Of course. I’ve volunteered for service in war I did not support. I chose to go unarmed, as a combat medic, for my faith and its belief about life. I’ve been active in promoting Catholic pro life causes since long before I could vote. All my siblings have adopted “difficult placements”. My wife and I had planned on doing likewise, but our youngest is severely disabled. But we contribute heavily to pro life ministries throughout our Archiocese.
My faith is a huge part of my own identity. I grew up in a house without indoor plumbing, primarily because my father, a decorated war vet, would not lie about being Catholic. When you question any person’s faith and sincerity, they are naturally going to be offended.
With you, Catholicism, and abortion, the insult is naturally more grave. Consider what you just wrote in another thread:
Ridgerunner said:
Abortion is the #1 “legal evil” in the U.S. It admits of no compromise. There is no clearer evil going on. Nothing, not the war, not welfare, not the economy, not anything even comes close in seriousness to one million murdered children per year.
If all Catholics voted against pro-abortion candidates, without exception, it would send a message that no candidate or party could ignore. No party can give up 20% of voters (Catholics) starting out, plus perhaps an equal number of Evangelicals and have any hope of winning.
If that happened, then the bishops could attack “evil #2” and so on down the line. No political party could possibly ignore that.
But, when I had the audacity to assert that Catholics should consider at least holding out for a candidate who:
A) Has not supported upholding Roe within the last election cycle
and
B) Publicly embraces a position on abortion that the Church does not consider intrinsically evil
Oh my goodness! It must be a Democratic plot!!!
Suddenly, the ‘crime’ is not the GOP putting up presidential candidates who have supported upholding Roe and still hold positions we consider evil (3 straight elections now, and 5 of the last 6) but,
gasp, actually treating abortion as an evil that “admits of no compromise”.
I know that some of this is just a generational/cultural gap. I grew up in an environment where, well, you did things like volunteer when your nation is at war. Civic values were not partisan, but something we all studied in school and generally held to be common beliefs and principles.
Your world, where we not only put the burden for fighting wars on a tiny minority, but even push the cost onto our descendants, is quite alien to me. Ideas like promoting the use of the paramount civic duty of voting for partisan political purposes are repulsive to me, but seemingly “a great idea!” to millions of Rush L. listeners like yourself.
If one has a world view where abandoning civic duty for partisan gain or politicising, say, the justice department is just politics as usual, it is probably perfectly natural to project an assumption of such behaviors onto others.
In that spirit, I should probably just accept that the values I grew up with, and continue to hold dear, are just as alien to you. And that, in of itself, this disparity is not a reflection of the Christian conscience.
But when I see you howl about the ‘smell’ of ‘partisan trickery’ when I simply propose holding
all political parties to a standard you, yourself claim to hold dear. I cannot escape the uncharitable conclussion that you care more about electing Republicans than you do about abortion.
I can’t to help it. When explaining why we had no running water, my father explained that the only values a man can truly claim to hold are the one’s he will stand by when they cost him something. When “no compromise” meets ‘force even the GOP to put up actual pro-life candidates’, your loyalities appear clear.
As noted, such thinking on my part is un-Christian. Just as you are actively questioning my faith, I am now actively questioning yours. Having acknowledged the sin, all I can do now is strive to correct it.