Again, you’re simply asserting your opinion without answering the question as to how you or anyone would know how anyone else’s conscience was formed unless they told you how they arrived at their decision.
Agreed.
It seems to be the same method of reaching a conclusion that OSAS advocates come to when asked to explain how if one is “saved” once and for all, how could anyone turn away from Christ. The only explanation is that “they were never saved in the first place, they just
thought they were saved”.
Same thing here: If one voted for Obama on conscience, then that person must have been deluded into thinking that they had a properly formed conscience…as deemed by someone who could not possibly know their state of mind or conscience.
The problem here is that it’s assumed de facto that nobody with a properly formed conscience could possibly vote for Obama…either that or their conscience must not be properly formed.
I’d have thought…IF Abortion was the ONE issue on which we as Catholics were to place our votes, that the Pope, the bishops, deacons and Priests would have told us it was a sin to vote for Obama, right? IF Right to life was SO important in making our voting choices, didn’t they all (excepting a very few who publically said as much) drop the ball?
They’re supposed to give us spiritual guidance and lead us away from sin…why would they be silent on this isssue?
And don’t say the Church isn’t involved in politics…the Archdiocese of Detroit spent mega-bucks to mail out CDs informing every Catholic in the diocese about stem cell research, in an effort that we might vote against allowing embryonic stem cell research in Michigan.
Yet they ignored letting us know that voting for a pro-choice candidate was forbidden???
Very inconsistant, methinks. They must really have overlooked something.
