http://www.mercatornet.com/sheila_liaugminas/view/11700
11:50:20 AM
by Sheila
Liaugminas | 17 Jan 2013 |
(1)
tags: Becket Fund for
Religious Liberty, freedom of
worship, HHS mandate,
President Obama
proclamation, Religious
Freedom Day, religious
liberty
In
another twist on news that doesn’t square with other news, and words by the
president that don’t match actions by the president…
Mr.
Obama declared January 16th Religious Freedom Day. Here’s
the Proclamation:
Foremost
among the rights Americans hold sacred is the freedom to worship as we choose.
Right
there is a tip off to where his administration has been going with religious
liberty in America, transitioning it to the freedom to worship.
But
immediately afterward he makes this fine set of points:
Today,
we celebrate one of our Nation’s first laws to protect that right — the
Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom. Written by Thomas Jefferson and guided
through the Virginia legislature by James Madison, the Statute affirmed that
“Almighty God hath created the mind free” and “all men shall be free to profess
. . . their opinions in matters of religion.” Years later, our Founders looked
to the Statute as a model when they enshrined the principle of religious
liberty in the Bill of Rights.
Because
of the protections guaranteed by our Constitution, each of us has the right to
practice our faith openly and as we choose…Americans of every faith have molded
the character of our Nation. They were pilgrims who sought refuge from
persecution; pioneers who pursued brighter horizons; protesters who fought for
abolition, women’s suffrage, and civil rights. Each generation has seen people
of different faiths join together to advance peace, justice, and dignity for
all.
Define
“all,” because different faiths have joined together over several decades to
advance rights that don’t apply to the entire class of human beings who exist
in the mothers’ wombs but are as yet unborn, and over most of 2012 to advance
rights that are being denied employers who morally object to his HHS mandate.
People who are battling in courts across the country to defend “the right to
practice our faith openly and as we choose”.
The
president continues:
As we
observe Religious Freedom Day, let us remember the legacy of faith and
independence we have inherited, and let us honor it by forever upholding our
right to exercise our beliefs free from prejudice or persecution.
Indeed.
The
Becket Fund for Religious Liberty issued this statement
soon after the Proclamation was released.
“Today
we welcome the President’s Proclamation on Religious Freedom Day. However, we
deeply regret that the President does not mention the HHS mandate, which was
issued by his administration and which is now trampling the religious freedom
of millions of individuals, schools, hospitals, charities, and businesses
throughout our nation. Perhaps this mismatch between words and deeds can
be explained by the phrase “freedom of worship,” which the President uses in
the first sentence of his proclamation. Religious freedom certainly includes
worship, but it extends beyond the four walls of a church. If it is not to be
an empty promise, religious freedom must also include acting on one’s deepest
religious beliefs when one is feeding the poor, caring for the sick, educating
the young, or running a business. The HHS mandate ignores that simple truth and
is therefore out of step with our traditions and our laws, which promise
religious freedom for all.” — Kyle Duncan, General Counsel for the Becket
Fund for Religious Liberty
So again
I’m left wondering whether the president hears his own statements and considers
them. Because actions speak louder than words, and his are saying contradictory
things.
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