The topic of discussion for this Constitution Monday concerns the freedom to worship as one chooses. The First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States says plainly, “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.” Yet, an agency of the federal government allowed some of its officials to strip all Christian emblems and reference from its domains.
According to Fred Lucas at The Daily Signal, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) had inconsistent policies across the
spectrum of facilities for veterans. Some facilities stripped Bibles from the chapels,
Christmas cards from the veterans, and Christmas carolers from the hospitals.
Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert Wilkie has
been in the office for a little over a year. As the son of an Army artillery commander,
he grew up at Fort Bragg. He “served in both the Navy and Air Force reserves
and as a Pentagon official.” He remembers singing Christmas carols at the VA
hospital in Fayetteville, North Carolina as a child.
Wilkie says that Christmas caroling was no
longer permitted under the Obama administration. He discovered upon a trip back
to North Carolina that Bibles had been taken out of the chapel in the old VA
hospital. Because of what he remembered as a boy and what he saw as the
Secretary, he had a discussion with President Donald Trump about changes to the
policies.
The revised directives now “permit
religious literature, symbols, and displays at agency facilities.” Christmas
carols, Christmas trees, and Bibles are no longer banned, and chaplains are no
longer restrained on religious expression. The changes were specifically
designed “to protect the religious freedom of veterans and their families.”
The new guidelines “went into effect last
month,” and they refer “to the recent Supreme Court ruling allowing a
cross-shaped memorial to World War I dead to continue standing on public land
in Bladensburg, Maryland. The high court’s decision highlighted the important
role that religious symbols play in the lives of Americans and their
consistency with constitutional principles.”
In his service – “both in uniform and out
of uniform” – Wilkie has “seen the effects of combat.” He recognized that the
military culture once prioritized the “ability of our troops to worship, their
right to worship, their right to have access to chaplains, and to be free to
celebrate their faith.”
Now, moving over to VA, I consider the
spiritual well-being of our veterans, their spiritual health, to be just as
important as the medical competence and technical competence of our doctors and
nurses. They should have that fundamental right available to them to access chaplains,
to access their Bibles.
The new rules require “inclusion in appropriate circumstances of religious content in publicly accessible displays at VA facilities.” They allow “patients and their guests to request and be provided religious literature, symbols and sacred texts during visits to VA chapels and during their treatment at VA.” They also allow “donations of religious literature, cards, and symbols” to be given to the VA and to be distributed to VA patrons “under appropriate circumstances.” The new guidelines are not partial to any one religion and include “the Bible, the Quran, the Talmud, or any other religious text.”
The fact that this freedom is given to
members of all religions does not mean that the new policies are unopposed. It
is no surprise that the Freedom From Religion Foundation is against the new
guidelines. They claim that the new policies undermine the Constitution because
it “intentionally establishes a secular government in order to preserve
religious freedom, a right enjoyed by individuals.” This organization believes
that the VA should “keep its facilities free from government-endorsed religion.”
Since the VA based its policy on the recent Supreme Court decision, Wilkie does
not “anticipate litigation over the policy.” He believes that Justice [Neil] Gorsuch’s
statement “was absolutely on target.” “Because you might be offended doesn’t
give you standing to stop other people from worshipping. For me, this is not
only a military issue. It’s a religious liberty issue, and one that is vitally
important to those we serve.”
I like that statement: “Just because you
take offense at something I do, that does not mean that I must stop doing what
I do.” The person who takes offense has the responsibility to move away from
the offensive object or action – unless of course the action is vandalism,
murder, or other gross crimes.
We can be assured that some people will
still be offended by the sight of religious symbols and literature or by the
sound of Christmas carols. It seems that we will always have such people with
us. However, the VA guidelines seem to have been created on a firm foundation
and should be able to withstand many storms.
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