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Home/Featured/House Passes Bill To Protect Military Freedom of Religion

House Passes Bill To Protect Military Freedom of Religion

Earlier, priests were threatened with arrest if they ministered to military during shutdown

Written by David W. Virtue | Thursday, October 10, 2013

“This morning, we passed a bill (H. Con. Res. 58) in the House to ensure that our service members, their families, and their chaplains are able to exercise their fundamental constitutional rights. Rep. Doug Collins (R-GA), himself a former military chaplain, sponsored the bill and gave a great speech on the floor in support of it,” ACNA Bishop Derek Jones told VOL.

 

In a stunning development, some military priests were faced with arrest if they celebrated mass or practiced their faith on military bases during the federal government shutdown.

“With the government shutdown, many [government service] and contract priests who minister to Catholics on military bases worldwide are not permitted to work – not even to volunteer,” wrote John Schlageter, the general counsel for the Archdiocese for the Military Services USA, in an op-ed this week. “During the shutdown, it is illegal for them to minister on base and they risk being arrested if they attempt to do so.”

According to its website, the Archdiocese for the Military Services “provides the Catholic Church’s full range of pastoral ministries and spiritual services to those in the United States Armed Forces.”

“This morning, we passed a bill (H. Con. Res. 58) in the House to ensure that our service members, their families, and their chaplains are able to exercise their fundamental constitutional rights. Rep. Doug Collins (R-GA), himself a former military chaplain, sponsored the bill and gave a great speech on the floor in support of it,” ACNA Bishop Derek Jones told VOL.

In his piece, Schlageter worried about this restriction as Sunday nears. “If the government shutdown continues through the weekend, there will be no Catholic priest to celebrate Mass this Sunday in the chapels at some U.S. military installations where non-active-duty priests serve as government contractors,” he wrote.

Because of the lack of active-duty Catholic chaplains, the military relies on hiring civilian priests to serve as government service and contract ministers. Those civilian priests are not allowed on the bases during a shutdown, Schlageter wrote.

One Republican lawmaker on the House Intelligence Committee told The Daily Caller on Friday that this “crosses a constitutional line.”

“The constitutional rights of those who put their lives on the line for this nation do not end with a government slowdown,” Kansas Rep. Mike Pompeo, a graduate of West Point and an Army veteran, said in a Friday statement. “It is completely irresponsible for the president to turn his back on every American’s First Amendment rights by furloughing military contract clergy.”

Added Pompeo, “The President’s strategy during the slowdown, just as during the sequestration, is to create as much pain as possible. However, this action crosses a constitutional line of obstructing every U.S. service member’s ability to practice his or her religion.”

Source

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