Lay Catholics Asked to Fight New Birth Control Regulations

[09.23.2011]
250841305 44dbab96f7 b 300x225 Lay Catholics Asked to Fight New Birth Control Regulations

Photo from bepster via Flickr.

Earlier this summer, the Department of Health and Human Services passed a mandate requiring insurers to provide birth control without a co-pay.  Now, the Catholic Church is fighting back. The Catholic Church is opposed to contraception on the grounds that it separates sex from the act of procreation, and because the rule requires employers to offer their employees insurance plans that include a range of preventive services, including sterilization, birth control and emergency contraception, the Church is saying that it should not be forced to provide insurance to covers procedures that it finds morally objectionable.

It has yet to be determined whether some religious employers – like the Catholic Church – will be able to opt out of the new regulations.  As the end of the comment period on the mandate draws to a close, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops distributed a letter articulating their displeasure with the rule and instructed bishops to show Catholics how to file a written objection. “All bishops were asked to alert parishioners of the need to address the threat to religious liberty found in (the) HHS mandate related to health care reform,” said Sister Mary Ann Walsh, a spokeswoman for the bishops conference.

Whether Catholics will actually take the steps to dispute the rule is another question.  Research conducted by PRRI earlier this summer shows that while the Catholic hierarchy officially condemns birth control, Catholics themselves don’t seem to object to birth control use.  We found that 85% of Catholics support expanding access to birth control for women who cannot afford it.  That means that not only do an overwhelming majority of Catholics accept birth control use, they are comfortable with their tax dollars being used to subsidize contraceptives for low-income women and families.

In fact, large numbers of Catholic women may themselves be poised to benefit from the new HHS regulations.  Earlier this spring, the Alan Guttmacher Institute showed that only 2% of Catholic women who regularly attend church rely on “natural” family planning methods. By contrast, nearly 70% of Catholic women use a “highly effective” form of contraception like the birth control pill, an IUD, or sterilization.

It seems that birth control may be another issue on which many ordinary Catholics believe that their hierarchy is too conservative (as 44% Catholics reported with regard to abortion).  Tell us what you think.  Are you Catholic?  Will you be writing to HHS to ask for a religious exemption for the Catholic Church?

4 Responses to “Lay Catholics Asked to Fight New Birth Control Regulations”

  1. [...] are quite willing to selectively deviate from their hierarchy on personal or ethical issues.  Last week, I pointed out that even though U.S. Catholic bishops are making an effort to organize lay Catholics against new [...]

  2. [...] Now Notre Dame University is joining the roster of Catholic institutions asking for conscience-based exemption from regulations requiring employers offer no-co-pay insurance on birth control and sterilizations to students and employees.  For indications on how popular this might be among Catholics, see my post from last week. [...]

  3. [...] policies and the values espoused by the Catholic hierarchy.  To make matters more complicated, lay Catholics also tend to deviate from the hierarchy’s stances, although not always in the direction that politicians would [...]

  4. [...] A group of Roman Catholic activists tried to deliver a petition to the Vatican, asking the Catholic Church to begin ordaining women as priests.  The protesters were blocked outside St. Peter’s Square and some were detained by the police.  The activists may have some potential allies, however, at least among a majority of American Catholics.  A New York Times/CBS poll conducted in 2010 showed that 6-in-10 American Catholics favored women’s ordination.  PRRI research shows that lay American Catholics diverge from the Catholic Church’s position on abortion, same-sex marriage, and the death penalty as well – although they don’t always lean to the left of the hierarchy. [...]

Leave a Reply