E
estesbob
Guest
The fact that many Catholics reject Church teaching is irrelevant when discerning:The church does not endorse political candidates because it would open itself up to legal / IRS issues. If the legal / taxation issues were not a factor, I don’t know if the church would endorse candidates or not. I suspect that certain priests would make endorsements of candidates, while others would refrain from doing so.
As you have said, the church leaves the discernment up to the individual. However, discernment by definition is unique to each individual. Discernment is not collective. Your discernment is yours and yours alone. In the 2008 and 2012 elections, a majority of our fellow Catholics discerned differently than you did.
1790 A human being must always obey the certain judgment of his conscience. If he were deliberately to act against it, he would condemn himself. Yet it can happen that moral conscience remains in ignorance and makes erroneous judgments about acts to be performed or already committed.
1791 This ignorance can often be imputed to personal responsibility. This is the case when a man "takes little trouble to find out what is true and good, or when conscience is by degrees almost blinded through the habit of committing sin."59 In such cases, the person is culpable for the evil he commits.
1792 Ignorance of Christ and his Gospel, bad example given by others, enslavement to one’s passions,** assertion of a mistaken notion of autonomy of conscience,** rejection of the Church’s authority and her teaching, lack of conversion and of charity: these can be at the source of errors of judgment in moral conduct.
1793 If - on the contrary - the ignorance is invincible, or the moral subject is not responsible for his erroneous judgment, the evil committed by the person cannot be imputed to him. It remains no less an evil, a privation, a disorder. One must therefore work to correct the errors of moral conscience.