Within the past few weeks at least
two people proclaiming membership in the Catholic Church wrote
letters to the editor to daily newspapers presenting flawed
thinking on the Catholic teaching of abortion and their particular
political beliefs. As their bishop, I have no choice but to
respond to their public action.
As people of faith, we are called to be in an intimate and
personal relationship with Jesus Christ, accepting him as
Lord and Savior. Only then will our hearts and minds, our
words and actions be truly formed by Jesus Christ.
As Catholics, we learn about our faith through the reading
of the Sacred Scriptures and the teaching of the Magisterium.
This teaching is found in doctrinal instruction, encyclicals
like the Gospel of Life, and other official documents like
the General Instruction on the Roman Missal. Much of this
material is collected into handy resources like the Catechism
of the Catholic Church.
The church, in our ever-changing world, always turns in faith
to the Lord. As the Bible reminds us, the gates of hell will
not prevail against the church. The teaching of the church
is in opposition to the culture of death and therefore the
church is attacked by agents of the culture. Actually, if
we follow Jesus, we should expect to carry the cross of misunderstanding,
attack and even hate. As St. Peter said to the sanhedrin,
“We must obey God rather than men.”
The teaching of the Church
In light of the letters to the editor, I want to present
the church teaching in a straightforward manner: You cannot
on the one hand support abortion rights and on the other be
a Catholic in good standing. Likewise, you cannot offer personal
opposition to abortion and then act differently in your professional
life.
As the Fathers of the Vatican II Council said more than 30
years ago: “This split between the faith which many
profess and their daily lives deserves to be counted among
the more serious errors of our age.” (Gaudium et Spes
43)
The church, through the bishops, must teach the Gospel. I
have the duty to teach about human life and dignity, marriage
and family, war and peace, the needs of the poor and the demands
of justice. As we learned during the civil rights struggle,
we have a moral responsibility to state the truth about the
dignity of every human being regardless of race. It doesn’t
matter whether a particular politician or a candidate for
office agrees with us or not.
The same is true today.
The Catholic Church has taught from the beginning that the
killing of the unborn (burning them with a solution the doctor
injects into the womb, cutting them up while still alive in
the womb like so much meat, or sucking out the brain in partial
birth abortion) is intrinsically evil, murder and can never
be justified.
Those who perform an abortion and those who cooperate willingly
in the action, if fully aware of the grave evil, cut themselves
off from the church and separate themselves from God’s
grace. This is and has been the constant teaching of the Catholic
Church.
The common good
The letters to the editor and statements I have received
in a few private letters are clear examples of the erosion
in Catholic formation for the last two generations.
Today nominal Catholics are often soft on abortion and badly
misinformed about this and other aspects of the faith including
the Eucharist and the proper formation of one’s conscience.
They fail to grasp the difference between the common good
and excessive individual rights.
In the Diocese of Sioux Falls we have the Institute for Religious
Education (IRS) offering up to 120 hours of training in the
faith for religious education teachers, Catholic school teachers,
and others to have the full teaching of the church. It will
be offered again this fall, and I encourage you to take part.
Call the Education Office at 605-334-9861 and ask to be included.
To date more than 1,500 people from the diocese have enrolled
for all or part of the program.
During the June bishops’ meeting in Denver, we stated
clearly that the legal system itself cooperates in evil when
it fails to protect the lives of those who have no protection.
When the Supreme Court interpreted that abortion on demand
is a constitutional right, the justices failed to protect
the lives of innocent and defenseless new members of the human
race; a sin against the common good.
The morality that protects human rights and thus the common
good is the first and best thing worth legislating. When a
politician says, “I am personally opposed to abortion
but don’t want to impose my Catholic beliefs”
or says something like, “You can’t legislate morality,”
he or she fails the common good.
As the bishops stated in “Faithful Citizenship,”
Catholics who bring their moral convictions into public life
do not threaten democracy or pluralism, but rather enrich
them and the nation. The separation of church and state does
not require division between belief and public action, between
moral principles and political choices, but rather protects
the rights of believers and religious groups to practice their
faith and act on their values in public life.
The church clearly teaches in the Gospel of Life (par. 73)
and on page 6 of the Statement from the Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith (in the English translation) that those
who formulate the law (legislators at the state and national
level) have a grave and clear obligation to oppose any law
that attacks human life. If you review someone’s voting
record or listen to their campaign promises, you will have
the information to cast an intelligent vote.
The statement from the Congregation goes on to say, “A
well-formed Christian conscience does not permit one to vote
for a political program or an individual law which contradicts
the fundamental content of faith and morals.” (CDF page
6)
Morality not political activity
It is clear that from the pulpit you cannot endorse a certain
political party or speak for or against a particular candidate
for office. However, pastors are only fulfilling their duty
when they share the teaching of the church with regard to
faith and morals. This is not political activity.
I have given the statement from the CDF to the priests and
deacons so they can reflect on it and address it from the
pulpit when appropriate. I have asked them to read the Gospel
of Life and Veritatis Splendor and share this with the people.
This is important as we help people properly form their conscience.
We cannot be silent out of fear and anxiety, but rather we
must speak the truth of the faith.
As our Holy Father said in the Gospel of Life (par. 28), “We
are facing an enormous and dramatic clash between good and
evil, death and life, the ‘culture of death’ and
the ‘culture of life.’ We all have a responsibility
which we cannot escape of choosing to be unconditionally pro-life.”
There is a faulty thinking today that all life issues are
equal or the same. Even some priests and religious and a few
politicians try to promote this. The philosophical fallacy
that underpins this argument is called relativism. It teaches
that all things and issues are relative and up to the individual
to decide which is of greater importance. Some elements in
the media favor it as it “squares” in their minds
with the sense of strong individualism fostered by the culture.
It goes hand-in-hand with the attitude, “whatever I
think or believe, whatever I value or want, whatever I feel
or desire must be correct.”
The fundamental right
But the teaching of the church, which corresponds with reality
and the natural law, is that all life issues are not equal
or the same. In fact, there is one which is primary, life
itself. It is so basic and foundational that if it is not
upheld, all other issues and rights are meaningless. Opposition
to abortion binds every Catholic under pain of mortal sin
and admits of no exceptions.
It was for this reason that I stated in October of 2000 that
you cannot vote for a politician who is pro-abortion when
you have a choice and remain a Catholic in good standing.
For some Catholics this is a hard teaching, but I am simply
repeating church teaching: “Human life is sacred because
from the beginning it involves the creative action of God
(Gospel of Life, par. 53)...the direct and voluntary killing
of an innocent human being (abortion and euthanasia) is always
gravely immoral (Gospel of Life, par. 57, 65)...protecting
the mother’s health does not justify the deliberate
killing of an innocent human being (Gospel of Life, par. 58).”
As Cardinal Ratzinger has said, “Catholics would be
guilty of formal cooperation in evil, and so unworthy to present
themselves for Holy Communion, if they were to deliberately
vote for a candidate precisely because of the candidate’s
permissive stance on abortion or euthanasia.” This would
separate one from the community of the Church.
If one had a properly formed conscience admitting the grave
evil of abortion and euthanasia, as the Church teaches, and
does not share a candidates stand in favor of abortion and
euthanasia, but votes for the candidate for other reasons,
it is considered remote material cooperation which can be
permitted, Cardinal Ratzinger states, if proportionate reasons
are present, e.g., the candidate would limit abortions.
You cannot form your conscience properly based on popular
opinion or feeling or an article in some news magazine, but
only from the Scripture and the teaching of the church. If
your personal belief or feeling is different from the church,
then you need to change.
It is not a matter of one opinion versus another opinion.
As the Catechism states in its section on abortion, when the
unborn are not protected, the “very foundations of a
state based on law are undermined.” (CCC, 2273). Life
is “the issue,” because every other right is dependent
upon it. Understand that this is not simply one bishop’s
opinion, but is the truth as revealed to us through the church
founded by Christ. Certainly, each individual conscience has
rights, but it also has duties, and one of the primary duties
is to inform our conscience through the teaching of the church.
The right judgment of conscience is not a matter of personal
preference nor has it anything to do with feelings. It has
only to do with objective truth. “Conscience must be
informed and moral judgment enlightened. A well-formed conscience
is upright and truthful. It formulates its judgments according
to reason, in conformity with the true good willed by the
wisdom of the Creator. The education of conscience is indispensable
for human beings who are subjected to negative influence and
tempted by sin to prefer their own judgment and to reject
authoritative teachings.” (CCC, 1783)
Have you read the Gospel of Life, Veritatis Splendor, the
Doctrinal Notes from the Congregation on Some Questions Regarding
the Participation of Catholics in Public Life, Living the
Gospel of Life: A Challenge to American Catholics, and the
Catechism, especially the sections on abortion, euthanasia
and conscience formation?
What have you read?
In all honesty, how could a person oppose Catholic teaching
or claim to be right if they have never read what the church
teaches? I urge all Catholics to properly inform their conscience
by reading the relevant church documents before stating what
is believed or not believed!
I join the bishops of the United States in committing myself
to teaching clearly, persuading and mobilizing Catholics and
all people of good will to defend human life and support policies
that protect human life from conception to natural death.
In the Diocese of Sioux Falls, those who act in defiance of
these fundamental principles of life should not be honored
or invited to speak at Catholic colleges, schools or parishes,
or hold any office such as lector, Eucharist Minister, usher,
parish council member or religious education teacher.
While we commit ourselves to maintain communication with public
officials who make decisions every day that touch human life
and dignity, we also remember that the Eucharist is the source
and summit of Catholic life. As we read in the Scriptures,
“Whoever, therefore, eats the bread or drinks the cup
of the Lord in an unworthy manner will be guilty of profaning
the Body and Blood of the Lord.” (1 Cor. 11:27) This
means that all must examine their consciences as to their
worthiness to receive the Body and Blood of our Lord. This
examination includes fidelity to the moral teaching of the
church and how we live our personal and public lives.
I think we all have some work to do.
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