IDo you now say that a Catholic can morally vote for a pro-choice candidate over a pro-life candidate? Yes or no?
How on earth could you possibly twist my last post to suggest a contradition?
My position remains unchanged, in fact, I can lay it out here:
- Catholics, because of the nature of our faith, should strive to fully follow it. That is, we should strive to live the entire Catechism, with ‘living’ including our voting.
- Catholics, by virtue of being Christian, must accept that we will all fail with regards to #1. We should continue to strive, but concious of our own unworthiness and sin, we should not assert our moral authority over others who simply have different failures than our own.
- The Church, acknowledging #2, and recognizing that all not teachings have equal weight (though weight has changed over time and all remain important), has advised Catholics on nine principles that should not be compromised during participationin public life. In addition, it has given some broad principles that should also be given great weight. I believe that this list and overriding principles should be dutifully followed to the best of one’s ability, even at the ‘cost’ of earthly political power.
- Willfully misguiding members of the Body of the Faithful on Church teaching is a grievous sin, to always be avoided.
If you can find a post of mine in this thread that you believe does not match these principles, please bring it to my attention. I am quite certain that in all cases we will find that it is either a problem in clarity, or interpretation.
There is ZERO room in the above list for voting pro-choice. There never has been. I realize that many people here spend a lot of time listening to ‘light switch’ intellecualism (the shallowness and sheer stupidity of most of our public discourse in this country continues to amaze me), but think back to 3rd grade math. A larger ‘set’ includes the ‘subset’. There is no contradiction in voting a larger set of Catholic values unless one engages in idolotry.
Regarding rather we “agree”. I would have to say no. Based on your posts, not just here but from extensive posts in other threads, my interpretation would be that you reject all 4 of the points above.
You have expressed a Calvinist view towards teachings the Church deems “pro life”, you are quite comfortable asserting the moral superiority of your voting decisions, you have expressly argued that not only can principles that the Church has described as non-negotiable, but that they should be for pragmatic political purposes- and you have repeatedly supported this last position with false Church doctrine, while disregarding corrective materials from Rome.
This does not make you a better or worse person, but it makes it appear clear that we do not agree about the Apostolic nature of the Church or the importance of the Catholic faith in voting.