Related Pages
Ending Abortion
Abortion Is the Overriding
Issue: What Bishops Have Said
Public Servants and Moral Reasoning:
A notice to the Catholic community in northern Colorado
September 8, 2008
To Catholics of the Archdiocese of Denver:
When Catholics serve on the national stage, their actions and words impact
the faith of Catholics around the country. As a result, they open themselves
to legitimate scrutiny by local Catholics and local bishops on matters of
Catholic belief.
In 2008, although NBC probably didn't intend it, Meet the Press has
become a national window on the flawed moral reasoning of some Catholic public
servants.On August 24, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, describing herself
as an ardent, practicing Catholic, misrepresented the overwhelming body of
Catholic teaching against abortion to the show's nationwide audience, while
defending her "pro-choice" abortion views. On September 7, Sen. Joseph Biden
compounded the problem to the same Meet the Press audience.
Sen. Biden is a man of distinguished public service. That doesn't excuse
poor logic or bad facts. Asked when life begins, Sen. Biden said that, "it's
a personal and private issue." But in reality, modern biology knows exactly
when human life begins: at the moment of conception. Religion has nothing
to do with it. People might argue when human "personhood" begins -- though
that leads public policy in very dangerous directions -- but no one can any
longer claim that the beginning of life is a matter of religious opinion.
Sen. Biden also confused the nature of pluralism. Real pluralism
thrives on healthy, non-violent disagreement; it requires an
environment where people of conviction will struggle respectfully but vigorously
to advance their beliefs. In his interview, the senator observed that other
people with strong religious views disagree with the Catholic approach to
abortion. It's certainly true that we need to acknowledge the views of other
people and compromise whenever possible -- but not at the expense of a developing
child's right to life.
Abortion is a foundational issue; it is not an issue like housing policy
or the price of foreign oil. It always involves the intentional killing of
an innocent life, and it is always, grievously wrong. If, as Sen.
Biden said, "I'm prepared as a matter of faith [emphasis added] to
accept that life begins at the moment of conception," then he is not merely
wrong about the science of new life; he also fails to defend the innocent
life he already knows is there.
As the senator said in his interview, he has opposed public funding for
abortions. To his great credit, he also backed a successful ban on partial-birth
abortions. But his strong support for the 1973 Supreme Court decision Roe
v. Wade and the false "right" to abortion it enshrines, can't be excused
by any serious Catholic. Support for Roe and the "right to choose"
an abortion simply masks what abortion is, and what abortion does. Roe
is bad law. As long as it stands, it prevents returning the abortion issue
to the states where it belongs, so that the American people can decide its
future through fair debate and legislation. In his Meet the Press
interview, Sen. Biden used a morally exhausted argument that American Catholics
have been hearing for 40 years: i.e., that Catholics can't "impose" their
religiously based views on the rest of the country. But resistance to abortion
is a matter of human rights, not religious opinion. And the senator knows
very well as a lawmaker that all law involves the imposition of some
people's convictions on everyone else. That is the nature of the law.
American Catholics have allowed themselves to be bullied into accepting the
destruction of more than a million developing unborn children a year. Other
people have imposed their "pro-choice" beliefs on American society without
any remorse for decades. If we claim to be Catholic, then American Catholics,
including public officials who describe themselves as Catholic, need to act
accordingly. We need to put an end to Roe and the industry of permissive
abortion it enables. Otherwise all of us -- from senators and members of
Congress, to Catholic laypeople in the pews -- fail not only as believers
and disciples, but also as citizens.
+Charles J. Chaput, O.F.M. Cap.
Archbishop of Denver
+James D. Conley
Auxiliary Bishop of Denver
Source:
http://www.archden.org/repository//Documents/ArchbishopChaputCorner/Addresses/PublicServants&MoralReasoning9.8.08.pdf
Related Pages
Ending Abortion
Abortion Is the Overriding
Issue: What Bishops Have Said
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