Doing nothing is not a ‘reasonable’ response to the guidance from the bishops.
If it’s law, it would be morally wrong to break the law, except in unjust laws, as in abortions, euthanasia, etc.
Actually, doing “nothing” is entirely appropriate if something has already been done.
There are more than 20,000 gun control laws on the books, none of which stopped Newton.
And I think you misunderstand the authority of a Bishop. He instructs on matters of morals and moral philosophy, but we have not only the right, but the obligation to exercise our conscience when it comes to matters of policy.
Your interpretation of this issue seems to land heavily on the “we must obey the POLICY prescriptions of the Bishop(s)”, but in point of fact, we must DISOBEY the policy prescriptions if they run contrary to the moral teaching.
The teaching is basic: “sanctity of life.” The policy prescriptions, as you seem to interpret them, run counter to that teaching, in that disarming people will RESULT in the loss of life. Thus in obedience to the teaching authority of the Bishops, I submit to the philosophy, but disagree with what I see as a tendentious interpretation of their rather abstract policy prescriptions.
I even obey their policy prescriptions in that I support laws that restrict the ownership of guns by the violent mentally ill, and felons, and I obey their moral teaching by advocating for “must issue” CCWP, and encouraging society to take their responsibility to protect their own lives, and the lives of those around them seriously, and to act in accordance to the seriousness of that responsibility.
Furthermore, I follow their moral teaching by encouraging society to return to a time when a child carrying a rifle into a school after a morning hunt, then storing it in his locker during class, or a man carrying a gun into a supermarket, was normal. This caused no concern, and was common behavior in urban and rural areas. Schools had rifle ranges, and engaged in competitive shooting contests with other school’s teams.
Yes, there was a time when this didn’t cause concern, because children were taught to safely use guns, to respect the sanctity of life, and to take responsibility for themselves and those around them.
Gun control is a tiny band-aid on the gaping wound that has been inflicted on our society by the destruction of our culture, our society, and our system of moral teaching and living. Gun control, or any other kind of “focus on the symptom, not the problem”, will do nothing, while only encouraging the underlying disease to progress by giving the illusion of “treatment.”
In short, I obey the Bishop’s moral teaching, but not necessarily YOUR interpretation of their policy prescriptions.