I HAVE PREVIOUSLY COMMENTED ON THE SCANDAL OF THE CHA SUPPORTING THE PASSAGE OF OBAMACARE. NOW HERE IS AN UPDATE ON THAT SCANDAL:
Cardinal George lays blame on CHA for passage of health-care reform bill //
June 17, 2010
CATHOLIC WORLD NEWS. ORG
The president of the US bishops’ conference believes that the Catholic Health Association (CHA) bears a great deal of responsibility for the passage of health-care reform legislation that expands coverage for abortion.
Speaking at a meeting of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) in St. Petersburg, Florida, Cardinal Francis George of Chicago revealed that he and other USCCB representatives had tried to persuade the CHA not to endorse the health-care bill, after a pro-life amendment was defeated. Their efforts were in vain.
When he signed the legislation, President Barack Obama presented the CHA president, Sister Carol Keehan, with a pen used in the ceremony, in recognition of her role in helping ease Catholic opposition to the bill. Cardinal George said that “the Catholic Health Association and other so-called Catholic groups provided cover for those on the fence to support Obama and the administration.”
While the USCCB was meeting in Florida, the CHA was holding its own conference in Colorado during the past week. John Allen of the National Catholic Reporter notes that CHA leaders were unflinching in their support for the health-care bill, and unapologetic about their role in securing its passage.
Ironically the bishop whose diocese is playing host to the meeting of the US hierarchy, Bishop Robert Lynch of St. Petersburg, questioned whether the USCCB had a right to expect other Catholic organizations to follow the bishops’ lead on a political issue. Bishop Lynch said: “I have never before this year heard the theory that we enjoy the same primacy of respect for legislative interpretation as we do for interpretation of the moral law.”
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Bishop Lynch Butts Heads with Cardinal George over Bishops’ Authority
By Kathleen Gilbert
ST. PETERSBURG, Florida, June 17, 2010 (LifeSiteNews.com) – One bishop on the board of the pro-ObamaCare Catholic Health Association (CHA) has contended that U.S. bishops do not have authority to state the official Catholic position on a given piece of legislation. The remarks put Bishop Robert Lynch of St. Petersburg in apparent conflict with the position of the current head of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB), Cardinal Francis George of Chicago.
Cardinal George has maintained the USCCB’s position against the federal health care bill and has repeatedly condemned the efforts of Sr. Carol Keehan, leader of the CHA, and other dissident Catholic groups who supported the legislation. Democrats have affirmed that the bill, widely recognized by the pro-life community as vastly expanding abortion funding in America, would have probably failed had Obama not succeeded in persuading Keehan and others to break with the bishops and lend the bill a veneer of authenticity for Catholic legislators.
George and other top bishops at the USCCB said that the CHA’s dissent weakened the moral authority of America’s Catholic bishops, and dealt a “wound to Catholic unity.”
“This may be a narrow disagreement, but it has exposed a very large principle,” George told the National Catholic Reporter’s John Allen this week.
“If the bishops have a right and a duty to teach that killing the unborn is immoral, they also have to teach that laws which permit and fund abortion are immoral. It seems that what some people are saying is that the bishops can’t, or shouldn’t, speak to the moral content of the law, that we should remain on the level of abstract principles.”
St. Petersburg’s Bishop Robert Lynch appeared to challenge George’s argument. He told Allen that despite having been associated with the USCCB since 1972, he has “never before this year heard the theory that we enjoy the same primacy of respect for legislative interpretation as we do for interpretation of the moral law.”
Lynch, a member of the CHA Board of Trustees, added that “this theory needs to be debated and discussed by the body of bishops.”
The Florida bishop also suggested that the ongoing Apostolic Visitation of U.S. women religious orders has created a perceived negative “climate we have to recognize” when dealing with nuns involved in the health care battle. “There are bishops who feel strongly that CHA somehow betrayed the church,” said Lynch, who went on to insist that the association “acted in good conscience” and that “the dust has to settle” before effective dialogue can continue.
Lynch won notoriety in pro-life circles as Terri Schiavo’s bishop who, after a prolonged silence regarding the widely-publicized fight to save Terri’s life in 2005, issued a bizarre statement urging “mediation” between Terri’s family and Michael Schiavo at the same time as the latter strove to have Terri starved and dehydrated to death by removing her feeding tube.
Terri’s brother Bobby Schindler later excoriated the bishop for failing to help the Catholic family save Terri’s life. “The bottom line is, when apostolic grace and responsibility are abdicated, innocent people die,” Schindler told the bishop in a 2007 open letter.