E
estesbob
Guest
We most certainly should be correct members of our Church when they mistake church teaching and lead people believe that a well formed Catholic conscience would ever allow one to vote for pro-abortion candidate.I understand and accept that you are using your faith formed conscience to make your decision. I also understand that everyone on this thread is doing the same. Cardinal Ratzinger said:
This does not forbid someone from voting their own consciences. Sure many in the Church have interpreted this as forbidden, while others believe it is leaving it up to them to use their faith formed consciences to decide which is right and which is wrong, what is believable from candidates and what is not. Who is silent on an expressed explanation is our Holy Father. Why? If it were as ‘cased closed’ as some say, and it is an issue that half the Church is condemned for by some of the other half, why isn’t he speaking up as our shepherd to protect the salvation of that endangered half? I know some say, he has many bishops who spoke up! The bishops were split last election. Which were correct and which were wrong? Some of the Church says only those bishops they agree with were right and the rest were wrong, and saying some unsavory things about those that disagreed or gave different explanations? Again why is the clarification coming from the Holy Father? It’s his job to lead the Church, to bind and loose. His word is final and the largest majority of Catholics would accept it.
We shouldn’t be taking on condemning members of our Church. That’s the same as judging. We don’t have the authority to bind and loose and on this subject there is no definitive binding and loosing from the one who can end the discussion one way or the other.
One need only go back to this thread and see the voluminous documentation provided by those expressing the teachings of the church. Direct quotes from two popes, Vatican documents,the catechism of the Catholic Church, the USCCB voting guide and direct quotes from nemerous bishops. All we get in return is vague arguments based on the primacy of conscience, one line out of context quotes from the voting guide or one’s personal interpretation of a short footnote to a letter written by then Cardinal Ratzinger.