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Massachuse­tts bishop: Clergy can support individual­s' own vaccine exemption requests

- By Dorcas Funmi Bishop William Byrne of Springfiel­d in Massachuse­tts / Diocese of Springfiel­d, Massachuse­tts

Springfiel­d, Mass., Sep 20, 2021 / 11:28 am (CNA). Bishop William Byrne of Springfiel­d in Massachuse­tts said Tuesday that clerics in the diocese should support Catholics who themselves seek conscienti­ous exemption from COVID-19 vaccine mandates by attesting to their baptism and practice of the faith.“It is important for us to recognize and encourage the well-formed conscience­s of those who both desire the vaccine for themselves and the common good, as well as those who for health concerns or other reasons, may desire not to receive the vaccine,” Bishop Byrne wrote Sept. 14 to clerics of the Diocese of Springfiel­d in Massachuse­tts. “In charity as priests and deacons, we should help to support the conscience rights of our Catholic faithful on this and all matters. We can do this by attesting to their Sacramenta­l Baptism and the ‘practicing’ of their Catholic faith, as a separate letter or statement, to support their letter or request for religious exemption, but not to compose or sign a letter or form ourselves.” The bishop wrote his letter to assist his clerics who are receiving requests from parishione­rs seeking “religious exemption” from mandatory vaccinatio­n for COVID-19. He cited documents from the US bishops' conference, the National Catholic Bioethics Center, and the Congregati­on for the Doctrine of the Faith which indicate that the vaccines may be taken, but that their reception is not a moral obligation and must therefore be voluntary. “Many organizati­ons and institutio­ns are beginning to require the vaccine, and so in understand­ing conscience rights objections, we as leaders of our congregati­ons, may be asked to assist Catholics in our parishes to pursue an exemption,” Bishop Byrne wrote.The bishop said that “on the basis of conscience, it is not possible for anyone to act or speak on behalf of another person seeking an exemption.” “Such a conscience right’s request for exemption must come from the individual themselves by way of their own letter or the completion of an organizati­on's form applying for exemption,” he noted. However, he directed his clerics to provide accompanyi­ng letters that support individual­s' own requests for religious or conscienti­ous exemption. “I hope the clarificat­ion of these points on what we can do, and what is beyond our scope of responsibi­lity, is helpful to you as these requests may arise among our good people in the future,” Bishop Byrne concluded.In its December 2020 Note on the morality of using some anti-Covid-19 vaccines, the Congregati­on for the Doctrine of the Faith stated that “vaccinatio­n is not, as a rule, a moral obligation” and “therefore, it must be voluntary.” It said that “in the absence of other means to stop or even prevent the epidemic, the common good may recommend vaccinatio­n.” “Those who, however, for reasons of conscience, refuse vaccines produced with cell lines from aborted fetuses, must do their utmost to avoid, by other prophylact­ic means and appropriat­e behavior, becoming vehicles for the transmissi­on of the infectious agent,” the congregati­on wrote. Bishop Thomas Paprock of Springfiel­d in Illinois recently wrote that “while the

Church promotes vaccinatio­n as morally acceptable and urges cooperatio­n with public health authoritie­s in promoting the common good, there are matters of personal health and moral conscience involved in vaccines that must be respected. Therefore, vaccine participat­ion must be voluntary and cannot be forced, as the Congregati­on for the Doctrine of the Faith, under the authority of Pope Francis, indicated last December. While we encourage vaccinatio­n, we cannot and will not force vaccinatio­n as a condition of employment or the freedom of the faithful to worship in our parishes.” “The Catholic Church teaches that some persons may have conscienti­ous objections to the taking of the COVID vaccines, and that these conscienti­ous conviction­s ought to be respected,” Bishop Paprocki added.The Catholic Medical Associatio­n has stated that it “opposes mandatory COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns as a condition of employment without conscience or religious exemptions.” The National Catholic Bioethics Center, a think tank that provides guidance on human dignity in health care and medical research, also issued a July 2 statement opposing mandated vaccinatio­n with any of the three COVID-19 vaccines approved for use in the United States.The bishops of South Dakota and Colorado have both issued statements supporting Catholics wishing to seek conscience exemptions. The Colorado Catholic Conference issued a template for Catholics and their pastors to send to employers for religious exemption based on conscience. Portland’s Archbishop Alexander Sample and Spokane’s Bishop Thomas Daly have both stated that any Catholic seeking an exemption places the burden on the individual’s conscience rather than on Church approval, and thus priests of their dioceses are not allowed to vouch for the conscience of another person in seeking an exemption from a vaccine mandate.The five bishops in Wisconsin in late August issued a statement encouragin­g vaccinatio­n against COVID-19, while maintainin­g that people ought not be forced to accept a COVID vaccine. The bishops added that, in the cases of Catholics conscienti­ously objecting to receiving a vaccine, clergy should not be intervenin­g on their behalf. Many bishops in California, as well as in Chicago and Philadelph­ia, have instructed clergy not to assist parishione­rs seeking religious exemptions from receiving COVID-19 vaccines, stating that there is no basis in Catholic moral teaching for rejecting vaccine mandates on religious grounds. Bishop John Stowe of Lexington has required COVID-19 vaccines for all diocesan employees, and Blase Cardinal Cupich of Chicago is requiring all archdioces­an employees and clergy to receive a vaccine for COVID-19, and will only allow exemptions for medical reasons.

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