| Faithful Citizenship: Abortion -
September 2008 |
Bishop Thomas Wenski
Diocese of Orlando
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In late August, the Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi, appeared on
Meet the Press. In order to justify her support of abortion as a
Catholic, she misrepresented the history and the nature of the authentic
teaching of the Catholic Church on abortion. On behalf of all the
bishops, Cardinal Rigali, chair of our committee on Pro-Life Activities,
and Bishop Lori, chair of our committee on Doctrine, issued a statement
refuting Ms. Pelosi’s attempt to justify the unjustifiable. No one can
legitimately argue that support for abortion can be reconciled with the
moral teachings of the Church. In their statement, the bishops quote
succinctly from the Catechism of the Catholic Church: “Since the
first century the Church has affirmed the moral evil of every procured
abortion. This teaching has not changed and remains unchangeable. Direct
abortion, that is to say, abortion willed either as an end or a means,
is gravely contrary to the moral law.” (CCC # 2271)
Last month, I too had to issue a clarification by means of a letter to
the editor that appeared in the Orlando Sentinel on August 16th
concerning an article in that same newspaper on August 13th that
suggested that “Catholic leaders” viewed the Democratic Party Platform’s
“abortion plank” in a positive light. In fact, many would argue that the
plank this year was more extreme than the party’s previous endorsements
of “reproductive rights”.
I wrote: “….(the bishops) are the ones who speak as the leaders of the
Catholic Church in the United States
—
and not political operatives for one party or another who happen to be
Catholic. In Forming Consciences for Faithful Citizenship, the bishops
wrote that ‘opposing intrinsically evil acts has a special claim on our
consciences and our actions’ and warned against a ‘moral equivalence’
that would make no ethical distinctions between different kinds of
issues involving human life and dignity.
As we bishops wrote: ‘The direct and intentional destruction of innocent
human life from the moment of conception until natural death is always
wrong and is not just one issue among many. It must always be opposed.’”
Catholics in public life
—
whether they are Democrats or Republicans
—
must act seriously and responsibly on many important moral issues. Our
faith has an integral unity that calls Catholics to defend human life
and human dignity whenever they are threatened. A priority for the poor,
the protection of family life, the pursuit of justice and the promotion
of peace are fundamental priorities of the Catholic moral tradition
which cannot be ignored or neglected. Yet abortion is a grave violation
of the most fundamental human right
—
the right to life that is inherent in all human beings, and that grounds
every other right we possess.
As Pope John Paul II wrote in Christifideles Laici, “…the common outcry,
which is justly made on behalf of human rights
—
for example, the right to health, to home, to work, to family, to
culture —
is false and illusory if the right to life…is not defended with maximum
determination…The human being is entitled to such rights, in every phase
of development from conception until natural death; and in every
condition, whether healthy or sick, whole or handicapped, rich or poor
(#38).
Bishops do not endorse candidates or parties. We do not tell people for
whom they should vote. We say that Catholics should vote their
consciences
—
and public officials who are Catholic should always act in accord with
their own consciences. But, we insist that one’s conscience must be
consistent with fundamental moral principles. As members of the Church,
all Catholics are obliged to shape our consciences in accord with the
moral teaching of the Church. That so many Catholics in public life hold
positions on human life
—
like Representative Pelosi and Senator Biden
—
not coherent with their Catholic faith and yet, at the same time,
declare themselves to be “good Catholics” is a scandal.
In Forming Consciences for Faithful Citizenship, we recognized that,
while a Catholic may never vote for a candidate because of that
candidate’s support for abortion, he or she might
—
for a serious and grave reason
—
vote for such a candidate. And there are a few Catholics with strong
pro-life credentials who feel this way in the current campaign.
—
One such Catholic is Douglas Kmiec, former head of The Catholic
University of America’s law school.
But the Democratic standard bearers
—
in reaction to the Sarah Palin nomination
—
are seemingly intent on making this election a referendum on defending
abortion “rights”. If they do, a Catholic with a well formed conscience
would be hard pressed to find any “serious” and “grave” reasons to
justify voting for them.
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