Pentecost, Sunday, May 27, 2007
The following is one of "Culture of Life's" 2008 election victory banner. May the Holy Spirit open the hearts and minds of Catholics, other Christians and Orthodox Jews to this message. It originated in 2005 by "The Catholic Leadership Conference" of the leaders of over 100 Catholic organizations representing in their membership over 2 million Americans. Phoenix, Oct. 28/05, LifeSiteNews.com
1. “In the Catholic tradition, responsible citizenship is a virtue; participation in the political process is a moral obligation. Every believer is called to faithful citizenship, to become an informed, active, and responsible participant in the political process.” Faithful Citizenship, USCCB….
2. Catholics should recognize that not all moral and social teachings have equal weight in determining how to cast their vote. Some teachings are directly binding and some are guided by individual prudential judgment.
3. The first obligation of government is the protection of innocent human life from conception to natural death. The Church teaches that justice requires this protection. This truth can also be known through reason unaided by revelation….
4. Catholic voters must first make decisions about their votes based on the moral issues that are non-negotiable. First among these are the life issues.
5. On prudential matters that affect the common good, Catholics of good will can disagree. Though there are Catholic principles such as compassion, justice and charity that we should share, there is no single “Catholic” policy on issues like taxes, education, foreign policy and immigration reform.
6. A similar distinction was made by the then Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith. His Eminence Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict XVI to the American Bishops when he stated, “There may be a legitimate diversity of opinion even among Catholics about waging war and applying the death penalty, but not however with regard to abortion and euthanasia.”…
7. Catholic priests and bishops first and foremost are shepherds of souls. The role of these shepherds is to instruct and remind voters, candidates and public officials of the moral obligations and social principles that should guide their political action.
8. All Catholics, especially the laity, have a right and duty to be heard in the public square. Catholic moral teaching should be publicly espoused in such a way that they can inform law and public policy and not be artificially limited to the private domain of individual belief.
9. In their political participation, Catholics must not compromise these principles even though at times, prudential judgment will require accepting imperfect legislation as a means of incremental progress. (Pope J.P. II, “Evangelium Vitae”)
10. The ultimate political goal for Catholics must be the achievement of public policies and laws that result in the legal protection of all innocent human life and promote the dignity of each human person without exception and compromise.
George H. Kubeck, (Please duplicate and or translate into Spanish)
Sunday, May 27, 2007
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment