This is true to an extent. What happens is that the media is going to blast any Catholic on these issues, in particular, abortion. The media fears Catholics, because Catholics have a firm and unchanging position on this and other matters.
There is also another matter that is particular to Catholics, that being the perception that the candidate is not really the one in charge, but rather the Pope. A lot of non-Catholic Christians are very anti-Papist, and would not vote for a Catholic unless the the alternative was simply unpalatable.
Yes.
I am old enough to remember the Kennedy Presidency, and I can testify that THIS was the main reason that people would not elect a Catholic President.
It’s not that non-Catholic Christians are anti-Papist, although back then, quite a few probably were. My parents were certainly not anti-Papist, and the Baptist church that I grew up in was by no means anti-Catholic or anti-Papist.
But the fact is, the President of the United States should not be beholden or answerable to ANYONE but the American people.
Back then, loyalty to Rome vs. loyalty to the U.S. was still an issue, and U.S. citizens were rightfully concerned that a Catholic President would have divided loyalties. There was a lot of debate about this issue.
Think about it–who are YOU, as a Catholic, more loyal to–the Church (headed by the Pope) or the U.S. government?
Think about all the priests who are currently disobeying the U.S. government to provide shelter and protection for illegal immigrants. They will answer, ultimately, to God for their actions, and I’m not sure what God thinks of this course of action by these priests.
You have to look at history to know why Americans were concerned about a President with more loyalty to the Pope than to the American people. Back then, the Cold War was a daily reality, and all of us were afraid that Russia and the Communists would take over. There was a very real sense of nationalism in this country that isn’t really here now, IMO. It was a different time than now–social issues weren’t issues back then. Abortion was a crime, not legal. And homosexuality was still considered a perversion and a mental illness by the American Psychological Association and by most Americans.
You can’t take today’s circumstances and apply them to the past. You have to consider the circumstances at that time.
MY personal feeling is that there are enough Catholics in the U.S., who, if they voted according to the teachings of the Catholic Church, would have the power to elect a Catholic President who is pro-life and anti-same-sex marriage. Many evangelical Protestants would stand side by side with Catholics and happily, joyously, enthusiastically elect a Catholic Christian to the Presidency IF he or she stood firm on the abortion and homosexual marriage issues along with the other issues that Christians can not compromise on. (John Kerry did not qualify.)
The problem is, Catholics do not vote according to the teachings of the Catholic Church. They vote for the candidates that their parents would have voted for.
In the last election, Catholics ignored the abortion issue and instead, voted against the war, and elected President Obama, who promised over and over again to stop the war and bring everyone home. Well, he didn’t keep that promise, did he?
I do hope that Catholics learned their lesson. We need to be faithful to obey the Lord and our Church and vote for Pro-Life, Pro-man-woman marriage candidates. God will honor that. I personally believe that one of the reasons why President Obama has struggled is that he is being thwarted by the Lord God because of the evil pro-choice policies that he has enacted.