Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Court Rules March for Life Qualifies for Abortifacient Mandate Exemption Based on Moral, Not Just Religious, Objections
Court Rules March for Life Qualifies for Abortifacient Mandate Exemption Based on Moral, Not Just Religious, Objections
Jan 15, 2026 1:06 AM

Imagine if the government were to tell an organization dedicated to veganism that, because of a new mandate, they must purchase a meat platter to serve at their monthly meetings and that the chair cushions in their conference room must be made of leather.

Appalled by this governmental intrusion, the vegans ask to be excluded from the mandate since none of their members wish to eat bologna while sitting on dead cow skin. They also point out that a group of Jain vegetarians who meet next door were given an exemption and that they are merely asking to be treated similarly.

The government considers their request and decides to deny the exemption. The reason? Unlike the Jains, the vegans’ objection is based on moral philosophy rather than religion.

Such reasoning would be morally and legally absurd. Yet it is the exact reason the Obama administration gave for denying an exemption from the HHS’s abortifacient mandate to March for Life, a non-religious, non-profit pro-life organization whose staff opposes all forms of abortion, including those caused by contraceptives that can act as abortifacients.

Last year the Supreme Court ruled that employers providing a religious objection to the mandate (e.g., employers like the owners of Hobby Lobby) might qualify for an exemption. But March for Life is not a religious organization, even if most of their employee’s objections to abortion are rooted in religious beliefs. March for Life sued the government, claiming that the mandate violates the Fifth Amendment’s guarantee of equal protection because it treats the organization differently than it treats similarly situated employers.

On Monday, a federal judge agreed. Judge Richard J. Leon of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia rejected the government’s position that the March for Life is not “similarly situated” to the exempted organizations because it “is not religious and is not a church.”

You can almost hear the Judge Leon’s exasperation when he writes,

This not only oversimplifies the issue — it misses the point entirely! The threshold question is not whether the March for Life is similarly situated with regards to the precise attribute selected for modation. For the following reasons, I conclude that it most assuredly is.

Religious employers are exempt from the Mandate because of the “unique relationship between a house of worship and its employees in ministerial positions.” What, then, makes that particular employment relationship “unique” in this particular context? The answer, according to HHS, is simple: employees of religiously exempt organizations are “less likely” than other groups to want contraceptives because of their moral beliefs. In HHS’ s own words, “[h]ouses of worship and their integrated auxiliaries that object to contraceptive coverage on religious grounds are more likely than other employers to employ people of the same faith who share the same objection, and who would therefore be less likely than other people to use contraceptive services even if such services were covered under their plan.”

[…]

What emerges is a curious rationale indeed. HHS has chosen to protect a class of individuals that, it believes, are less likely than other individuals to avail themselves of contraceptives. It has consequently moored this modation not in the language of conscientious objection, but in the vernacular of religious protection. This, of course, is puzzling. In HHS’ s own view, it is not the belief or non-belief in God that warrants safe harbor from the Mandate. The characteristic that warrants protection-an employment relationship based in part on a shared objection to abortifacients-is altogether separate from theism. Stated differently, what HHS claims to be protecting is religious beliefs, when it actually is protecting a moral philosophy about the sanctity of human life. HHS may be correct that this objection mon among religiously-affiliated employers. Where HHS has erred, however, is in assuming that this trait is unique to such organizations. It is not.

Of course that trait isn’t unique to religious employers, as the existence of March for Life makes clear. Giving one group an exemption and denying it to another that is exactly similarly situated, Judge Leon notes, amounts to “regulatory favoritism.” Moral philosophy, he adds, should be accorded the same treatment as religious belief.

This reasoning is so clear, obvious, and reasonable that it raises the question of how the Obama administration never thought of it themselves. The fact is, they likely did consider this rationale—and still rejected it. That is why they are likely to appeal the decision to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.

Still, for the time being, this is significant victory for mon sense and the rights of conscience. While the Obama administration continues to trample upon the moral beliefs of both the religious and the secular, at least one court still recognizes that, as ADF Senior Counsel Kevin Theriot says, “Americans should not be forced to choose between following their deepest convictions and submitting to unlawful and unnecessary government mandates.”

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
Evangelicals Endorse Mormon/Catholic Presidential Ticket
There is an utter disconnect between what I hear other people – mostly in the media – say about evangelical conservatives, and what I’ve experienced living in and among them for nearly three decades on this planet. I hear how intolerant and close-minded this group supposedly is, and I sit and absorb such attacks with a blank look on my face. They bear no resemblance to the environment I was reared in. The people who instilled in me the values...
I Am Woman: Hear Me Whine
I have been duped. I thought, along with my husband, that we were doing a good thing by raising our children in a household that valued traditional marriage and saw our children as gifts from God. I chose, for more than a decade, to work at home raising our children because I could not imagine a more important job during their formative years. According to Laurie Shrage, I’m quite mistaken. Wives who perform unpaid caregiving and place their economic security...
Bigger the Government, Smaller the Citizen
Today is November 6th, and we’re supposedly going to elect a new President of the United State of America by the time Charles Krauthammer goes to bed early tomorrow morning. But for those of us who can’t help but think “big picture” every second of every day, what does November 7th look like – regardless of who wins? What about November 8th? How about a year from now? Anyone who values liberty, limited government, and the free enterprise system knows...
Wisdom & Wonder & Interdisciplinary Studies
I was recently invited to write an essay on the importance of interdisciplinary studies for the Calvin Seminary student publication Kerux. In my essay “The Truth is One,” I reflect on the famous quote of Abraham Kuyper, [N]o single piece of our mental world is to be hermetically sealed off from the rest, and there is not a square inch in the whole domain of our human existence over which Christ, who is Sovereign over all, does not cry: “Mine!”...
RFK, Reagan, and Presidential Elections
The first presidential election I remember was the Ronald Reagan – Walter Mondale race in 1984. My kindergarten class in the Philadelphia suburbs held a mock vote that Reagan overwhelmingly won. It of course reflected the way our parents were voting. I can remember at the age of five, John Glenn was one of the Democrat candidates seeking the nomination and I knew he was a famous astronaut. The truth is, I’ve always been fascinated by presidential elections and Bare...
Is There an Intrinsic Morality of the Free Market?
In an essay for Big Questions Online, a site that examines questions of human purpose and ultimate reality, Rev. Robert Sirico considers whether morality is intrinsic to the free market: Is a hammer intrinsically moral? Your reply would most immediately be: “It depends on what it was used for. If employed to bash in the heads of people you do not like, the answer is no. If employed to help build a house for a homeless people, your answer might...
First English Translation of Herman Bavinck’s ‘The Christian Family’
Christian’s Library Press and Acton Institute announce the release of the first English translation of The Christian Family by Herman Bavinck. When this book was first published in Dutch, marriage and the family were already weathering enormous changes, and that trend has not abated. Yet by God’s power the unchanging essence of marriage and the family remains proof, as Bavinck notes, that God’s “purpose with the human race has not yet been achieved.” Accessible, thoroughly biblical, and astonishingly relevant, The...
A Prayer for the Nation
A prayer “For the Nation,” from the BCP: Lord God Almighty, who hast made all the peoples of the earth for thy glory, to serve you in freedom and in peace: Give to the people of our country a zeal for justice and the strength of forbearance, that we may use our liberty in accordance with thy gracious will; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with thee and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever....
College Cramming: A Refresher Course on the Electoral College
Whether the Republicans cry “fraud” or the Democrats scream “disenfranchised” we can be certain of one thing after the polls close: the President of the United States won’t be elected today. Even if there are no hanging chads or last minute court appeals, the election of the President won’t be made until December 13. That is, after all, the way the Founding Fathers designed the system to work. Confused? Then it’s probably time for a brief refresher on the Electoral...
Jesse Jackson Didn’t Have to Choose Between the Poor and the Unborn
In 1977 a pro-life Jesse pared the pro-choice position to the case for slavery in the antebellum South: There are those who argue that the right to privacy is of higher order than the right to life. I do not share that view. I believe that life is not private, but rather it is public and universal. If one accepts the position that life is private, and therefore you have the right to do with it as you please, one...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved