Tuesday, November 11, 2008

This is going to unleash anti-Catholic virulence, the likes of which none of us have ever experienced.

Are you ready and willing to defend your Church?

Catholic Bishops Vow to Confront Obama Administration Over Abortion

Roman Catholic bishops say they will confront Barack Obama over his support for abortion rights.
AP Tuesday, November 11, 2008

BALTIMORE -- The nation's Roman Catholic bishops vowed Tuesday to forcefully confront the Obama administration over its support for abortion rights, saying the church and religious freedom could be under attack in the new presidential administration.

In an impassioned discussion on Catholics in public life, several bishops said they would accept no compromise on abortion policy. Many condemned Catholics who had argued it was morally acceptable to back President-elect Obama because he pledged to reduce abortion rates.
And several prelates promised to call out Catholic policy makers on their failures to follow church teaching. Bishop Joseph Martino of Scranton, Pa., singled out Vice President-elect Biden, a Catholic, Scranton native who supports abortion rights.

"I cannot have a vice president-elect coming to Scranton to say he's learned his values there when those values are utterly against the teachings of the Catholic Church," Martino said. The Obama-Biden press office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Archbishop Joseph Naumann of the Diocese of Kansas City in Kansas said politicians "can't check your principles at the door of the legislature."

Naumann has said repeatedly that Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius, a Catholic Democrat who supports abortion rights, should stop taking Holy Communion until she changes her stance.
"They cannot call themselves Catholic when they violate such a core belief as the dignity of the unborn," Naumann said Tuesday.

The discussion occurred on the same day the bishops approved a new "Blessing of a Child in the Womb." The prayer seeks a healthy pregnancy for the mother and makes a plea that "our civic rulers" perform their duties "while respecting the gift of human life."

Chicago Cardinal Francis George, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, is preparing a statement during the bishops' fall meeting that will press Obama on abortion.

The bishops suggested that the final document include the message that "aggressively pro-abortion policies" would be viewed "as an attack on the church."

Along with their theological opposition to the procedure, church leaders say they worry that any expansion in abortion rights could require Catholic hospitals to perform abortions or lose federal funding. Auxiliary Bishop Thomas Paprocki of Chicago said the hospitals would close rather than comply.

During the campaign, many prelates had spoken out on abortion more boldly than they had in 2004, telling Catholic politicians and voters that the issue should be the most important consideration in setting policy and deciding which candidate to back.

Yet, according to exit polls, 54 percent of Catholics chose Obama, who is Protestant. The new bishops' statement is meant to drive home the point in a way that cannot be misconstrued.
"We have a very important thing to say. I think we should say it clearly and with a punch," said New York Cardinal Edward Egan.

But some bishops said church leaders should take care with the tone of the statement.
Bishops differ on whether Catholic lawmakers should refrain from receiving Communion if they diverge from central church beliefs. Each bishop sets policy in his own diocese.
"We must act and be perceived as acting as caring pastors and faithful teachers," said Bishop Blase Cupich of Rapid City, S.D.

But Dr. Patrick Whelan, a pediatrician and president of Catholic Democrats, said angry statements from church leaders were counterproductive and would only alienate Catholics.
"We're calling on the bishops to move away from the more vicious language," Whelan said. He said the church needs to act "in a more creative, constructive way," to end abortion.

Catholics United was among the groups that argued in direct mail and TV ads during the campaign that taking the "pro-life" position means more than opposing abortion rights.
Chris Korzen, the group's executive director, said, "we honestly want to move past the deadlock" on abortion. He said church leaders were making that task harder.

"What are the bishops going to do now?" Korzen said. "`They have burned a lot of bridges with the Democrats and the new administration."
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11 comments:

Elisabeth said...

I'm getting ready. I'm disappointed the bishops didn't speak more loudly and clearly during the campaign season - I'm upset that more Catholics in the pews were not challenged and reminded what's what - (I had one good catholic couple ask me to remove them from my email list over "political" Life stuff) -
But now that they're speaking, I am glad, and I hope they will follow through. Yes, anticatholic sentiment will arise - but so will respect from genuine Christians currently separated from us.

Mike T said...

In particular, I object to the quote from the Catholics United spokesman that the bishops "have burned a lot of bridges with the Democrats and the new administration."

Since when does civility and the development of a working relationship require a pretense of agreeing on everything?

Does a spirit of collaboration demand an abandonment of core principles? Quite to the contrary, I would suggest that the most effective collaborators are those who do not hesitate to articulate their core beliefs.

Thirty years of backbonelessness among Catholic Democrats notwithstanding, the Church remains perfectly willing to work constructively with the new administration, whenever possible, on a wide range of issues -- be it energy or the environment, foreign relations or national defense -- while remaining uncompromisingly faithful to the Gospel of Life.

Adrienne said...

Laura - I said that because one of the sites I went to (not Catholic) had about 276 of the vilest anti-Catholic comments I had ever seen. It was shocking that anyone would speak of others in such a manner

MikeT - Hi and welcome....I agree!

Tracy said...

I'm Ready!!

Anonymous said...

Count me in! Hopefully it's not all just talk, but action.

Mark D. said...

Well, the question is: what happens when push comes to shove? Dissenting Catholics and their allies have wrecked a good deal of havoc regarding the Church's clear teaching on the topic of abortion. Will the Church step up and start disciplining its clergy, institutions, and laity, who are willfully disobedience to the Magisterium on this point? If not, this will all be for naught.

During the struggle over civil rights and desegregation in the South, the Church stepped up to excommunicate Catholics who refused to acknowledge that all human beings are equal in the sight of God and should therefore be equal in the sight of the law. When Catholic politicians in the South sought to evade the natural law, they were punished by the bishops. This is what is necessary in the current situation. The bishops must begin disciplining wayward Catholics -- clergy, religious, and laity. There simply is no other option at this point.

The place to start? The vice president-elect.

Adrienne said...

Mark - you'll get no argument from me on this. I am hoping that they will not start waffling and let this whole thing slide.

PJA said...

Don't worry, you can all come over to my home diocese where the Bishop openly supports Obama!

Adrienne said...

Philip - are you serious???

irene said...

I can understand that you found an anti-Catholic site on the web. You can find an anti-anything site on the web. All it takes is a nut case who learns first grade HTML to make one and post it. If it was a blog, it doesn't even require that little bit of knowledge.

But an epidemic of anti-Catholicism? I for one do not expect it. In fact, I've not personally experienced any anti-Catholicism in the last 40 years. Yes, there always will be anti-Catholic protestant fundamentalists. But there doesn't seem to be very many of them -- I never see any around me.

Let's not give way to paranoia.

Again, the task is clear, and scriptural: teach, evangelize, and convert. And pray without ceasing.

PJA said...

Deadly serious. I've posted about him on my blog. Sorry to sound crude, but he's peeing himself with glee.