<p>Archbishop O’Brien, head of the Catholic Military Archdiocese opposes the law passed by the House as bad for the military and bad for religion in the military.</p>
<p>Article link: <a href=“http://www.catholicnews.com/data/stories/cns/0605633.htm[/url]”>http://www.catholicnews.com/data/stories/cns/0605633.htm</a>
Here is his quote:</p>
<p>But Archbishop O’Brien said the legislation would have elevated “the so-called ‘rights’ of a military chaplain above those of the military and its people.”</p>
<p>“Our military is a pluralistic society that relies heavily on unit cohesion,” he wrote. "When military chaplains, who are assigned as chaplains for the entire unit, are called upon to deliver public prayer to mandatory attended gatherings, they are speaking with some form of command sanction.</p>
<p>“This legislation would appear to give the ‘right’ to a chaplain to decide independently to use denominational-specific prayer in any setting,” Archbishop O’Brien added. “To avoid the obvious adverse effect on unit cohesion that such activity would cause, it is entirely possible that commanders, who are ultimately responsible to protect the free exercise of religion for all their people, would decide to dispense with public prayer entirely. Our military would not be well served by this turn of events.”</p>
<p>Archbishop O’Brien said military chaplains will continue to have the right to pray as they see fit at voluntarily attended worship services.</p>
<p>The military archdiocese “has long been an advocate for the constitutional rights of military chaplains to preach in accordance with their religious convictions when preaching to their congregations,” he said.</p>
<p>The archdiocese “vigorously supported the efforts of Air Force chaplains Father Vincent Rigdon and Rabbi David Kay in their litigation against the then-secretary of defense (William J. Perry) when these dedicated military chaplains were ordered not to preach to their congregations about legislation banning partial-birth abortion,” Archbishop O’Brien noted.</p>
<p>“We were most gratified when the federal judge held impermissible the military attempts to restrict or limit military chaplains who were performing their duties as clergy conducting voluntarily attended worship services,” he added.</p>