E
elts1956
Guest
Dag nab it!. I had an answer almost completed and lost it, so here I go again.You are correct in that the USCCB document is very vague, although it does not appear to contain anything contrary to Church teaching, it easy for someone reading it to come to the wrong conclusions due to its vague wording.
The document I was referring to was a doctrinal note put out by the Vatican:
vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/cfaith/documents/rc_con_cfaith_doc_20021124_politica_en.html
Here is an excerpt from that document:
The difference between this and the voters’ guide is that the Vatican’s note is much more broad and encompassing and not succint as is the voters’ guide. Again, as with the USCCB, this does not mean the voter’s guide is wrong, rather it is incomplete, though it may have been sufficient for this past election. It is lacking enough though that it cannot be considered as encompassing enough for all election scenarios which may present themselves. I agree very definitely, but for me it was very clear, at least for this election. Who knows what will be on the front burner in the next election.From the same document:
Here it references the concept of “limiting the harm” introduced by Pope John Paul II in Evangelium Vitae. Again, I think the concept is much more restrictive that the concept of “voting for the lesser evil” given in the voter’s guide. Your thoughts?
The words, “limiting the harm” and “voting for the lesser evil” resonate the same with me. I really think, (and this is different from what I wrote first) most people voted party, voted according to their own perception of what they thought was said by the Church, or the guidance given, or they were just a wee bit stubborn and weren’t going to let ANYONE, not even the Catholic Church tell THEM how to vote which gives a little indication of arrogance. And so, whether one focused on “limiting the harm”, or “voting for the lesser evil”, I think, in the end, the results would have been the same. They didn’t have their priorities straight.
The Church in the past 60 years, in many dioceses and parishes, has gotten so loosey goosey about issues I would consider to be written in concrete, that in comparison to then, there is now mass confusion about hierarchies of good and evil. Many people today, cannot discern the difference among issues of lesser, or greater, or limiting the evil. They have no idea of absolutes on which to base good or evil.
Therefore they had no idea of how to interpret such doctrines as Evangelium Vitae, the USCCB document on voting, or even the CAF guide, which to me was about as clear as a guide could get. Yes, it left out the much broader spectrum written in encyclicals and statements given by the Popes, or even the USCCB document which indeed did not say anything in contradiction to Church teaching. But if folks could not follow and understand the CAF document, articles written by Father Pavone, Corapi, statements to their parishoners by such Bishops as Finn, Chaput, Rigali, Martino and others, which were very, very clear about the intrinsic evil of abortion, then they were either downright stupid, downright stubborn, or downright arrogant. I think they were beyond letting anyone place restrictions on how they voted, or thought.
Was that clear, or muddled words?