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Mass Appeal: Evangelicals Copy More of Catholic Playbook to Oppose Contraception Ruling

Mandate has evangelicals and Catholics finding common ground on ethics—and strategy.

Mass Appeal: Evangelicals Copy More of Catholic Playbook to Oppose Contraception Ruling

Despite differences over contraception, evangelical leaders have fallen in step with Catholic bishops over what they see as federal compulsion to provide services against their conscience.

In 2011, the Obama administration ruled that religious institutions would be required to provide employees with free contraceptive coverage. President Obama said in February that insurers would be responsible for paying for the contraception, but those who opposed the new rule suggested insurers could simply raise premiums to cover the cost.

Searching for strategies, some evangelicals filed lawsuits. Others followed Catholic bishops' lead, releasing letters to be read in churches.

At least 117 Catholic bishops issued statements to their dioceses, asking for their prayers and political opposition to the ruling. Many told priests to read the letters aloud to congregants during Sunday masses. Members of the National Association of Evangelicals (NAE) asked for advice on whether to distribute a similar letter, said Galen Carey, vice president of government relations. The organization decided not to take the unprecedented step because its leaders believe that reading a letter on a political issue should be done rarely, if at all.

Evangelicals including Chuck Colson, Albert Mohler, and Jim Daly specifically said the issue was not just a Catholic one. While evangelicals do not take the same stance against all contraception, they generally oppose forms of birth control that block uterine implantation.

Evangelical institutions Colorado Christian University, Louisiana College, and Geneva College joined Catholic universities in filing lawsuits to challenge the rule. Spokespeople for the Becket Fund and the Alliance Defense Fund told CT they expect to file more lawsuits.

"This is one of the more remarkable displays of unity that I've seen in a long time," said Paul Kengor, a political science professor at Grove City College. "The most common tactic or response Catholics and evangelicals will probably pursue is within the courts. It's not that they sought this issue; this came to them."

Evangelical leaders particularly noted that the administration did not widen an exemption that applied narrowly to churches, so the contraceptive ruling would still apply to Christian colleges, parachurch institutions, and other groups not directly connected to a church. Many fear the narrow exemption for religious groups could set a poor precedent for future decisions.

"The administration anticipated and tried to address Catholic concerns more directly than they did evangelical concerns," Carey said. "They're probably surprised at how important we think the issue is, even if we're talking about it from a different angle."

Evangelical and Catholic leaders have long found common ground on social issues, but observers say today they are collaborating more closely than usual to resist the new rule.

More than 600 religious leaders and professors from institutions such as Wheaton College, Baylor University, and the University of Notre Dame signed a Becket Fund letter of protest that labeled the contraceptive mandate "a grave violation of religious freedom."

"What began as a marriage of convenience has blossomed," said Robert George, a Princeton University professor, who is Catholic. "On this issue, we're united by common principles and common threat, and that's a powerful combination."

The hierarchical structure of the Roman Catholic Church carries significant advantages and disadvantages, said Francis Beckwith, who was president of the Evangelical Theological Society until he converted to Catholicism. Catholics bring institutional weight and have the President's ear (Obama personally called New York Archbishop Timothy Dolan about the revised rule), but they often do not have evangelicals' flexibility or grass-roots efforts.


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Comments

Edgar Hathaway

April 17, 2012  1:25pm

On June 8th at noon there will be another set of local rallies all over the nation. I attended the previous rally ( at Independence Hall in Philadelphia) . It opened with prayer, hymns were sung, it was conducted in a peaceful, thoughtful and patriotic manner. The speakers were top notch. At the close of the opening prayer, I looked up and saw about 80% of the crowd making the sign of the cross. I am a Methodist. I hope that future rallies will have greater Evangelical attendance. This is NOT a Roman Catholic issue, it is about the right of "free exercise of religion" found in the 1st Amendment of the US Constitution. This is an issue all Americans should seriously and prayerfully consider. If no exception is made by the administration, we should all "remember in November" and vote accordingly, and get all like minded family members, friends and neighbors to do likewise.

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Gabrielle LeBlanc

April 13, 2012  6:56pm

The absence of any mention of abortifacient drugs is disturbing. Also a point that doesn't get mentioned as often as it ought to be: why should ANYONE pay for someone ELSE's CONTRACEPTION? This is not something that needs to be, or ought to be, covered by insurance, considering that access to contraception and abortion was won on the principle of the right to PRIVACY.

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