Bishop: Patrick Kennedy Misrepresenting Letter on Communion, Abortion

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Washington, DC – Congressman Patrick Kennedy, a pro-abortion member from Rhode Island, says Bishop Thomas Tobin has asked him to stop receiving communion because of his pro-abortion views. However, Tobin says the demand was merely a voluntary request that was issued two years ago and meant to be private.

lifenews.com/state4590.html
 
This is a very strange story. It appears that Mr. Kennedy is releasing this information now in a deliberate attempt to damage the Catholic Church and derail the USCCB’s attempt to make sure publicly funded abortions are left out of health care reform! I certainly don’t see any other reason for him to bring up a private conversation that occurred over 2 years ago.

It’s also rather sad how the media is covering this story. They are covering it like it’s a new action Bishop Tolbin just took- it happened over 2 years ago! They also seem to enjoy writing that Kennedy was “barred” from communion but from what I can tell the Bishop asked Kennedy not to receive communion for his own spiritual well being.

I am personally against Bishops publicly denying communion, it strikes me as political grandstanding which should be above the Catholic Church. But if a Bishop wants to have a private conversation with a high-profile member of his diocese it is certainly within his right, and should be kept private! If Patrick Kennedy has such a problem with the Catholic Church that he feels the need to damage it in public I do think he should consider looking elsewhere.
 
This is a very strange story. It appears that Mr. Kennedy is releasing this information now in a deliberate attempt to damage the Catholic Church and derail the USCCB’s attempt to make sure publicly funded abortions are left out of health care reform! I certainly don’t see any other reason for him to bring up a private conversation that occurred over 2 years ago.

It’s also rather sad how the media is covering this story. They are covering it like it’s a new action Bishop Tolbin just took- it happened over 2 years ago! They also seem to enjoy writing that Kennedy was “barred” from communion but from what I can tell the Bishop asked Kennedy not to receive communion for his own spiritual well being.

I am personally against Bishops publicly denying communion, it strikes me as political grandstanding which should be above the Catholic Church. But if a Bishop wants to have a private conversation with a high-profile member of his diocese it is certainly within his right, and should be kept private! If Patrick Kennedy has such a problem with the Catholic Church that he feels the need to damage it in public I do think he should consider looking elsewhere.

Only Political Grandstanding is being done by Ole Pat.
This certainly isn’t the 1st time that the Kennedy Klan has run afoul of a Preist or Bishop. ( you’ll note that it was an imported Irish Priest that gave Teddy his last rites, Hopefully Ted actually repented before his death)

Personally, I’d like to see some of these High Profile CINOs ( Catholic in name only)
Politicians & actors Formally denounced / excommunicated. They are clearly not living a Catholic Lifestyle & most openly & brazenly defy the Church, her Bishops & Priests and the Doctrines & Dogmas of the Church.

If it walks, squawks like an Apostate then call a spade a spade and in all charity & love send these hypocrites a message. loud & clear. Repent and Reconcile yourselves to the Church you claim to love & be a member of.

I personally hope they all reconcile themselves before God prior to an untimely demise. After all that is what its all about. Saving Their souls & our souls.
 
Kennedy said, "You mean to tell me the Catholic Church is going to be denying those people life saving health care? I thought they were pro-life?”

What a sad hypocrite!

Why not have a health care bill that actually cares for health, not pays for murdering innocent babies??

The Catholic Church provides more life saving health care than any other government or charitable agency in the history of human civilization!!

Kennedy’s actions are just another in a long line of those who support the murder of innocent babies through abortion and try to cover up their atrocities by accusing the Catholic Church of wrongdoing & try to defy the teachings of Jesus Christ.

If Kennedy disagrees with the Catholic Church’s unequivocal stance proclaiming abortion as ALWAYS A GRAVE EVIL, then he should join a church that supports abortion.

You can’t pick & “choose” only the easy & convenient or politically expedient teachings to follow. It’s “all or nothing baby!”

"Not every one who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ shall enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of my Father who is in heaven." (Mt 7:21)

Sancta Maria, Mater Dei, Ora Pro Nobis Peccatoribus!

mark
 
Washington, DC – Congressman Patrick Kennedy, a pro-abortion member from Rhode Island, says Bishop Thomas Tobin has asked him to stop receiving communion because of his pro-abortion views. However, Tobin says the demand was merely a voluntary request that was issued two years ago and meant to be private.

lifenews.com/state4590.html
The thing that I just can’t understand is why the Kennedys or anyone else would want to be Catholic if their beliefs are not Catholic.
 
Actually, it’s easy to understand.

Such people feel that they ‘own’ their faith, and that they can determine what exactly they ‘take’ or ‘get’ from it.

Sometimes it’s cultural. They want all the warm fuzzies of whatever their cultural Catholicism is noted for. . .but none of the bother of the actual practice of the religion. These are the ones who wear rosaries or jeweled crucifixes, make a big point of dressing in green on St. Patrick’s Day, buy gifts on Christmas, eat ham on Easter, and ‘use’ Catholicism to make themselves look good.

If they’re politicians, so much the better. They can attempt to play both sides. . .appeal to any of their constituents (hey, we’re both Catholics, ya know? ) whether the constituents are faithful (hey, we’re BOTH Catholics, ya know?) or not so faithful, (hey, we’re both Catholics, but you and I know the REAL deal and we’re working for the REAL ‘Christ’, ya know?). And they really, REALLY get brownie points from the virulently antiCatholic if they PRESENT ourselves as Catholic yet pointedly diverge from the teaching.

And of course, the issue of pride. Pride in determining that THEY (they alone) are the ‘right’ kind of Catholic, that they (they alone) have the truth. If the bishop or others DARE to ‘defy’ them, well, that just shows how wonderful Mr. Kennedy and his ilk are (in their minds) because they aren’t going to give those bishops the satisfaction of ‘getting rid of them’. Oh, no, Mr. Kennedy is bound and determined that if HE wants to claim Catholicism, he ‘damn well’ will, and to hell with anybody who says otherwise. It is a total power trip and has nothing to do with Christ (whom few of these people would even recognize, sadly). It’s all “my wants, my needs, my thoughts, my decisions, my life, me me me.”
 
the Catholic Church is fanning “the flames of dissent and discord” by taking the position that it opposed the health care bills in Congress because of their abortion funding.
"You mean to tell me the Catholic Church is going to be denying those people life saving health care? I thought they were pro-life?” he said.

???
 
I’m voting for the Bishop on this one. It is about time we stand up for what we believe in.
 
Washington, DC – Congressman Patrick Kennedy, a pro-abortion member from Rhode Island, says Bishop Thomas Tobin has asked him to stop receiving communion because of his pro-abortion views. However, Tobin says the demand was merely a voluntary request that was issued two years ago and meant to be private.

lifenews.com/state4590.html
Which is precisely why as a rule I refuse to support any candidate whose religious views requires his/her voting based on such. I don’t want any individual injecting their religious views into the decision making process whether I agree with their views or not because ultimately it could have an negative impact on the American people. I want the politicians to make an informed decision based on legal, moral & ethical grounds; not on based on what their religious body dictates to them.

When it comes to politics, religious views belong in a house of worship, in a forum or in a persons own house.
 
Which is precisely why as a rule I refuse to support any candidate whose religious views requires his/her voting based on such. I don’t want any individual injecting their religious views into the decision making process whether I agree with their views or not because ultimately it could have an negative impact on the American people. I want the politicians to make an informed decision based on legal, moral & ethical grounds; not on based on what their religious body dictates to them.

When it comes to politics, religious views belong in a house of worship, in a forum or in a persons own house.
The statement in bold is self-contradictory. There is no morality or ethics without religion.
 
The statement in bold is self-contradictory. There is no morality or ethics without religion.
I know of Athiest’s who are people of fine moral & ethical character. Its not limited to those of religion.
 
I know of Athiest’s who are people of fine moral & ethical character. Its not limited to those of religion.
I am a former atheist. I can assure, an atheist has nothing on which to base moral or ethical decisions.
 
I am a former atheist. I can assure, an atheist has nothing on which to base moral or ethical decisions.
Thanks for your response.

I’ll mention that to my friends and see if they agree with you although I have a suspicion that they’ll not be inclined to embrace your views but who knows? I don’t know if I don’t ask.
 
I am personally against Bishops publicly denying communion, it strikes me as political grandstanding which should be above the Catholic Church. But if a Bishop wants to have a private conversation with a high-profile member of his diocese it is certainly within his right, and should be kept private! If Patrick Kennedy has such a problem with the Catholic Church that he feels the need to damage it in public I do think he should consider looking elsewhere.
I believe that a bishop should first talk with pro-abortion politicians privately, and if that doesn’t work, then, since the politicians are public about what they are doing, the bishop should make the consequences public, so that scandal is avoided.

Right now there are lots of Catholics who think it is all right to support abortion, because for so long, the bishops have done nothing except wring their hands. If a Catholic publicly professes support for abortion, other Catholics need to see that Catholic disciplined just as they saw the support. And i think that the public discipline should extend only as far as the public knowledge would have gone; if the person is only locally known, then the knowledge should be publicised only in the locality, but if the figure is nationally known, then the discipline should be published nationally.
 
Which is precisely why as a rule I refuse to support any candidate whose religious views requires his/her voting based on such. I don’t want any individual injecting their religious views into the decision making process whether I agree with their views or not because ultimately it could have an negative impact on the American people. I want the politicians to make an **informed decision based on legal, moral & ethical grounds; **not on based on what their religious body dictates to them.

When it comes to politics, religious views belong in a house of worship, in a forum or in a persons own house.
If the person’s ethics and morality are such that they believe X to be true, then they must vote in that way. If Senator Catholic believes that the unborn child is a human being and that God commands us not to kill innocent human beings, he cannot then vote in some other way, because his morals and ethics tell him to vote against abortion.

Religion is not just for Sundays or home. What you seem not to understand is that religion is the basis of the world, we ignore it at our peril. You think God only made Sundays and homes? No, He created everything.
 
If the person’s ethics and morality are such that they believe X to be true, then they must vote in that way. If Senator Catholic believes that the unborn child is a human being and that God commands us not to kill innocent human beings, he cannot then vote in some other way, because his morals and ethics tell him to vote against abortion.

Religion is not just for Sundays or home. What you seem not to understand is that religion is the basis of the world, we ignore it at our peril. You think God only made Sundays and homes? No, He created everything.
Thanks for your response.

The thrust of my post was to express my opinion regarding candidates running for political office mixing in their religious views as dictated by their house of worship.

To further that, this country was founded on the basis of separation of church and state, I believe that we need to keep religion out of politics and government. What works for one religious body may not work for another and if its policies or beliefs are forced on the unwilling, then it could open the door for further polarization between peoples of differing religious/moral views.

I hope that clarifies my earlier post.
 
Thanks for your response.

The thrust of my post was to express my opinion regarding candidates running for political office mixing in their religious views as dictated by their house of worship.

To further that, this country was founded on the basis of separation of church and state, I believe that we need to keep religion out of politics and government. What works for one religious body may not work for another and if its policies or beliefs are forced on the unwilling, then it could open the door for further polarization between peoples of differing religious/moral views.

I hope that clarifies my earlier post.
No, I understood your point. I just disagree completely with foundation of your thought. First of all, there was not supposed to be a separation of church and state; the first amendment forbids the federal government from establishing a church as the national church. England, you may recall, had a government-established church which many of the colonists escaped by coming here. The first amendment was to protect personal religion, not eradicate it.

Secondly, on a personal level, if a person believes that killing unborn human beings is wrong, how on earth do you expect that person to support abortion? Conversely, if a person does not think that killing unborn babies is wrong, he ought not receive the Eucharist in a Catholic church. The point of the bishop’s actions is not to get Kennedy to vote pro-life but to get him to realize that he can’t be a member of both the Catholic Church and the pro-abortion politician crowd.
 
Thanks for your response.

I’ll mention that to my friends and see if they agree with you although I have a suspicion that they’ll not be inclined to embrace your views but who knows? I don’t know if I don’t ask.
Of course those fools will disagree. But what do they base their morality or ethic onb? Some changable. feel-good “I think this is right”, idea? Stop insulting our intelligence.

Justifying immoral behavior by saying, “but that is what an atheist would say” is as logical as saying “killing people is cool” because Ted Bundy thinks it was.

Your position is not tenable nor is it is intellectually honest. In fact, your position is inherently and intrinsically unjustifiable.

I will conclude by saying your posts are off topic, which is against forum rules.
 
Thanks for your response.

The thrust of my post was to express my opinion regarding candidates running for political office mixing in their religious views as dictated by their house of worship.

To further that, this country was founded on the basis of separation of church and state, I believe that we need to keep religion out of politics and government. What works for one religious body may not work for another and if its policies or beliefs are forced on the unwilling, then it could open the door for further polarization between peoples of differing religious/moral views.

I hope that clarifies my earlier post.
off topic.
 
Thanks for your response.

The thrust of my post was to express my opinion regarding candidates running for political office mixing in their religious views as dictated by their house of worship.

To further that, this country was founded on the basis of separation of church and state, I believe that we need to keep religion out of politics and government. What works for one religious body may not work for another and if its policies or beliefs are forced on the unwilling, then it could open the door for further polarization between peoples of differing religious/moral views.

I hope that clarifies my earlier post.
Referring to the text in bold, that is not correct. The US Constitution stated that there would be no official religion. The idea of “church separated from state” was from the personal writing of Thomas Jefferson in the early 19th century.

If you want to speak intelligently on this, at least get your facts straight.

But again, you post is off topic and thus is not really up for consideration.
 
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