M
MichaelTDoyle
Guest
This +1(emphasis mine)
Depends on what the “one issue” is. The abortion issue is certainly a wise metric to use, to determine the moral reliability of the candidate on matters of public policy. And let’s not forget the president appoints judges to the Supreme Court. Don’t suspect he will appoint persons with political opinions that are diametrically opposite of his own. And given the Obama Administration’s contraceptives mandate, I would urge you to not vote for him.
The implications of him winning is this: since he won’t be up for re-election anymore, you can bet his level of boldness will rise in terms of what he is willing to push into law. Whereas, during the first term, the president needs to restrain himself to some degree knowing that too many unhappy citizens can translate into him being voted out of office by the said citizens. Not so during the second term. Do you really want to risk him going further than just testing the waters with Catholic Church? Do you want to risk increasingly graver threats to Her?
If we stand on the sidelines or worse condone this what will be our excuse as the Church is persecuted? What do we tell the children deprived of Christian homes now that Catholic orphanages are closing?
Children raised in homes that love Christ are far better off to face the one true challenge of running the race. Isn’t that what we should be concerned about? Too often it seems views expressed even here are not Christocentric. The Church is our greatest ally in running the race. The current secular mindset embraced by the administration seems bent on opposing her.