Catholic Health Ass. reverses position?

Someone just sent me a copy of the CHA’s letter to the Health and Human Services Department (HHS) of The First Gay President’s administration.

It seems that Sr Carol “GIVE BACK THAT PEN” Keehan, the CHA head and Pres. Obama’s – formerly, at least -tame nun, may be on a reverse march of sorts. Maybe she is evolving.

I am still absorbing the letter itself, but here is a reliable source on the story.

From Life News with my emphases and comments:

Catholic Health Association reverses; now opposes HHS mandate

CHA noted that it was changing its initial position welcoming the White House’s “accommodation” to religious groups in February

FRI JUN 15, 2012 17:59 EST
Catholic Health Association reverses; now opposes HHS mandate

CHA noted that it was changing its initial position welcoming the White House’s “accommodation” to religious groups in February

BY KATHLEEN GILBERT

WASHINGTON, June 15, 2012 (LifeSiteNews.com) – In a reversal that deals a significant blow to the HHS contraception mandate, the major Catholic hospital association that once provided crucial political steam [rather, political cover for catholic pro-abortion dems!!] for President Obama’s health care legislation has now backed off supporting the mandate, saying that the president’s “accommodation” of religious groups is inadequate. [The image of rats scrabbling down the cables of a burning ship just popped into my head.]

The Catholic Health Association (CHA) on Friday issued a letter to an official with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services under the Health and Human Services (HHS) Department, stating that the government’s proposed rule forcing religious employers to provide birth control insurance to employees left them “deeply concerned.”

CHA noted that it was changing its initial position welcoming the White House’s “accommodation” to religious groups in February, whereby President Obama claimed insurance companies would offer the birth control for free, rather than having religious institutions directly pay for it.

“While this new development seemed at the time to be a good first step [uh huh], our examination and study of the proposal as outlined then and in the ANPRM has not relieved our initial concerns,” wrote CHA president Sr. Carol Keehan and two members of the board.

“Accordingly, for the reasons set forth below, we continue to believe that it is imperative for the Administration to abandon the narrow definition of ‘religious employer’ and instead use an expanded definition to exempt from the contraceptive mandate not only churches, but also Catholic hospitals, health care organizations and other ministries of the Church.

If the exemption is not expanded, they said, then the administration must pay directly for such coverage.

CHA was an early supporter of the federal health care legislation, pledging to support the administration’s proposal as early as July 2009. The group continued to support the measure even as Catholic bishops issued strong warnings over the bill’s potential to expand abortion, leading then-USCCB president Cardinal Francis George to chastise CHA as causing “confusion and a wound to Catholic unity” on the issue.

After the insurance mandate was announced last August, CHA pushed unsuccessfully for a compromise before stating opposition to the rule. However, the group’s position quickly reversed after the February “accommodation”: CHA almost immediately stated its renewed support even as U.S. bishops moved from caution to condemnation.

According to one calculation, if the mandate is not reversed or modified, it has the potential to shutter the 12.6 percent of American hospitals that are Catholic – an option Cardinal George in February emphasized as not far-fetched.

George had urged people to buy a copy of the Archdiocesan directory “as a souvenir” and to look at a page containing a list of Catholic hospitals and health care institutions. “Two Lents from now, unless something changes, that page will be blank,” he said.

Better late than never? Too little too late? Hey, that’s great!

What think you?

I think it is a damned shame that they caused so much damage and scandal in the first place!

Qui cum canibus concumbunt cum pulicibus surgent.

Posted in Brick by Brick, Dogs and Fleas, Magisterium of Nuns, Our Catholic Identity, Religious Liberty, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged , , , , , , ,
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ActonU – UPDATE – Friday

And so the final day of Acton University begins. We had Holy Mass in the Extraordinary Form and, to obtain the indulgence, had public recitation of the Act of Reparation to the Sacred Heart of Jesus.

Breakfast (croisant and jam with coffee) brought a discussion of ad orientem worship after a young Evangelical fellow announced that he was interested in attending the “Tridentine Mass”.

Class now, on John A. Ryan and the New Deal.

UPDATE:

I was delighted to meet a representative of the Tea Party of ITALY! Yes, Tea Party Italia! Their lovely and charming rep gave me some of their spiffy swag.

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Class on the Politics and Economics of Edmund Burke is starting now.

UPDATE:

This is way too cool. One of the participants happened to know by heart part of a letter of Burke to the Sheriff of Bristol! She stood and recited it!

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UPDATE

Tonight we have a talk from Fr Sirico.

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As St Jerome once wrote that the world woke up and groaned to find itself Arian, so too today the world may wake up to find ourselves socialist.

and…

It was a mistake to take federal money in the first place.

Posted in Brick by Brick, On the road, What Fr. Z is up to | Tagged ,
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Fr. James Martin, SJ’s, sympathy for a call to ordain women

At the Jesuit run America Magazine, James Martin, SJ – who worked so hard to confuse as many people as he could into thinking that the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith was picking on all women religious in the USA – is now presenting a sympathetic view of a Christian Brother who is calling for the ordination of women to the priesthood.

Yes, I know.  You are shocked.

When you look over the article on your own, pay attention to the code language “institutional church”.  This is the same-ol-same-ol tactic of pitting the “institutional” church against something that is, in their estimation, a more authentic church.

No where in his 700 words on this idea from Brother Louis DeThomasis, FSC, – which, by the way, is contrary to the Catholic Faith – does Fr. Martin defend the Church’s teachings. Instead, Martin dwells on how dysfunctional the Church is. Martin effectively concludes with DeThomasis’ words:

It is unjust for anyone to judge that we who are not in lockstep with all the outward signs of behavior that the church prescribes are therefore “less Catholic.”

Really?

Is open denial of the Church’s teaching about the impossibility of ordaining women just an “outward sign of behavior”?  Don’t “outward signs of behavior” mean anything to these people?

I, however, am in lockstep with the Church’s teaching on this matter.

Speaking of lockstep… here is an image from the Cafepress store… of the legendary coffee mug.

CLICK TO GO TO STORE

 

Posted in Biased Media Coverage, Dogs and Fleas, Magisterium of Nuns, Our Catholic Identity, Priests and Priesthood, Throwing a Nutty | Tagged ,
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Long interview with Card Levada about the mean Vatican picking on the nuns… NOT.

My friend the nearly-ubiquitous John L Allen Jr (still alas with the Fiswrap) has a fascinating and long interview with the Prefect of the CDF Card. Levada about the LCWR and Sr Farley and “being mean to nuns”.

Must read.

Here is an excerpt:

ALLEN: You said a moment ago that this is not about “the sisters,” but LCWR. Yet looking at recent events, including the apostolic visitation of women’s orders in the States, the LCWR crackdown and the notification on Sr. Margaret Farley, many people can’t help concluding that there is a broad attack underway on nuns in America.
CARD L: I’ve read some articles along those lines, but it’s just not the case. These things take a lot of time, and they all have their own logic. For instance, we didn’t just wake up one day and say, “Let’s go after Margaret Farley.”  [I love it.] Frankly, this came up because of an interview she gave in Ireland. She was there for a conference, and said something along the lines that Ireland ought to approve same-sex marriage. Someone in Ireland objected, asking, “Why is this sister coming from the States and pushing same-sex marriage?[This is why Fr. Z suggests that sometimes it is a good idea to write to the CDF.] We wrote to her superior and got a vague response about how she’s a wonderful person who enjoys great esteem. That’s how Margaret Farley came onto our radar screen. It had nothing to do with the LCWR. We then found [her book] Just Love, read the reviews, and the process developed from there.
I don’t see any conspiracy. All of us as Catholics have responsibilities, but especially bishops, priests and religious, to speak the good word that is the faith of the church, which is that God is revealed through Jesus Christ. We have nothing to say about the “Gospel according to Maureen Dowd,[LOL] of course, but Margaret Farley is a woman who represents the church.
If anything, [the Farley case] collaterally gives another example of why this LCWR assessment is taking place. Too many people crossing the LCWR screen who are supposedly representing the Catholic church aren’t representing the church with any reasonable sense of product identity.

I’ve gotta hand it to both of them. Read the whole thing!

Posted in Brick by Brick, Magisterium of Nuns, The Drill | Tagged , ,
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Benedict XVI establishes Anglican Ordinariate in Australia

Benedict XVI is the Pope of Christian Unity.

From The Catholic Herald:

Pope Benedict XVI has established a personal ordinariate in Australia and named a Lancashire-born former bishop of the Traditional Anglican Communion (TAC) to lead it.

The ordinariate, the world’s third for Anglicans wishing to become Catholic while retaining some of their Anglican heritage, is known as the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of the Southern Cross. It was erected today, June 15.

Fr Harry Entwistle, who was born in Chorley, Lancashire, was ordained a Catholic priest today and named as the ordinariate’s leader.

Fr Entwistle had previously served as a bishop in the TAC, a communion of traditional Anglican groups that had broken away from the worldwide Anglican Communion.

The 72-year-old priest studied at St Chad’s Theological College at Durham University and served as chaplain at Wandsworth prison in south-west London before emigrating to Australia.

He said: [NB] “Pope Benedict has made it very clear that unity between Christians is not achieved by agreeing on the lowest common denominator, and those entering an ordinariate accept the Catechism of the Catholic Church as the authoritative expression of the Catholic faith.

“Membership is open to former Anglicans who accept what the Catholic Church believes and teaches; former Anglicans who have previously been reconciled to the Catholic Church but who now wish to reconnect with their Anglican spiritual heritage and those baptised in the Catholic Church who have close family members who belong to the ordinariate.”

“As the ordinariate is in organic unity with the Catholic Church, Western and Eastern Catholics are welcome to worship and receive communion in an ordinariate Mass and vice versa,” he said.

Posted in Benedict XVI, Brick by Brick, Just Too Cool, Our Catholic Identity, Pope of Christian Unity, Priests and Priesthood | Tagged , , , , ,
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Bishops “relieved” of their duties

At Chiesa Sandro Magister has a piece about bishops who have been deposed from their sees.

It is longish, but here is some of it.  You can read the rest there:

VATICAN CITY, June 15, 2012 – The old-timers of the curia remember a quip that one cardinal loved to repeat: “Among the apostles one out of twelve betrayed, and today among the successors of the apostles the average is certainly no better.”

Today, without counting the other Christian denominations, the Catholic bishops who are the heirs of the apostles number about 5200, and so by applying to them this “evangelical” proportion, there should be more than 400 emulators of Judas Iscariot in the Church of Rome. A figure that may be too optimistic in the eyes of the Lefebvrists, or from the opposite perspective, of the progressive ecclesial galaxy, but certainly much higher than the number of prelates who in various ways have been punished in recent years by the only person who has this power, the pope.

There are no complete statistics in this regard, in part because beyond the most spectacular cases, it normally happens that a bishop who is asked to leave the leadership of a diocese for doctrinal or moral reasons, or because of ecclesiastical or administrative mismanagement, is convinced to hand in his resignation to the pope before reaching the retirement age of 75, on the basis of paragraph 2 of canon 401 of the code of canon law, which states: “A diocesan bishop who has become less able to fulfill his office because of ill health or some other grave cause is earnestly requested to present his resignation from office.” And the pope accepts his resignation very quickly.

Normally, this paragraph 2 of canon 401 concerns churchmen afflicted by physical or psychological “ill health,” but there is no lack of cases of “other grave cause.”

So recently, on June 7 came the early resignation of the auxiliary bishop of Canberra in Australia, Patrick Percival Power, 70, known for his progressive positions.

While on January 4 came the announcement of the resignation of the auxiliary of Los Angeles, Gabino Zavala, 61, because he is the father of two children. It is not known whether next year his name will still be listed in the Annuario Pontificio.

In the past, in fact, the names of bishops who have left their posts in order to get married have been more or less promptly expunged from the thick red book that details each year the organizational structure of the Catholic Church.

Without digging back up the cases of the Argentine Jeronimo Podestà and the American James Patrick Shannon, which concern the pontificate of Paul VI, one can recall a few relatively more recent cases, like those of the Irish bishop of Galway, Eamon Casey, who resigned at the age of 65 in 1992 and disappeared from the Annuario in 1997; of the Swiss bishop of Basel, Hansjoerg Vogel, who resigned at the age of 44 in 1995 and disappeared from the Annuario in 1997; of the Scottish bishop of Argill, Roderick Wright, who resigned at the age of 56 in 1996 and was also removed in 1997; of the Canadian bishop of Gaspé, Raymond Dumais, who resigned at the age of 51 in 2001 and disappeared from the Annuario in 2003.

From the Annuario Pontificio of this year has also disappeared the name of the bishop of Pointe-Noire in Congo, Jean-Claude Makaya Loembe, whom the pope “relieved” of his duties on March 31, 2011.

In fact, in the case in which a bishop, in spite of being urged to do so, does not accept to present his resignation, it is the pope himself who “relieves” him of his duties. Which happens rather rarely. But it happens.

Last May 19, for example, the Italian bishop of Trapani, Francesco Micciché, 69, was “relieved” over administrative problems.

While on May 2, 2011, for doctrinal reasons, the Australian bishop of Toowoomba, William M. Morris, was “relieved.”

In 1995, however, the French bishop of Evreux, Jacques Gaillot, 60, also for doctrinal reasons, was not “relieved” but was transferred to the titular see of Partenia.

Morris and Gaillot were removed because they were extremely progressive. But there is no lack of examples on the other front.

In 2003, for example, the resignation of the Thai bishop of Ratchaburi, John Bosco Manat Chuabsamai, 67, was accepted after he had gotten too close, perhaps, to the world of the Lefebvrists.

While in March of 2009, the pope “exempted” Monsignor Gerhard Wagner from accepting the position of auxiliary bishop of Linz, to which he had been appointed at the end of January. In Austria, Wagner had been subjected to a formidable line of fire on the part of the progressives, because of his traditionalist positions.

Other bishops who have been removed from the Annuario Pontificio are those who have been reduced to the lay state. By authority, as in the famous case of Emmanuel Milingo in 2009, or at the request of the interested party, as happened in 2008 with the president-elect of Paraguay and former bishop of San Pedro, Fernando Lugo.

It is foreseeable that another name that will disappear from the Annuario is that of the Canadian bishop emeritus of Antigonish, Raymond Lahey, who was removed from the clerical state one month ago after a civil sentence for possession of child pornography.

Without a doubt, the majority of the “grave reasons” that lead to the early resignation of bishops concern moral questions.

The list is rather long. In addition to the cases already mentioned are those of the U.S. archbishops of Atlanta in 1990 and of Santa Fe in 1993; of the archbishop of La Serena, Chile in 1997; of two bishops of Palm Beach in the U.S. in 1998 and 2002; of the bishop of Santa Rosa in the U.S. in 1999; of the Polish bishop of Poznan in 2002; of the archbishop of Milwaukee in the U.S. in 2002; of Lexington, also in the U.S., in 2002; of the Argentine archbishop of Santa Fe in 2002; of the Filipino bishop of Novaliches in 2003; of the Argentine bishop of Santiago del Estero in 2005; of the bishop of Zamora, Mexico in 2006; of the Hungarian military ordinariate in 2007; of the central African bishops of Bangui and Bossangoa in 2009; of the Brazilian bishop of Minas in 2009; of the Dutch bishop of Ngong in Kenya in 2009; of the Irish bishop of Benin City in Nigeria in 2010.

Particular media attention went to the cases of the Belgian bishop of Bruges in 2010 and of the German bishop of Trondheim, Norway in 2009. The cardinal of Vienna, Hans Hermann Groer, accused of molestation, resigned his post after reaching the age of 75 and without ever having admitted guilt.

A different case is that of bishops who have had to resign early not because they committed gravely immoral acts, but under the accusation of having covered up the actions of their priests.

[…]

Awful, but interesting.

Posted in Benedict XVI, Brick by Brick | Tagged , ,
10 Comments

Fishwrap, Pill, and Sister Kunigunde

The Fishwrap is one in being with The Pill in a defense of women deacons.

Austrian sister calls for ordination of women deacons
by Isabella R. Moyer on Jun. 14, 2012

NCR Today

The Catholic church in Austria made international headlines with the Austrian Priests’ Initiative, founded in 2006, and last year’s “Appeal to Disobedience.” The April 30 NCR article “For a year now, Austrian Catholics debate obedience” provides an excellent summary. [Fishwrap is for the disobedience.]

Today, The Tablet published a short article titled “Leading nun calls for women deacons”: [Which isn’t possible, so the Fishwrap is bound to be for it.]

The leading voice of women religious in Austria has called for the ordination of women as deacons. [Well!  If she’s a leading voice…. okay then!]

In an interview in the June issue of the Austrian monthly Kirche In, the President of the Association of women religious in Austria, Sr Kunigunde Fürst (a Franciscan Sister of Vöcklabruck), [I don’t think there are nearly enough sisters names Kunigunde these days.] said: “Why should it not be possible to ordain women deacons? Why are they being excluded from performing deacons’ services?” [Because I am pretty sure the argument that the Church doesn’t have authority to ordain women to the priesthood also applies here.  We can’t just make things up as we go.] She went on to suggest that the Catholic hierarchy were afraid of women’s advancement. [HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA!] “Could it be that the hierarchy is afraid that women will get too close to the priesthood and then perhaps even move on to becoming bishops?” she asked. “That is not a good kind of fear,” she added. [Yah… the bishops and Holy Father are real a-scared!]

To lean more about this question, I recommend Martimor’s book on Deaconesses.

Meanwhile, Tabula delenda est.

 

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Magisterium of Nuns, Our Catholic Identity | Tagged , , , , , ,
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Bp. Boyea (D. Lansing) skeptical about need for USCCB document on U.S. economy

When I heard that the bishops of the USCCB in their plenary session were talking about drafting a new document on the economy and related issues, I first reaction was “OH NO! Don’t they learn from history?”

I also read this on Catholic World News:

By a 171-26 vote at their meeting on June 13, the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) approved a proposal by Bishop Stephen Blaire, chairman of the bishops’ Committee on Domestic Justice and Human Development, to begin drafting a message on the US economy.

The draft of “Catholic Reflections on Work, Poverty and a Broken Economy” will be brought to the body of bishops at the conference’s November meeting, after this year’s US presidential elections. During the discussion leading up to the vote, Bishop Earl Boyea of Lansing criticized the committee’s opposition to the budget plan put forward by Congressman Paul Ryan. “There have been some concerns raised by lay Catholics, especially some Catholic economists, about what was perceived as a partisan action against Congressman Ryan and the budget he had proposed,” Bishop Boyea said in reference to the USCCB committee’s opposition to the House budget plan. “We need to be articulate only in principles, and let the laity make these applications … It was perceived as partisan, and thus didn’t really further dialogue in our deeply divided country.”

[NB:] “I’m not sure that we have the humility yet not to stray into areas where we lack competence, and where we need to let the laity take the lead,” he added. “We need to learn far more than we need to teach in this area. We need to listen more than we need to speak. We already have an excellent, fine Compendium [on the Social Doctrine of the Church].”

Following his remarks, Archbishop Allen Vigneron of Detroit called upon the committee to place greater emphasis on the “disintegration of the family” as a factor in the breakdown of the economy. Echoing Bishop Boyea’s comments, Archbishop Joseph Naumann of Kansas City said that the committee is “at times perceived as partisan” and needs to consider the principle of subsidiarity, which has been “neglected in past documents.” Archbishop Naumann added that solutions that place emphasis in enrolling people in government programs have been “tried for decades” and failed. “We need to talk about the debt and the real seriousness of that debt,” he continued. “Sometimes we’re perceived as just encouraging the government to spend more money with no realistic way of how we’re going to afford to do this.”

 

Posted in The Drill | Tagged , , ,
42 Comments

Will all the SSPX sign on?

Our friends over at Rorate have posted a 1 June interview of SSPX Bp. Bernard Tissier de Mallerais. He may be a bishop, but he is not the Superior of the SSPX. Bp. Bernard Fellay is the Superior.

The Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith said that the three SSPX bishops (Tissier de Mallerais, Williamson, Galerreta) who are not the Superior (Bp. Fellay) would have to be dealt with in some step in addition to the reconciliation of the SSPX with the Roman Pontiff.

I also have in mind the fact that recently we saw a copy of a letter from the Pontifical Commission “Ecclesia Dei” stating rather forcefully that people who on days of precept attend some independent chapel on the fringe of, in the orbit of the SSPX, but not actually under the aegis of the SSPS, do not fulfill their Mass obligation.  Let that be a warning to those who do not embrace what Rome is offering.

That said, Bp. Tissier de Mallerais’s comments in 1 June (NB: a couple weeks in advance of the new developments) are a unsettling.  Here is a quote:

R.: Some believe that the statute of personal prelature proposed to you will provide sufficient guarantee to you concerning all danger of abandoning the combat for the faith.

Bp. T.: That is incorrect. According to the project of prelature, we would not be free to create new priories without the permission of the local bishops and, additionally, all our recent foundations would have to be confirmed by these same bishops. It would thus mean subjugating us quite unnecessarily to an overall Modernist episcopate.

Not positive.

Alas, those of the SSPX who may refuse to be reconciled with Rome run the risk of being as irrelevant as the LCWR.

Posted in Our Catholic Identity, SSPX | Tagged ,
33 Comments

ActonU UPDATE. Thursday

The day began with a TLM (both the Ordinary and Extraordinary Form are available daily to participants) and then breakfast with some of the Acton folks.

The first session today was on Orthodoxy and the State. We are in a break now. Soon Michael Novak will talk about American Exceptionalism.

Tonight after supper talk by Eric Metaxas and the undersigned has been asked to do the invocation.

More later.

UPDATE:

The afternoon session continues with a talk on Benedict XVI and Caritas in veritate and then Theologians v. Capitalism.

During the break after lunch we had a screening of an episode of a new series called Poverty Cure. Splendid.

UPDATE:

Right now we are in Theologians v. Capitalism and, thinking about Milbank. What on earth is a “heterogenesis of ends”?

UPDATE:

I did the invocation tonight, which was a great honor. Now we have as our speaker Eric Metaxas, on Dietrich Bonhoeffer.

Posted in New Evangelization, On the road, What Fr. Z is up to | Tagged , , , , ,
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