The following comes from a Nov. 9 story on Live Action News.
On a Sunday morning, congregants fill the campus of Calvary Chapel Chino Hills, a non-denominational evangelical church located in the heart of Southern California. Since the church’s inception, Senior Pastor Jack Hibbs – a strong pro-life proponent – has encouraged his congregation to uphold religious values and fundamental liberties in the public square. Now, the church is opposing a California mandate egregiously imposed on religious institutions across the Golden State. The congregation is challenging a decision by the California Department of Managed Healthcare that forces all employers, including churches, to provide coverage for elective abortions in all health insurance plans.
“I felt violated; I felt forced,” Hibbs said in response to the abortion mandate. “I love America and I love American history, and I have a lot of invested interest in defending the unborn. I see the Constitution under attack, and I see my religious freedom under attack.”
In an interview with Live Action, Hibbs said California’s decision is a flagrant violation of the right of churches and pastors to freely exercise their freedom of conscience. Hibbs and his congregation have joined six other churches across the state in a legal challenge opposing the coercion.
The seven churches, represented by Alliance Defending Freedom and Life Legal Defense Foundation, filed a complaint with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services last month, contending that the order is an encroachment on religious liberty, as protected under the Constitution.
The complaint notes, “DMHC is an arm of the state of California and purports to be interpreting and applying the law of California, a state that receives billions of taxpayer dollars. … California accepted those funds with full knowledge of the requirements of the Weldon Amendment, but it has chosen to ignore this law. The need to remedy this discrimination is urgent because it is immediately depriving Complainants of a health plan that omits elective abortions.”
Hibbs said he, in concert with pastors named in the legal challenge, will do whatever it takes to send this message to the state of California:
“We will take this to the point of being jailed, if necessary, being arrested, if necessary – whatever it takes. I cannot violate my biblical worldview,” Hibbs said. “Once I have to do that, I no longer live in the United States our founding fathers gave me.”
“This abortion issue for a Christian is not a political issue – it’s a biblical issue,” Hibbs added. “God is the engineer of life – he’s the giver of life. I cannot think of a human being more defenseless than an unborn baby.”
Alliance Defending Freedom called the requirement an “assault” on the most fundamental American freedoms. In a statement, the alliance’s senior counsel Casey Mattox explained that the mandate directly violates the 2004 Weldon Amendment, a law passed by Congress that protects religious organizations from being forced to pay for abortion in health insurance plans. Life Legal Defense Foundation’s Legal Director Catherine Short said the mandate is political kowtowing to the big abortion lobby.
“This move was a pure power play, and we trust that the Department of Health and Human Services will take the necessary steps to bring the state into compliance with federal law,” Short said.
The decision comes in the aftermath of the landmark U.S. Supreme Court Burwell v Hobby Lobby decision which affirmed the right of closely held for-profit corporations to opt out of abortion funding. California’s decision to single-handily impose the mandate on religious institutions side-steps federal law and legal precedence.
Earlier this year, the Alliance and Life Legal warned the state that it was in violation of federal law. The department responded, affirming its decision to enforce abortion funding in all health insurance plans. The legal group duo also filed a complaint in September with HHS on behalf of employees at Loyola Marymount University….
Calvary Chapel Chino Hills joins other prominent churches, including Skyline Church in La Mesa, Foothill Church and Foothill Christian School in Glendora, Alpine Christian Fellowship in El Cajon, The Shepherd of the Hills Church in Porter Ranch, City View Church in San Diego and Faith Baptist Church in Santa Barbara.
To read the original story, click here.
The faith of Calvary Chapel Chino Hills, a non-denominational evangelical church located in the heart of Southern California, is the reason why some Catholics leave our Faith.
They are more Faithful to Sacred Scripture (the Word of God) than some of our own Bishops, who support pro-abortion politicians, accept secular insurance laws that violate our faith, etc.
Catholics leave our faith for any number of reasons. Would I leave the Eucharist, the sacraments, the eternal sacrifice of the mass for a non-denominational evangelical church? No, and anyone who truly knows the faith would answer likewise.
Would they leave knowing that there is no salvation outside the Catholic Church?
Warren, is that truly the teaching of the Church?
Abortion and sodomy are the two death-sacraments of Satanists and Democrats.
Add euthanasia.
The Democratic Party of CA Platform 2014 includes all taxpayers paying for “death with dignity”.
When are CA voters going to wake up ?
These are true martyrs for the Christian Faith. Wonder where the Catholic Bishops stand?
California Catholic Bishops have opposed it, found new insurance that does not provide contraception and abortion payments, sued the State and raged against it. They have not been silent.
Bob One, Those of us who work for the average company in California have been offered only insurance which covers contraception, abortion, etc. for many years now. The Bishops have indeed been silent about our needs for a long, long time. In addition, they continue to back the unions who also push these abominations onto we the faithful, (not to mention those who are unfaithful).
These are true Christian martyrs. Wonder where the Catholic Bishops stand?
They stand for nuance. Nuance. Always nuance.
Government cannot not force anyone to do evil, but it can force us to make difficult decisions. Be not afraid!
Real Christian leadership!!!!!!!
He talks the talk and walks the walk.
He puts the American bishops, even the Pope, to shame.
Then after all the noise the Bishops have been making about the Obamacare, why so slow to respond. Just NOW he is speaking up? What about the early beginnings of this church and the 1970s when Catholic pro-life efforts were fighting Rowe v Wade? Perhaps the scare in Texas with a pastor being required to hand over his sermon to the government, was the wake up call. His stand should be against abortion, not because HE feels the violation, but the violation that is done to innocents in the womb. Yes, Christian civil liberties are trampled upon! Unite CHURCH!
Being Faithful to the constant Teachings of The Church will always draw more people than insipid pandering to the culture. When out Bishops and priests get a backbone about moral issues instead of trying to be another of the hundreds feel-good social service agencies, the flood of Catholics leaving The Church for these ecclesial communities will stop.
Can I please hear some of our Bishops and Priests say “I’d go to jail before funding abortion or supporting same sex unions?”.
I thought we as Catholics were the one true Apostolic Church. I am very sad to see how silent our church is.. Pray for our church leaders and ministers.. We need a voice for the unborn..
Bullies. Bullies. Bullies. I thought our society was against bullying. Apparently not when it comes to the issue of abortion. I was born into a faith-filled Catholic family and mom and dad gave me four siblings. We stand against abortion. I have been out on the streets of Sacramento, and even the streets of D.C. for many, many, many years protesting the bullying of the unborn through abortion. Our church has always declared war on those promoting abortion. Many of our church members have gone to jail(witness Joan Andrews of Florida who was incarcerated for pulling the plug on an abortion machine.) Those of us of faith have risked much in our belief that abortion is wrong and will continue to obey God rather than man on this and other issues that offend God. Are you with us?
Dear Respectlife Comment:
It is no longer enough to simply pray for the bishops.
With every prayer, write a letter to your bishop and cite the reasons why he should resign—and remind him that you will no longer donate to the DDF (Diocesan Development Fund).
God bless their courage.
California is requiring all heath care plans to cover abortions.
What are the odds that Jack Hibbs has health insurance? Somewhere in the neighborhood of 100%? He’ll go to jail to avoid providing health plans for his employees, but notice he says nothing about vaguely considering paying for a colonoscopy out of pocket in protest.
It makes great, principled-sounding rhetoric, but means very little. The real motivation here is that the healthcare mandate is is forcing him as an employer to provide a basic standard of living for employees.
Calvary Chapel is about as far removed from religion as church can be anyway. It’s basically a community space. The doctrine in a nutshell: a literal reading of Genesis, and a bizarre obsession with eschatology. No need to pay attention to any of that, though…. simply say “I accept Jesus Christ as my personal savior” once, and you’re good.
Hugh, your comment is a bit overly simplistic don’t you think? I went to the web site of Calvary Chapel to see what they were all about. 5000 adults attend on Sundays, not counting children and teens. Not bad for a church that began as a neighborhood Bible study group 14 years ago. Their beliefs are well written and totally Bible based. Their web site it totally Christian. It has a great outreach program to other parts of the world, assistance for locals and ministries for everyone in the congregation. We Catholics could learn from them rather than just write them off as whatever.
@Bob One, I am familiar with Calvary Chapel, at least the mothership in Costa Mesa (which was started in the 1960s). I grew up nearby and knew lots of congregants. They had an active (and successful) youth outreach program. My dad met his second wife at one of their divorce groups (which is a meat market for middle aged people). I went to events and workshops there.
5000 adults attend on Sundays. Of course they do. It wouldn’t be a megachurch otherwise. It’s theater. And more of a global brand than a church at this point.
It’s not a bad place at all. It’s successful as a community space. There are precious few in OC that aren’t related to commerce. Congregants want to be there, and participate in a lot of non-service activities. The people are nice, and genuinely good natured. It’s welcoming and aesthetically pleasing.
As a religion, though. It has all the weight of astrology. They may study the Bible, but it’s heavily predigested with heavy emphasis on literal reading of Genesis and Revelation, pop culture with Jesus veneer, and Republican talking points. Most of the congregants have only a superficial attachment to or understanding of Christianity, and don’t really need to, so they even miss a lot of that. Seriously, “I accept Jesus as my personal savior” is Open Sesame for Heaven. Why bother digging deeper?
Hugh, and maybe he participates in one of the Christian Medical Sharing Programs out there. Members do not share medical bills for contraception, nor abortion, nor sterilizations. These programs were started by Protestants.
Satan wants to drag souls to hell, and he is accomplishing via his minions in the abortion and sodomite movements.