Past and Present
In 1634, a mix of Catholic and
Protestant settlers arrived in Southern Maryland from England aboard the Ark
and the Dove. They had come at the invitation of the Catholic Lord Baltimore,
who had been granted the land by the Protestant King Charles I of England.
While Catholics and Protestants were killing each other in Europe, Lord
Baltimore imagined Maryland as a society where people of different faiths could
live together peacefully. This vision was soon codified in Maryland’s 1649 Act
Concerning Religion (also called the “Toleration Act”), which was the first law
in our nation’s history to protect an individual’s right to freedom of
conscience.
Maryland’s early history teaches
us that, like any freedom,religious liberty requires
constant vigilance and protection, or it will disappear. Maryland’s experiment
in religious toleration ended within a few decades. The colony was placed under
royal control and the Church of England became the established religion.
Discriminatory laws, including the loss of political rights, were enacted
against those who refused to conform. Catholic chapels were closed and
Catholics were restricted to practicing their faith in their homes. The
Catholic community lived under this coercion until the American Revolution.
By the end of the 18th century
our nation’s founders embraced freedom of religion as an essential condition of
a free and democratic society. So
when the Bill of Rights was ratified, religious freedom had the distinction of
being the First Amendment. Religious liberty is indeed the first liberty. This is our American heritage,
our most cherished freedom. If we are not free in our
conscience and our practice of religion, all other freedoms are fragile. If our
obligations and duties to God are impeded, or even worse, contradicted by the
government, then we can no longer claim to be a land of the free.
Is our most cherished freedom
truly under threat? Among many current challenges,
consider the recent Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) mandate
requiring almost all private health plans to cover contraception, sterilization
and abortion-inducing drugs. For the first time in our history, the federal
government will force religious institutions to facilitate drugs and procedures
contrary to our moral teaching, and purport to define which religious
institutions are “religious enough” to merit an exemption. This is not a matter
of whether contraception may be prohibited by the government. It is not even a
matter of whether contraception may be supported by the government. It is a
matter of whether religious people and institutions may be forced by the
government to provide coverage for contraception and sterilization, even when
it violates our religious beliefs.
...
What can you do to ensure the protection of religious freedom?
To learn more about our first freedom, and to send your message to HHS and Congress telling them to stand up for
religious liberty and conscience rights, go to www.usccb.org/conscience today! Thank you for joining the effort to
end this unprecedented government coercion of conscience and intrusion in religious affairs.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario