R
ribozyme
Guest
But his clarity is simply breath taking. When I ask an Evangelical Protestant about social justice issues, I’ll often hear responses to the effect ‘abortion is more important because it is better to be suffering in poverty than dead…’ From a Protestant point of view, with its rejection of our beliefs about things like baptism, this does not even make much sense. But, even from a Catholic point of view it is arguing evil as a zero sum game, justice for the unborn must come at other’s expense…
Compare this to the Pope’s argument in CHRISTIFIDELES LAICI. He approaches it from the other direction. These are inalianable rights of the human person. Given by God, affirmed by Scripture, and held as absolute by the Dogmatic Constitution of the Church. This is, in effect, what we already hold most dear. And, the most fundemental of these rights is life…
The arguments may seem similiar, but they are not. One is, I think, hypocritical. It professes to pursue justice in the name of Christ, but starts with the assumption that it is impractical to apply the same principles universally. The other is cohesive and coherent.** Abortion is not an issue in isolation, but one of many aspects of a fundemental belief in the right to life, at “any stage” and in “any condition”…**
Again, this is not knew, consider this quote from Pope Stephen V in the 9th century:
More than a thousand years have passed since that was written, but the topic is still relevant. Our inalianable rights of the human person do not end at birth. So it is hypocritical to only treasure life, without exception, when it has not yet even reached its most clearly identifiable form.“If he who destroys what is conceived in the womb by abortion is a murderer, how much more is he unable to excuse himself of murder who kills a child even one day old.” - Pope Stephen V, Epistle to Archbishop of Mainz
Emphasis mine:
You are only demonstrating the veracity of his earlier statements by monomanically focusing on abortion. Liberals, such as myself, need to accept that most Catholics will be against abortion. However, liberalism is not about promoting abortion, but one of its primary objectives is to make sure that the weakest in society are adequately taken care off. Such beliefs are motivatived by utilitarian principles of Mill and Bentham as their utilitarianism augmented the classic Lockean liberalism. Some utilitarian liberals such as myself accept abortion because one can coherently argue that an inchoate fetus is not a “person.” However, liberals must accept that Catholics do not adhere to the utilitarian ethical scheme, but some liberals such as myself abhor the idee fixe of abortion by some Catholics.
If you think liberalism is about promoting abortion, go to www.cbpp.org. That website promotes a liberal agenda, but it doesn’t obsessively talk about abortion. Liberalism is more than promoting abortion rights.