The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

The real priorities

The morning after Election Day, the Supreme Court heard a case on foster care and adoption that puts a heck of a lot in perspectiv­e.

- Kathryn Lopez

I listened with some frustratio­n and bewilderme­nt as a few of the justices talked with some hostility about the idea that Catholic Social Services in Philadelph­ia would dare to expect to be able to contract with the city to certify and provide ongoing support for foster and adoptive families.

There are children in the city of Philadelph­ia who need homes, and there are people certified by Catholic Social Services with the ability and desire to help these children. How dare the city of Philadelph­ia get in the way of that?

While everyone has been stuck on the presidenti­al election drama, understand­ably, I fear we miss the most important things. Most of the headlines that covered the Philadelph­ia case set it up as a conflict between LGBTQ rights and the Catholic Church. Here’s how Becket Fund for Religious Liberty lawyer Lori Windham put it during an exchange with Justice Brett Kavanaugh: “( Catholic Social Services) is not going to prevent any same- sex couple from being able to foster in Philadelph­ia. There are many other agencies out there. They’re merely asking to be able to step aside and recuse if that situation ... were ever to arise. ... This is a system that has worked effectivel­y and worked well for many years.”

That, of course, brings to mind the ridiculous fight that the Obama administra­tion waged against the Little Sisters of the Poor, who wound up before the U. S. Supreme Court not once, but twice, as their religious liberty rights were attacked. Who would expect Catholic nuns to cover contracept­ion and abortionin­ducing drugs in their employees’ health insurance? This is what religious liberty is all about.

Speaking Wednesday about being a president for all the people was certainly the right thing for Joe Biden to say. But I have my concerns, to say the least. His partner on the ticket, Kamala Harris, has said that membership in the Knights of Columbus renders judicial candidates questionab­le. Given it’s a fraternal organizati­on, that was mercifully one strike against Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett that didn’t make the Democrats’ list of objections.

Speaking of the Knights of Columbus, one of my dearest friends in the world, Andrew T. Walther, a former vice president for communicat­ions and strategic planning for the Knights, has died. He will be mourned and missed. He worked tirelessly to advance the work of the Knights of Columbus in the service of God. He cared especially about protecting religious minorities in the Middle East and elsewhere. But the fact of the matter is he was a man who lived everyday virtue courageous­ly.

If we’re going to heal under one president or another, there needs to be some buyin from the American people. Do we still understand that the purpose of the presidency isn’t to punish our political opponents? Do we understand, too, that politics isn’t meant to be a religious substitute? There’s a blind, dangerous fervor I see on the streets and on social media. My solace comes from people actually praying to God for peace and wisdom.

And the message of the Knights of Columbus and the life of Andrewwalt­her is that real religious freedom and a robust civil society are essential. Anything else will drive us crazy — as we see in our politics and in much else.

Kathryn Jean Lopez is senior fellow at the National Review Institute, editor- at- large of National Review magazine and author of the new book “A Year With the Mystics: Visionary Wisdom for Daily Living.” She is also chair of Cardinal Dolan’s pro- life commission in New York. She can be contacted at klopez@ nationalre­view. com.

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