Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Hobby Lobby, The HHS Mandate And Why This Matters To Women
Hobby Lobby, The HHS Mandate And Why This Matters To Women
Jan 28, 2026 4:55 PM

I won’t bother reviewing all the details of the Hobby Lobby case before the Supreme Court regarding the HHS mandate (you can do more reading here, here and here.) I’d like to talk about why this issue is of particular interest for women, and why the voices of all women need to be heard.

The organization Women Speak For Themselves has been vocal in the fight against the HHS mandate. They want to make it known that the call for universal access to birth control and abortion via employee health insurance is not supported by all women, and that women from every walk of life deserve to be heard.

We are Democrats, Republicans and Independents. Many, at some point in our careers, have worked for a Catholic institution. We are proud to have been part of the religious mission of that school, or hospital, or social service organization. We are proud to have been associated not only with the work Catholic institutions perform in munity – particularly for the most vulnerable — but also with the shared sense of purpose found among colleagues who chose their job because, in a religious institution, a job is always also a vocation.

No one speaks for all women on these issues. Those who purport to do so are simply attempting to deflect attention from the serious religious liberty issues currently at stake. Each of us, Catholic or not, is proud to stand with the Catholic Church and its rich, life-affirming teachings on sex, marriage and family life. We call on President Obama and our Representatives in Congress to allow religious institutions and individuals to continue to witness to their faiths in all their fullness.

Helen Alvaré, professor of law at Georgetown University, has been particularly active in making sure that a multitude of women’s voices have been heard on this issue. In an amicus before the Supreme Court in January of 2014, Alvaré argued that the Department of Health and Human Services had not demonstrated pelling argument for forcing employers to supply artificial birth control and abortion coverage as part of employee health insurance.

Why does this matter to women? Aren’t we supposed to be able to make decisions about our own health, well-being, fertility? Women Speak for Themselves [WSFT] says yes, but the HHS fight is about something more than birth control:

It is rather about whether practically and culturally severing human sexual relations from the fact of their originating new, vulnerable human lives, improves the lives of women, and along with them, of men, children and society. A great deal of reliable data indicates that the answer is “no” in some important aspects. This is the question the purveyors of the “War on Women” theme steadfastly refuse to engage. WSFT would like them, and all people of good will, to engage it, to get past sound-bytes and onto the hard questions for the sake of women and all society.

Putting it very simply, separating sex from reproduction has been disastrous. It has harmed women, their health, their relationships, their work, and their children. When our teen daughters have sex, even with birth control, over 16% of them will e pregnant within a year. Merck, the makers of the birth control device Nuva Ring, will pay out over $100 million in settlements regarding blood clots in women who’ve used the device. (One woman, Megan Henry, was a would-be Olympic athlete whose career was ended by use of Nuva Ring.) Alvaré points out that HHS gives no indication or data as to how birth control has any health benefits for women, and therefore has no place in health insurance.

At the very least, our health is at risk. Beyond that, our liberty is at risk, and the Obama administration has sorely misjudged how much our liberty means to us. We want to be able to practice our faith, guided by our conscience and our respective faith leaders, daily. We do not want our faith relegated to a once-a-week worship service. We have the God-given right to worship and practice our faith as we see fit. This does not mean we constrain others by our faith, but neither should our faith be constrained.

If a woman wishes to purchase birth control, it is widely available and inexpensive (in some cases, it’s free.) Many women (and men, of course) have deeply-held religious beliefs regarding this, and they cannot in good conscience pay for this. Our government should not be making this decision for us. Women’s rights – long-fought for, cherished and important to all women – cannot and should not be forcibly removed by our government. Women of all backgrounds, beliefs, political realms, ethnic origins, levels of education and e in the United States have the ability and desire to speak for ourselves. The HHS mandate will drown out the voices of many women. Let us speak for ourselves.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Pope Francis wants us to pray for small and medium-sized enterprises
In a surprising change in tone, Pope Francis issued a call to pray for businesspeople who “dedicate an immense creative capacity to changing things from the bottom up.” Is the class-warfare rhetoric over? Read More… Who would ever have guessed this would happen? Well, it did. And in the quiet month of Rome’s roasting August, when the city experiences a near-total exodus to cooler climes. Very few journalists, in either the religious or secular press, noticed. Yet, it rightfully made...
Customers put product value ahead of political values
Woke capitalism prioritizes politics. But paying customers always put service and price first. Read More… For years American business has allowed itself to be swayed by the push and pull of political culture. Investment decisions, corporate donations, and hiring practices have been made in response to a culture that demands acquiescence or cancellation. But as Netflix, Disney, and State Farm deal with political and cultural backlash from both sides on a host of issues, and politicians scapegoat businesses large and...
Natural law limits government and arbitrary power
Human flourishing demands that laws be reasonable and in the interest of mon good, and that, as Aquinas noted, the state not “impede people from acting according to their responsibilities.” Subsidiarity, too, is natural law. Read More… Any discussion of the nature and ends of liberty and justice inevitably touches upon the role of government and law in society. A good place to begin reflecting upon natural law’s approach to these questions is Aquinas’ understanding of law. In his Summa...
The Trump raid will only harden Americans’ positions
The search of Mar-a-Lago is not the first time a high-ranking official (or former official) has been under intense criminal investigation. But it may be the first time that public trust in the integrity of the agencies carrying out that investigation has been this low. Read More… It’s 1973. The Watergate scandal that would ultimately doom the presidency of Richard M. Nixon is roiling that administration. But it’s not the only breach of public trust dogging the Nixon White House....
When a Joke is the difference between freedom and tyranny
What can a 50-year-old movie about munist regime in Czechoslovakia tell us about cancel culture and microaggressions today? Nothing, if we’re not willing to struggle. Read More… This year, at the Karlovy Vary Film Festival, the major film attraction in Eastern Europe, there was a memento of the Prague Spring: a newly restored version of the 1969 movie The Joke, directed by Jaromil Jireš and adapted by him and Milan Kundera from the latter’s eponymous debut novel. The Joke was...
Student loan forgiveness is unforgivable
Don’t kid yourselves: Those student loans will be paid back. The question is by whom? And is that in any way fair? Read More… The first iron law of economics is that we live in a world of scarcity. Because of this, economics puts constraints on our utopias. Rinse and repeat. This is how we discern between good and disastrous policies. Student-loan bailouts fall into the disastrous category. There are two arguments to be made here: the moral and the...
Is It Time for a Minimum Corporate Tax?
The Law of Unintended Consequences has not been rescinded. Don’t be surprised if corporations find loopholes to circumvent new tax laws intended to get them to “pay their fair share.” Read More… Big reforms should be based on wide consensus. At the height of an economic crisis caused by bined effects of the pandemic lockdowns and sanctions for Russia’s war in Ukraine, further economic experiments such as a global minimum corporate tax could easily e another example of thelaw of...
Would Prophet Muhammad punish Salman Rushdie?
The horrific assassination attempt against author Salman Rushdie has provoked both cheers and condemnation from Muslims. But which response is more faithful to the scripture and the Prophet of Islam? Read More… It seems that the infamous “death fatwa” that Ayatollah Khomeini issued against Salman Rushdie back in 1989 for his novel The Satanic Verses, which most Muslims found offensive, finally reached it mark on August 12 in upstate New York. Seconds after the award-winning author appeared on stage at...
Reading an immigrant’s love letter to the West
Moving from the former USSR to the U.K., a popular YouTuber has a lot to say about the glories of the West—and the perils of mistaking microaggressions for real oppression. Read More… For regular listeners of the Triggernometry YouTube podcast, much of the content and tone of co-host Konstantin Kisin’s just-published nonfiction book, An Immigrant’s Love Letter to the West, e as no surprise. Part memoir and part mentary, the book recounts the arc of Kisin’s family story as it...
Despite the critical backlash, Persuasion largely persuades
Has there been a recent production more lavishly condemned than Netflix’s new adaptation of Jane Austen’s Persuasion? Nevertheless, the contemporary touches merit your attention. Read More… Can an unmarried woman e a guide to romance? It certainly appears so with Jane Austen (1775–1817), spinster author of sharp, witty novels of manners set in early 19th-century England, who has e something of a belated authority on navigating the rocky shores of modern romance. A film from 2007, The Jane Austen Book...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved