Abortion Mandate Threatens Religious Freedom
- CDF Faith Desk
- 4 abr
- 2 Min. de lectura
Actualizado: 9 abr
Last month, the Ninth Circuit Court of AppealsĀ showed its disregard for religious liberty
by ruling that a local church in Washington State does not have the right to challenge
a state law forcing it to cover abortion in its employee health care plan.
The case, involving Cedar Park Assembly of God, a Pentecostal church in Kirkland,
Washington, began in 2019 when the church was informed by its provider, Kaiser
Permanente, that it could no longer exclude abortion from its insurance coverage due
to Washingtonās so-called āParity Act.ā This law states that if a plan covers maternity care,
it must also include both contraception and abortion. For Cedar Parkāa Pentecostal
congregation whose beliefs hold life sacred from conceptionāthis was a direct violation
of their Christian faith.
The church filed suit, standing firm on the First Amendmentās guarantee of religious
freedom. And for good reason. What kind of freedom exists if the state can force a
church to participateāfinancially and administrativelyāin the destruction of innocent
life? This is not just about one church in Washingtonāitās about the rights of all faith-
based organizations. If the state can compel a church to pay for abortion, what else can
it compel?
This fight is far from over. Cedar Park plans to seek a rehearing from the full Ninth Circuit
and potentially appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, if necessary. The stakes are high. If
this ruling stands, religious institutions in the nine states impacted by this decision, such
as churches, Christian schools, pro-life nonprofitsācould be forced to violate their
convictions or face crippling legal consequences. And while the ruling currently applies
only to states under the Ninth Circuitās jurisdiction, it could easily set a legal precedent
that influences other courts and encourages lawmakers in additional states to adopt
similar mandates. The ripple effect could undermine religious liberty nationwide.