This week the ABC ran a story accusing Brisbane’s Mater Mother’s Hospital of “denying miscarriage care”.[i] At face value, this paints the Mater as heartless, turning away women experiencing grief. This is the second article the ABC has run in a matter of months regarding the issue of abortion and the Mater.[ii] There appears to be an agenda here.
Let us be clear, miscarriage is a profoundly distressing experience. The loss of a child, no matter how early in a pregnancy is real and devastating. Our hearts go out to the women in this article, and we do not seek to diminish the anguish they endured. Every woman deserves compassion and genuine support when walking through such loss.
But compassion does not require forcing hospitals to act outside of their ethos. What this case highlights is not a lack of care, but a clash of values – a Catholic hospital being pressured to violate its beliefs. It appears that what the pro-abortion side really want is not better healthcare, but a symbolic victory in the cultural war.
Forcing compliance as a trophy in the cultural war
Surgical miscarriage management and abortion procedures are widely available in Brisbane. What they want is something else entirely: to force the Mater to cross the line and perform abortions. And this article is the tactical use of a devastating story to do just that.
Why? Because compelling a Catholic hospital to perform abortions would be celebrated as a symbolic triumph – proof that no institution of faith can resist. It’s not about access, it’s about conquest. While the women who have suffered miscarriage are tragically being used as a vehicle for this campaign.
Although the cases presented are about natural miscarriage, the clinical details provided in the story seemed to indicate a hesitancy on the part of the treating doctors that to expedite treatment might inadvertently result in an abortion, which is against the ethos of the hospital. If that was the case, they are entitled to act with the necessary caution.
The Mater’s right to its ethos
The Mater has always been clear about its Catholic identity. It was founded by the Sisters of Mercy to serve mothers and babies, never to end life. To this day, it provides compassionate miscarriage care through expectant and medical management. This does not mean the Mater abandons women, far from it.
Staff walk with grieving mothers, offering alternatives and referrals when surgical management is required. The hospital continues to provide world-class maternity, neonatal, and women’s healthcare, grounded in respect for both life and conscience.
There is a crucial point to recognise here: the Mater has every right to uphold its Catholic ethos. In Australia, freedom of religion is a fundamental right, protected in law. Religious freedom means more than the right to worship – it means the right of faith-based institutions to operate in the public square without being forced to act against their beliefs.
The Mater is not “imposing” Catholic teaching on anyone. Again, women are free to seek services elsewhere, with many services across Brisbane. What the Mater insists upon is the right to remain faithful to its mission, rather than being compelled to violate it. This is not extremism – this is the very essence of diversity in a free society.
If religious institutions are only allowed to exist so long as they conform to anti-life ideology, then religious freedom is meaningless. The Mater’s ethos is not a problem to be solved, it is strength to be embraced.
The double standard on public funding
Critics argue that because the Mater receives taxpayer funding, it should be compelled to provide every procedure demanded – including abortion. But this is a double standard.
Taxpayer dollars already flow to groups like Children by Choice, which received $8 million from the government[iii] despite its narrow abortion advocacy, and to abortion providers like MSI Australia.[iv] Why then, should the Mater – which delivers care for tens of thousands of Queensland families, be threatened with funding cuts simply for upholding its values?
The ultimatum that has been tactfully given here is either perform abortions or lose public funding. But what would that actually mean in practice? Cutting funding to the Mater would not just touch one wing of the hospital, it would have serious consequences on healthcare generally in Queensland. The Mater is one of the state’s largest providers of maternity care, neonatal intensive care, cancer treatment and emergency medicine. Thousands of patients a year rely on its services. Removing its funding would collapse essential healthcare. Is that really what activists want? For a government to risk the health of Queenslanders to make an ideological point?
Thinking back to Canberra
We’ve seen this happen before. In the ACT, the government seized control of a Catholic hospital because it refused to perform abortions. That hospital’s ethos was erased, and with it the principle of pluralism in healthcare.[v] The same strategy is now being applied in Queensland: shame the Mater, undermine its credibility, and set the stage for political intervention.
Standing with the Mater
This is bigger than the Mater, it’s about whether conscience has any place in public life. If the Mater can be forced to violate its ethos or lose its funding, then no faith-based hospital, school, or charity is safe.
If you work at the Mater, we would love to hear from you regarding your perspective on articles like this from the ABC, please email info@cherishlife.org.au
[i] ABC News, Emma Pollard [23 September 2025]. ‘The public hospital patients who ended up paying abortion clinics for miscarriage care’. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-09-23/qld-mater-miscarriage-care-catholic-hospital-abortion/105781022?utm_source=abc_news_app&utm_medium=content_shared&utm_campaign=abc_news_app&utm_content=other Accessed 24 September 2025.
[ii] ABC News, Emma Pollard [23 July 2025]. ‘Mater Hospital’s religious abortion ban left couple feeling ‘abandoned’’. Accessed 24 Septmeber 2025 https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-07-23/mater-hospital-religious-abortion-ban-couple-feeling-abandoned/105532550
[iii] Children by Choice. ‘Funding Boost for Children by Choice’s Crucial Termination of Pregnancy Support Services’. Accessed 24 September 2025. https://www.childrenbychoice.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/Media-Release-Funding-Boost.pdf
[iv] MSI Annual Report 2023. Accessed 24 September 2025. https://msichoices.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/Annual-Report-2023_Web-Version_02.pdf
[v] ABC, Joanna Howe, ‘The ACT’s takeover of Calvary Hospital overrides conscientious objection and threatens religious freedom’. Accessed 24 September 2025. https://www.abc.net.au/religion/act-takeover-of-calvary-hospital-overrides-freedom-of-conscience/102356586