As we approach the celebration of the Fourth of July, we have already begun the “Fortnight for Freedom” invoked by the U.S. bishops as a two-week period of prayer and reflection upon the freedom of religion which we possess in our great nation. The fortnight, which began June 21 and will conclude July 4, is an opportunity for us to come together across the nation and to celebrate what Pope Benedict XVI has referred to as the “most cherished of American freedoms” – religious liberty. It is also a time for us to be keenly aware of and to stand firm in countering the threats that are weakening our treasured right to practice and live our faith as is the birthright of our nation.
We can clearly perceive the threat to this most cherished freedom in the mandate of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to facilitate and fund abortion-inducing drugs, sterilization and contraception in the insurance policies provided through the Catholic Church. However, this is not the only threat to religious liberty and is part of the overall tendency to misunderstand what religious liberty is, as well as what it means for a person to practice one’s faith.
This threat is also perceived in other limitations upon Church outreach to families, immigrants, victims of human trafficking, the infirm and the needy because of our unwillingness to provide what is contrary to our moral teachings and convictions. The threat to religious liberty is much larger than any single issue. It is also not a “Catholic,” issue but one that is fundamental to all men and women of all faiths within our nation as American citizens. It is an “American” issue.
We are very blessed to live in a country where our freedom is protected. Religious freedom is the most basic of all our freedoms and is first in the Bill of Rights of the U.S. Constitution. Religious liberty is the basis for the founding of our country and the very reason that the Pilgrims fled to our shores and sacrificed their lives. Because we have lived in times in which this freedom has not been challenged, it is too easy to take for granted this right for which so many before us struggled and even died.