Posted on 08/26/2020 5:46:20 PM PDT by ebb tide
Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Aug 26, 2020 / 03:00 pm MT (CNA).- A Boston priest has said he believes in a womans right to choose on the issue of abortion, and will continue his advocacy for Joe Bidens presidential campaign, despite Catholic teaching on abortion and a Church prohibition on clerical advocacy for political candidates.
Msgr. Paul Garrity of the Archdiocese of Boston spoke to CNA Tuesday, after attracting criticism for a Facebook post endorsing former vice president Joe Biden for president.
In an Aug. 23 Facebook post titled I AM PRO-LIFE AND SUPPORT JOE BIDEN, Msgr. Garrity wrote: I am pro-life and I believe in a womans right to choose. I will vote for Joe Biden for President because I believe that Joe Biden is pro-life like me.
Garrity is pastor of a parish in Lexington, Massachusetts.
Biden is running for president on a platform that would codify the full extent of Roe vs. Wade into federal law, effectively preventing any state limitations on the practice. Biden also supports the expanded use of taxpayer funds for abortion.
Garrity added that he believes any woman who becomes pregnant should have the right to choose to give birth to her baby.
I am pro-life and I believe that every woman who becomes pregnant deserves to have the freedom to choose life. This is what I believe Joe Biden believes and is one of the many reasons that I will vote for him in November, said Garrity. The priest urged Catholics and others of similar viewpoints to vote for Biden as well.
The beauty of newborn babies are a reflection of the beauty and goodness of God and should propel us to do all that we can to help expectant mothers to choose life, he said.
In a statement to CNA Tuesday, Garrity stated that he has considered himself Pro-Life since he was ordained a priest in 1973, despite his support for legal protection for abortion.
I believe that it is a tragedy when a woman of any age decides to end her pregnancy prematurely, said Garrity in an email to CNA. The priest added that in his view, Catholics are also told that we should not be single issue voters and that the Church is neutral on the issue of voting.
In fact, the Church teaches that a person can never vote for a candidate who supports an intrinsic evil, like abortion, in order to advance that evil. A person could only vote for such a candidate if they judged there were proportionate reasons which might outweigh the harm done by the candidate's election, the Church teaches.
The U.S. bishops conference has said that ending legal protection for abortion is a preeminent priority in public life, and numerous bishops have taught there are few or no issues that could outweigh the gravity of abortion.
In 2008, Bishop (now Cardinal) Kevin Farrell released a joint statement with BIshop Kevin Vann saying that in their view There are no truly grave moral or proportionate reasons, singularly or combined that could outweigh the millions of innocent human lives that are directly killed by abortion each year.
Also in 2008, Archbishop Charles Chaput said of the issue that Catholics who support pro-choice candidates need a compelling proportionate reason to justify it.
What is a proportionate reason when it comes to the abortion issue? Its the kind of reason we will be able to explain, with a clean heart, to the victims of abortion when we meet them face to face in the next life which we most certainly will. If were confident that these victims will accept our motives as something more than an alibi, then we can proceed, Chaput said.
CNA made several requests for comment on Garritys remarks from the Archdiocese of Boston. The archdiocese did not respond to those requests.
While the archdiocese did not offer any official comment on the matter, one archdiocesan leader did say the priests view was contrary to Catholic teaching.
In a since-deleted tweet, Thomas Carroll, Secretary of Education & Superintendent of Schools for the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston, expressed criticism of Garritys post. He followed it up with an explanation saying that he believed Garritys view is 100% not in line with Church teaching, and that he did not want the 30,000 students in our schools to be led astray by false teachings spread by someone wearing a collar.
Carroll deleted the tweet on Tuesday afternoon. He referred questions from CNA to the Archdiocese of Boston.
Garrity told CNA that he posted on Facebook to tell Catholics that it is okay to vote for Joe Biden, that they have a moral choice to make in the upcoming election. Cardinal Dolan has publicly endorsed the Republican candidate. He has expressed his personal opinion, he said.
Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York has not publicly endorsed a candidate, Republican or otherwise. Dolan did offer an invocation Monday at the Republican National Convention, but said explicitly that his presence was not an endorsement and that he has prayed at the Democratic National Convention before, and would again if he were asked.
Dolan has, in the past, written of his displeasure with the Democratic Partys current swing towards abortion advocacy and against school choice, but neither endorsed a specific candidate nor instructed Catholics how to vote.
Calling Biden the pro-life candidate despite his support for abortion, Garrity told CNA Tuesday that in the 2016 election, church-going Catholics were told they had no choice by bishops and priests. I am hopeful this will not happen again.
It was unclear what Garrity was referring to in saying Catholics were told by bishops that they had no choice but to vote for Trump in 2016. The bishops do not endorse candidates; canon law prohibits clerics from taking an active role in political parties and civil law forbids nonprofits from endorsing political candidates.
Another diocesan priest, Fr. Frank Pavone, recently stepped down from an advisory position in Donald Trumps reelection campaign, telling CNA he had done so at the direction of Church authorities. Pavone has continued to advocate for Trump, though it is unclear what ecclesiastical leaders he is accountable to.
In 2008, Chicago priest Fr. Michael Pfleger drew attention for appearing as part of a People of Faith for Obama coalition during then-Senator Barack Obamas primary battle against Hillary Clinton for the Democratic Partys presidential nomination.
Pflegers bishop, Cardinal Francis George, said at the time that while a priest must speak to political issues that are also moral, he may not endorse candidates nor engage in partisan campaigning.
Garrity told CNA that no matter who is elected in November, abortion is not going away even if Roe v. Wade is overturned, and that it has become a wedge issue that is being used to divide people for narrow political gains.
I believe, with Pope Francis, that Our defense of the unborn needs to be clear, firm and passionate for at stake is the dignity of a human life, which is always sacred and demands love for each person, regardless of his or her stage of development, said Garrity.
In January, Pope Francis told Archbishop Joseph Naumann, chair of the USCCB pro-life committee, that the right to life was the most fundamental right. During the same ad limina visit to Rome by several U.S. bishops, Francis reportedly agreed with Archbishop Robert Carlson of St. Louis that abortion is the preeminent issue facing the United States, along with the transgender movement.
In the past, Pope Francis has called abortion akin to hiring a hitman. In 2019, ahead of the Italian National Day for Life, Francis requested that politicians, regardless of their faith convictions, treat the defense of the lives of those who are about to be born and enter into society as the cornerstone of the common good.
No. Even in pre-Conciliar versions, Conscience was the most important teaching in the Catechism: it is that through which God speaks to you.
Source please. Name the catechism and the edition.
If "conscience was the most important teaching", why did God give Moses the Ten Commandments? One of which is, "Thou shallt not kill".
Every human has a conscience, including Jeffery Dahmer, John Wayne Gacy, etc. Was God "speaking" to them, Mr. Chips?
Conception to natural death is quite clear.
Utterly shameful.
One has a duty to inform one’s conscience by the teachings of the Faith.
Impressed, possibly. Pleased, not!
27 Q. Which is the noblest creature God has placed on earth?
A. The noblest creature God has placed on earth is man.
28 Q. What is man?
A. Man is a rational creature composed of soul and body.
29 Q. What is the soul?
A. The soul is the noblest part of man, because it is a spiritual substance, endowed with intelligence and will, capable of knowing God and of possessing Him for all eternity.
Having claiming to have taught Latin for 23 years, I would think you know the root word of "conscience" is scio which means "I know".
You do not have the right to choose to kill your baby.
How hard is this to understand?
Of course I know the Latin. I just don’t get your point.
Looks here like you're defending contraception in certain cases, Mr. Chips. Do you deny it?
I am not on trial. What I believe about each of these is irrelevant. I am referring to the beliefs of others. But you continue to miss the point.
The conscience clause in the middle of the Catechism does allow for SOME disagreement with church teaching, if done after much effort and labor and discussion and reflection and prayer. One might, for example, disagree with the Church on contraception or divorce or capital punishment under such parameters. There is more gray area in the Catechism than one might think.
Why have a catechism, the Ten Commandments, or even a Catholic Church when there are gray areas that one is free to disagree with?
Actually, you were referring to what I believe. But, no matter. As for your current, quite un-Christian insult, I am simply quoting a very conservative priest with whom I had many conversations about the catechism at my conversion. Life is not all black and white. Good day.
So you were quoting a questionable priest, not the catechism, like you claimed to have done.
2370: In contrast, "every action which, whether in anticipation of the conjugal act, or in its accomplishment, or in the development of its natural consequences, proposes, whether as an end or as a means, to render procreation impossible" is intrinsically evil: Thus the innate language that expresses the total reciprocal self-giving of husband and wife is overlaid, through contraception, by an objectively contradictory language, namely, that of not giving oneself totally to the other. This leads not only to a positive refusal to be open to life but also to a falsification of the inner truth of conjugal love, which is called upon to give itself in personal totality. . . . The difference, both anthropological and moral, between contraception and recourse to the rhythm of the cycle . . . involves in the final analysis two irreconcilable concepts of the human person and of human sexuality.
Ok, you admitted that's what you believe and that includes, "One might, for example, disagree with the Church on contraception..."
There's a word for "catholics" that disagree with the Church and it also applies to Joe Biden and Nancy Pelosi.
Looks like we here have a lad who could profit from some time in a Trappist monastery.
Yes, it does; or at least find an orthodox Catholic confessor for him.
You continue to misconstrue my words, and miss my point entirely. This conversation is a an end. Good day, sir.
I’m quoting your words verbatim.
There is no gray area on contraception in any catholic catechism which you falsely claimed.
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