Feds tell Catholic hospital in Oklahoma: Blow out your sanctuary candle or face the penalties...

Michie

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Saint Francis Health System in Oklahoma told to remove chapel candle or stop serving those in need

WASHINGTON – The federal government recently told a Catholic hospital in Oklahoma to either blow out a small candle or stop serving elderly, disabled, and low-income patients. Saint Francis Health System, the twelfth largest hospital in the nation, keeps, with many prudent safeguards, a sacred candle always lit inside its hospital chapels, in accordance with its Catholic faith. After a hospital inspection in February, the government said a single candle was too dangerous and now threatens to strip the hospital of the ability to accept Medicare, Medicaid, or CHIP if it does not extinguish the flame. Becket sent a letter to the Biden administration reminding it that Saint Francis has the right to religious freedom and warning federal bureaucrats to leave the candle alone.

Saint Francis Health System is a premiere health system with five hospitals in Eastern Oklahoma. The health system cares for nearly 400,000 patients each year, has given away more than $650 million dollars in free medical care in the past five years, and employs more than 11,000 Oklahomans. Saint Francis’s mission is to extend the presence and healing ministry of Christ. In addition to providing compassionate and top-notch care to its patients, Saint Francis lives out its religious mission by maintaining multiple chapels throughout its hospitals, each of which has been blessed by the local Bishop.

Since Saint Francis opened its doors in 1960, the health system has had a sanctuary candle with a living flame as an act of worship. The flame, far removed from medical equipment and patients, is shielded by two glass holders, sits on a brass basin, is affixed to a wall and has a brass top covering it, with many sprinkler heads above it. For Catholics, the living flame is a sign of the living presence of Jesus. The federal government now threatens to tell all patients who rely on Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP that they can no longer receive care at Saint Francis—all over a candle.

Continued below.
 
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mourningdove~

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The devil is working very hard these days, to take the hope of Jesus away from people.

One day, the candle may go out at St Francis Health System but ...

"The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it."
 
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PsaltiChrysostom

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This would a concern if a patient with oxygen equipment goes in there, especially by themselves. We've had to deal with patients with oxygen generators who want to smoke even though we're a non-smoking facility. Oxygen generators should be kept 15 to 20 feet away from any open flames. If you have a patient who sits down at that chair under the candle, you just never know what might happen. And then the hospital will be liable.

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Michie

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Michie

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“The government has seen the light and has abandoned its attempt to force an Oklahoma hospital to blow out a small candle or stop serving elderly, disabled, and low-income patients,” Lori Windham, vice president and senior counsel at the Becket religious liberty legal group, said May 5 on Twitter.

She said the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has told St. Francis of Assisi “it can keep its living flame — a sacred candle housed in the hospital chapels.”
 
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WarriorAngel

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“The government has seen the light and has abandoned its attempt to force an Oklahoma hospital to blow out a small candle or stop serving elderly, disabled, and low-income patients,” Lori Windham, vice president and senior counsel at the Becket religious liberty legal group, said May 5 on Twitter.

She said the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has told St. Francis of Assisi “it can keep its living flame — a sacred candle housed in the hospital chapels.”
:crossrc::purpleheart:
 
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Michie

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chilehed

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This would a concern if a patient with oxygen equipment goes in there, especially by themselves. We've had to deal with patients with oxygen generators who want to smoke even though we're a non-smoking facility. Oxygen generators should be kept 15 to 20 feet away from any open flames. If you have a patient who sits down at that chair under the candle, you just never know what might happen. And then the hospital will be liable.

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That is such complete nonsense. The rate at which portable medical oxygen generators produce gas is so low that you'd have to put the cannula inches from the flame to get any meaningful increase in flame size.
 
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