J
JReducation
Guest
Everywhere my friend. You can’t look for one sentence that says, “Don’t vote for this person.” That’s not the way that the Church teaches. She never has spoken that way and never will. She teaches principles.Where does the Catholic Church teach that?
One source to which I can point you is to Evangelium Vitae, where the entire concept of voting and the proper exercise of democracy is explained in light of the Fathers of the Church and Christan Tradition.
The Church is very clear that the proper exercise of democracy is to promote the good.
Join to that what Aquinas explains about the highest good. One always has a moral duty to choose the higher of two goods.
Finally, add to that the fundamental moral principle in moral theology, a choice for the lesser of two evils is still a choice for evil and man may never choose any evil.
If we take these three principles and all of the other principles taught to us in moral theology we can conclude that we cannot morally vote for a pro-choice candidate. A pro-choice candidate will support an immoral position. To cast ouir vote for such a person is to empower him or her in the wrong direction. Our elected officials must represnt our moral values.
Rerum Novarum, Evangelium Vitae, and Lumen Gentium all make it very clear that government does not exist for its own benefit, but for the benefit of its citizens.
Then we have the moral example of great saints who gave up their lives fighting governments who stood between the citizen and the law of God. All of them were martyred, beginning with the prophets. If we honor the martyrs, we must ask ourselves, why so?
They gave their lives for the faith. This means that they espoused a moral value and a set of beliefs that was in conflict with the state. That’s why the state executed them. Two that should help us in dealing with the state are Thomas More and John Eudes. When the rubber hit the road, they were first and foremost, sons of the Church, then faithful citizens. They gave their lives rather than compromise with an immoral state. More’s last statement is very powerful. “I die a faithful servant of the King, but foremost, a son of the Church.”
Why honor these men and women, if we believe that we can vote for a pro-choice candidate? Someone like Mother Teresa loses her meaning in our Christian tradition. One of the constant criticisms that she made of American Catholics was “American Cathoics are the poorest men and women in the world, because they have to power to stop the killing of their children and they do not use it.” When John Paul II visited Baltimore around 1991 or 92, he said, “America, you have received much, but you will also have to answer for much, because you have allowed your children to be killed.”
All of these principles together, lead to one conclusion. We cannot be faithful to the Catholic Church and empower those who are willing to ignore her. This is why Thomas More and many other martyrs died. They refused to compromise. You’re either a son of the Church or you’r not.
Anyone who votes for a pro-choice candidate and honors the martyrs does not understand why the mayrtyrs died.
I always look at my own Franciscan brother, Maximilian Kolbe. He preferred to give his life, rather han allow one innocent man to die. If we are to be true to our Caholic heritage, then we must be like Maximilian. We should be willing to suffer whatever it takes, rather than let one innocent person die.
Children should not be killed in the womb or in pitri dishes. Such an act is barbarism at its best. Unemployment, poor roads, less schools and other hardships should be more tolerable than the thought of an innocent person being killed.
Good roads, better schools, safer neighborhoods, etc are all goods. But none is on the same rung in the hierarchy of good as the right to life. That is a principle that has been handed down to us from the scriptures, through the Fathers of the Church, her martyrs, her great doctors, our popes and other Catholic traditions and teachings.
These are men and women who support the right to abortion, the right to kill unused embryos in pitri dishes, and infanticide. How can we claim to be faithful Catholics and empower someone to make laws or support existing laws that allow for the killing of the innocent?
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF