In a speech to the law school at the Catholic University of the Sacred Heart in Milan, Giovanni Cardinal Lajolo, former president of the commission governing Vatican City State, warned that the current controversy in the United States about freedom of conscience indicates the need to seek greater protection for freedom of conscience in Europe. Speaking at length on the subject, he insisted that individual religious believers as well as religious institutions should always be able to live live and act in conformity with their conscientious convictions. [CNS]
Polish MP seeks protection of conscience for pharmacists
A Polish member of parliament, Jacek Żalekis, is advocating a protection of conscience law for pharmacists. Polands Catholic Pharmacists’ Association (SFK) supports the idea, noting that pharmacists are denied the freedom of concience enjoyed by physicians and nurses. The idea is opposed by the deputy speaker of parliament and others, who argue that pharmacists who wish to act in accordance with their conscientious convictions should change their profession. [The News]
American Cardinal on morality of employer cooperation in contraception
In an interview on the Eternal Word Television Network, Raymond Cardinal Burke, Prefect of the highest ecclesiastical court in the Catholic Church, has stated that an employer who pays for insurance coverage for contraception is “formally cooperating” in the sin of contraception, and that such cooperation cannot be justified. [LifeSite News]
American Catholics asked to ‘raise voice in support of the Church”
Bishop William E. Lori has published a four page “Primer on the HHS Health Mandate and Religious Liberty” that succinctly sets out, in question and answer form, the objections of the Catholic bishops in the United States to the federal government’s demand that employers provide health insurance for contraceptives, surgical sterilization and embryocidal drugs and devices.
Different denominations protest Obama administration’s mandate
A statement from a Catholic, Orthodox, Anglican and Prostestant religious leaders in Pennsylvania supports universal access to health care, but protests the federal government’s plan to force objecting religious employers to provide health care insurance for contraceptives, surgical sterilization and embryocidal drugs and devices. A number of the signatories have no moral objection to contraception. [Post-Gazette]