Again, you think abortion is about money exclusively?
I hate to be a stickler for reality, but you were the one who invented that point and interjected it into the conversation. Assigning it to me does not make it mine.
I was trying to be kind. The obvious answer would have been that cost is irrelevant to the discussion. Christ calls us to do what is right, not what is cheap. Pointing out that spending has historically proven to have no relationship seemed like a more tactful way to remove it as a red herring from the discussion.
No, you are claiming the Church is teaching something She does not teach. And not all issues must be addressed in the same way. That is why the Cardinal was saying Catholics may differ in how best to address certain things. You are elevating every political issue to same weight as abortion.
Look at the quotes. I am claiming only what the Church teaches (and providing quotes from the Church’s explanation intended for the laity). If you elevate any teaching, no matter how important, to the point where you are willing to compromise on the Catholic understanding of the human person, you are embracing evil at the expense of faith.
Look at it from the other direction - why are abortion and euthanasia absolutes for us? Why can we not place a mother’s life ahead of a fetus - which may only have a 50 or 60% chance of even resulting in a live birth?
Why can we not place the needs of a family ahead of dying invalid, perhaps spending that last of God’s greatest gift in a permanent vegative state?
Evangelium Vitae, JPII’s Gospel of Life, shows us that these teachings are both part of a coherent and cohesive single underlying belief. It is “incoherent” and a “detriment” to simultaneously support one manifistation of the teaching yet attack the underlying belief.
I believe it is the opposite. If you reject the war and hold that war is more important than the current abortion crisis you being incoherent.
Then reframe it solely it solely in the context of the discussion at hand. Bush professes to be pro-life. But he signed a bill making euthanasia (removing hyrdation and nutrition) on the basis of ability to pay easier. So his “pro life” aspects come with the baggage of euthanasia.
Similiarly, he professes to believe in the sanctity of fetal life, but still permits federal funding for stem cell research. In the last (GOP) Congress, a bill restricting the research altogether did not make it out of committee (blocked by a GOP chairman). So the “pro life” aspects come with more baggage still.
The war has not been declared unjust nor has our conscience been bound in the matter. It is bound in the abortion matter.
The war has been declared unjust by two different Vicars of Christ. Our current Pope selected Easter to describe the war as a “grave evil”.
One of the greatest Catholic apologists for the war, George Weigel, has conceded both a) that state approved torture would make a just war defense impossible under Catholic teaching and b) that the Vatican has opposed the war since before it started.
Cardinal Ratzinger noted in a letter that, in of itself, disagreement with the Church on the matter of just war does not inherently make one unworthy of communion. But that does not change the Dogmatic Constitution of the Church:
“If anyone should say that the Roman Pontiff has merely the function of inspection or direction but not full and supreme power of jurisdiction over the whole Church, not only in matters pertaining to faith and morals, but also in matters pertaining to the discipline and government of the Church throughout the entire world, or that he has only the principal share, but not the full plenitutde of this supreme power; or that this power of his is not ordinary and immediate over all Churches and over each individual Church, over all shepherds and all the faithful, and over each individual one of these: let him be anathema” -Vatican Council I, Dogmatic Constitution of the Church of Christ, #3
Look at my handle. When the Vicar of Christ selects Easter to decry something as gravely evil, I take it seriously.
No, the Church asks us to apply moral reasoning within the context of this political culture.
No, certain moral principles are non negotiable. You cannot embrace grave evil and you must compromise only very carefully.
Look at our teaching on abortion. You cannot embrace evil for even the most laudable ends.