Posted on 05/05/2004 6:45:56 AM PDT by Hugenot
Archbishop John J. Myers of Newark is the latest Church leader to address the growing controversy about Catholic lawmakers who favor and promote abortion.
In a carefully worded pastoral letter dated May 5, 2004, the Archbishop outlined the Church's position:
Catholics who publicly dissent from the Churchs teaching on the right to life of all unborn children should recognize that they have freely chosen by their own actions to separate themselves from what the Church believes and teaches. They have also separated themselves in a significant way from the Catholic community.
The Church cannot force such people to change their position; but she can and does ask them honestly to admit in the public forum that they are not in full union with the Church.
One who practices such dissent, even in the mistaken belief that it is permissible, may remain a Catholic in some sense, but has abandoned the full Catholic faith. For such a person to express communion with Christ and His Church by the reception of the Sacrament of the Eucharist is objectively dishonest.
As a result, Catholic voters and lawmakers must consider the serious implications of their actions.
"It is a time for honesty. I ask and urge that Catholic voters and Catholics in public life carefully consider their position if they find themselves in opposition to Church teaching in these matters. Sadly, I must point out that to continue down this road places them in danger of distancing themselves even more from Jesus Christ and from His Church."
The Archbishop also addressed the argument that abortion is only one issue of concern.
"Some might argue that the Church has many social teachings and the teaching on abortion is only one of them. This is, of course, correct. The Churchs social teaching is a diverse and rich tradition of moral truths and biblical insights applied to the political, economic, and cultural aspects of our society. All Catholics should form and inform their conscience in accordance with these teachings. But reasonable Catholics can (and do) disagree about how to apply these teachings in various situations."
"But with abortion (and for example slavery, racism, euthanasia and trafficking in human persons) there can be no legitimate diversity of opinion. The direct killing of the innocent is always a grave injustice. One should not permit unjust killing any more than one should permit slave-holding, racist actions, or other grave injustices. From the perspective of justice, to say I am personally opposed to abortion but
is like saying I personally am against slavery, but I can not impose my personal beliefs on my neighbor.
I hope it will not seem racist to say that "racism" is not as serious an issue as slavery or murder. Racism is seriously disgusting, but to be prejudiced against someone is not, obviously, as serious as killing him. That is why support for abortion is so grave a matter.
I would add that I am unable to see that, on the whole, Republicans are more racist than Democrats, as Democrats constantly argue. Is Bush more of a racist than Kerry? Quite the reverse, I would guess. In this instance, racism is no more than a red herring.
Attention John Kerry!?
Here's another situation/quandary candidate Kerry can try to spin out of?
Standing ovation!
Support abortion rights? Don't take Communion
Newark Archbishop John J. Myers said Tuesday that Catholics who support abortion rights have cut themselves off from the church's core teachings and shouldn't seek Holy Communion, the most important and sacred sacrament in the Roman Catholic Church. In releasing his five-page pastoral statement, Myers joined a small but growing number of U.S. bishops who, in an election year, are asserting their dominion over Catholic voters and politicians who hold positions contrary to the church's. With Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts, a Catholic who supports abortion rights, poised to become the Democratic nominee for president, the bishops have become increasingly vocal in their condemnations. "That some Catholics ... are willing to allow others to continue directly to kill the innocent is a grave scandal,'' Myers said in the statement, "A Time for Honesty,'' published in today's edition of The Catholic Advocate. "The situation is much, much worse when these same leaders receive the Eucharist ... their objective dishonesty serves to compound the scandal.'' Myers refrained from naming politicians - unlike his fellow bishops in Trenton and Camden, who respectively lambasted Governor McGreevey for his political positions, and for remarrying without seeking an annulment from the church. Myers also stopped short of saying that either he or his priests would refuse to serve dissenting Catholics the sanctified bread and wine that Catholics believe is the body and blood of Christ. "This is a teaching document,'' said Jim Goodness, a spokesman for Myers. "The church recognizes that people struggle with issues of faith at times. The bishop sees his role as helping them to a deeper understanding of the faith.'' Still, Myers left no room for disagreement, echoing the position taken by Pope John Paul II and pressed by the Vatican. "With abortion, there can be no legitimate diversity of opinion,'' he wrote. "The direct killing of the innocent is always a grave injustice.'' And at times, the statement seemed like a rebuke of McGreevey, who has said it's a personal matter whether or not he receives Communion. Myers subtitled one section "Communion is Not Private'' in boldfaced type. "To misuse the eucharistic symbol by reducing it to one's private 'feeling' of communion with Christ and his Church while objectively not being in such communion is gravely disordered,'' he wrote. With 1.3 million Catholics, the Newark Archdiocese is the seventh-largest in the nation and covers Bergen, Hudson, Essex, and Union counties. Even so, critics said they question whether the activism of Myers or the other bishops will have much effect. "You can't find a poll over the last 30 years that shows more than 20 percent of Catholics agree with the bishops that abortion should be illegal in all circumstances,'' said Frances Kissling, president of the Washington-based liberal group Catholics for a Free Choice. "I have sympathy for them, because they've staked their moral credibility on the abortion issue, and the reality is they cannot control Catholic public opinion and belief. They must feel terribly powerless.'' More than eight in 10 Catholics said they're more likely to follow their conscience on moral issues than the teachings of Pope John Paul II, a Gallup poll reported in October. A poll commissioned by Catholics for a Free Choice in 2000 found that 66 percent of Catholics said it should be legal for a woman to have an abortion. U.S. Rep. Bill Pascrell Jr., D-Paterson, said he was mystified by the bishops' urgent warnings. "It doesn't make sense that, all of a sudden, we discovered this as a political issue in 2004,'' said Pascrell, a Catholic who said he's pro-choice but supports bans on late-term abortions. "I'm interested to know whether we're going to deny the sacrament to those who are pro-death penalty.'' Pascrell's bishop, Paterson Bishop Frank Rodimer, joined the fray last week, when he wrote in the diocesan newspaper that politicians who support abortion rights "should have enough deferential concern for the scandal they cause among their fellow Catholics who do believe in the right of the unborn to live, not to present themselves for Communion.'' Pascrell said he frequently receives Communion, and has received it several times from Rodimer. He doesn't expect that to change. "I believe the bishop has always been a good shepherd,'' Pascrell said. "On the other hand, he knows we all have an individual conscience. And nowhere is it written who will receive and not receive.'' Rodimer couldn't be reached for comment. Bishops nationwide have handled the issue differently, with some saying they're uncomfortable with denying communion. A committee of bishops is meeting to draw up guidelines. Some Catholics hailed Myers' statement. "This is long overdue,'' said William Budesheim, the mayor of Riverdale, and a conservative Catholic who attends a Latin Mass at a Pequannock chapel. "The bishops are responsible for protecting the integrity of the Communion which is the body, blood, soul, and divinity of Christ.'' Jack Olsen, an anti-abortion activist in Bayonne, agreed. "I come from a family of nine, so I can appreciate children,'' he said. |
Wednesday, May 5, 2004 |
ARE NEW JERSEY Catholic bishops ganging up on Governor McGreevey? First, Trenton Bishop John Smith said the governor can't call himself a devout Catholic because he supports abortion rights. Then last week Joseph Galante, the new bishop of Camden, said he would not give communion to McGreevey if he came to the bishop's installation ceremony because the governor is divorced and has remarried without obtaining an annulment.
John Kerry was also warned by a bishop in St. Louis about his stance on abortion rights. A top Vatican cardinal said recently that a Catholic politician who supports abortion rights is "not fit" to receive communion. (Yesterday, Newark Archbishop John Myers said any Catholic who receives communion while differing with church teaching on abortion is "objectively dishonest." Political leaders who do so "compound the scandal.")
The church's position against abortion and divorce are clear. But when some bishops start singling out public figures for their sins and saying they should be denied communion, the bishops place themselves at the pinnacle of a very slippery slope.
Screening politicians for eligibility to receive the sacraments raises all kinds of questions. For starters, what other sins might be considered? What if a politician is pro-life and not divorced but cheats on his wife? What if he doesn't cheat but is greedy? What if he votes for tax breaks for businesses that give him large donations but deny their workers a living wage? What if he votes against workplace safety or environmental protections that save lives?
If Catholic politicians are following their faith, shouldn't they be voting for programs that ease poverty, create jobs, help the homeless, fight AIDS in Africa, and provide all the uninsured in America with health coverage? Caring for the poor and suffering is a direct order from Jesus himself. Will the bishops hold politicians accountable for those issues? Should they?
And if politicians are to be screened for communion, what about the rest of us? While the bishop is busy barring politicians, other sinners may sneak by. There could be a tax cheat in the first pew, or a vicious gossip behind him, or a manager in the choir who bullies her employees. More than a few parishioners probably use birth control. Maybe priests should take a poll on Sunday morning to find out who is in the state of grace.
There is true evil in the world. The new bishop of Camden could have a field day if he wanted to call attention to it in his diocese. Surely there is enough trafficking in human misery in Camden to keep him busy: pimps, slumlords, drug dealers, corrupt local politicians. Which is the greater evil - a divorced and remarried governor or the sharks who feed on the poor?
One could argue that one of our nation's greatest sins - one that most of us are guilty of - is our ingrained indifference to generations of urban despair.
A thoughtful letter to The Record recently raised this question: What about the bishop in New Orleans in the 1950s who excommunicated three racist politicians fighting tooth and nail against school desegregation? Is it easier to agree with his action? The letter makes a good point: Your reaction may depend on how you define evil.
Certainly, the church has the right - indeed the obligation - to fight against abortion, which it considers murder, as well as racism, unjust war, poverty, and the death penalty. The church must be a moral force in the world.
But denying communion to certain politicians who disagree with church positions - or agree with them but do not impose that position on others - is an extreme step. It smacks of politics. And what does it say about a church that claims to embrace sinners?
Last weekend, I met a Lutheran minister from Staten Island who said he wrote to Kerry and McGreevey, inviting them to communion at his church. "It's the Lord's table," he said. "All are invited."
His words remind me of my mother. She was a Catholic who truly loved her neighbor and lived her faith every day by helping others. But she never went to communion after she married a divorced man. She died believing that the church would not accept her.
Yet there are Catholics who believe that sinners need communion more than the just. And they feel funny about judging others and the state of their souls.
It's too much like casting the first stone.
Mary Ellen Schoonmaker is a Record editorial writer. Contact her at schoonmaker@northjersey.com . Send comments about this column to oped@northjersey.com .
"A Time for Honesty"
A Pastoral Statement by The Most Reverend John J. Myers,
Archbishop of Newark
May 5, 2004
Our times demand honesty. It is possible to value sincerely ones Catholic heritage and to revere ones Catholic forebears and yet not to have Catholic faith.
Faith is a free and personal act inspired by the Holy Spirit, by which we entrust ourselves to the living God and to Jesus Christ his Son and our Lord. While intensely personal, the act of faith is always at the same time ecclesial. This means that the act of faith embraces the Church to which Christ Himself has entrusted His mission. According to the Catechism of the Catholic Church, Whoever says I believe says I pledge myself to what We believe. In other words, faith, while free and personal, is also a commitment to make ones own faith the faith of the Church.
It is always a temptation to emphasize the personal aspect of faith with the intent of reducing the faith to those elements with which we are comfortable in our life. This is deeply erroneous. The commitment of faith is a commitment to grow not only closer to Jesus Christ but also to continue to grow, sometimes through questions and struggles, into the full faith of the Church.
It is clear in the constant teaching of the Church, and recently articulated in the Catechism of the Catholic Church, that protecting the fullness of the proclamation of the faith in any generation is a task entrusted to the bishops of the world in union with the Bishop of Rome. Through the grace of the Holy Spirit, the bishops are charged in each era and in each culture with proclaiming the truth of the Gospel and maintaining that truth in good times and in bad.
Cardinal Christoph Schonborn of Vienna has pointed out that perhaps the most powerful words in the Creeds of the Church are those that come first: I believe in God the Father Almighty Creator of Heaven and Earth . With these words we acknowledge that God is the source of the universe and of our existence. It is Gods world in which we live and it is our task to come to understand and respect that and live in the world as God intended. Authentic Christians know that it is not ours to define our own being in an absolute way, but rather it is ours to discover and live with joy the being in the world, which God has given us.
This is also true for the human conscience. Clearly each human person has a conscience and should follow it because by definition conscience is the intellectual act of judgment of what is right and wrong to do or not to do. It is the last best judgment of what one ought to choose. Thus, conscience must be formed through education and prayer, and be informed by the teaching of Christ. We cannot form our conscience in solitary isolation or simply with reference to cultural practices or convictions. Conscience can only be formed authentically by reference to the truth. Truth and conscience go together. Following an authentic conscience builds the truly human. Following a conscience without reference to truth sets an individual and society adrift on a sea of hopelessness.
There are many implications of these principles. We profess our faith not merely in a formula of words, but rather in the realities to which those words refer. And that certainly applies in the matter of abortion, euthanasia, cloning and other issues which are before the American people and the world public at this time. Long before science made clear that each individual is genetically new and unique from conception, the Church taught that abortion is a great evil. She still teaches this even in the face of the tragedy in our country where respect for the sanctity of human life has been eroded.
There is no right more fundamental than the right to be born and reared with all the dignity the human person deserves. On this grave issue, public officials cannot hold themselves excused from their duties, especially if they claim to be Catholic. Every faithful Catholic must be not only personally opposed to abortion, but also must live that opposition in his or her actions. In Robert Bolts play A Man for All Seasons, St. Thomas More remarks, I believe, when statesmen forsake their own private conscience for the sake of their public duties they lead their country by a short route to chaos. Sadly, too few follow the example of St. Thomas More. As voters, Catholics are under an obligation to avoid implicating themselves in abortion, which is one of the gravest of injustices. Certainly, there are other injustices, which must be addressed, but the unjust killing of the innocent is foremost among them.
At the same time, I point out that this is not simply a Catholic issue, but a basic moral issue of justice and human dignity. It applies to all persons. Some justify their actions by saying that they must respect the consciences of others. But this respect for anothers conscience should never require abandoning ones own properly formed conscience. Conscientious opposition to abortion, rooted in an understanding of the sanctity of human life, may not be sacrificed simply because others, whose consciences are gravely mistaken, would unjustly take the life of an unborn baby.
I have already said this before, in a previous Pastoral Letter in 1990:
Although we must all follow our conscience, the task of conscience is not to create moral truth, but perceive it. It is quite possible for an individual to perceive the moral reality of a particular situation erroneously. Such a person may be sincere, but he or she is sincerely wrong.
Catholics who publicly dissent from the Churchs teaching on the right to life of all unborn children should recognize that they have freely chosen by their own actions to separate themselves from what the Church believes and teaches. They have also separated themselves in a significant way from the Catholic community.
The Church cannot force such people to change their position; but she can and does ask them honestly to admit in the public forum that they are not in full union with the Church.
One who practices such dissent, even in the mistaken belief that it is permissible, may remain a Catholic in some sense, but has abandoned the full Catholic faith. For such a person to express communion with Christ and His Church by the reception of the Sacrament of the Eucharist is objectively dishonest.
This is not a new teaching of the Church. From the earliest years, it has been pointed out that one cannot claim to be a Christian and yet believe other than what the Church teaches. In the second century St. Justin Martyr described the Eucharist in this way: No one may share the Eucharist with us unless he believes that what we teach is true, unless he is washed in the regenerating waters of baptism for the remission of his sins, and unless he lives in accordance with the principles given us by Christ.
The law and discipline of the Church recognizes this fact in various ways. It is a time for honesty. I ask and urge that Catholic voters and Catholics in public life carefully consider their position if they find themselves in opposition to Church teaching in these matters. Sadly, I must point out that to continue down this road places them in danger of distancing themselves even more from Jesus Christ and from His Church.
Perhaps it is also time to remind ourselves of the meaning and purpose of communion. No one has an absolute right to the Eucharist. It is a gift given to us by a merciful and gracious God. In fact, the Eucharist is Gods gift of Himself to us. In receiving Him we are made one flesh with him. This reception also symbolizes and makes real our union with the whole Church. To receive unworthily or without proper dispositions is a very serious sin against the Lord. St. Paul explicitly teaches this in his letter to the Church at Corinth when he wrote, This means that whoever eats the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord unworthily sins against the body and blood of the Lord. A man should examine himself first; only then should he eat of the bread and drink of the cup. He who eats and drinks without recognizing the body eats and drinks a judgment on himself (1 Cor 11: 27-29). Without recognizing the body refers both to recognizing the presence of Christ in the Eucharist and recognizing the Body of Christ, which is the Church. Obviously this means that no Catholic should approach communion unless properly disposed (without unconfessed mortal sin on ones conscience, having fasted at least one hour in accordance with the Churchs discipline, etc.).
But, receiving the Eucharist also means that one is in fact in full communion with Christ and His Church. To receive communion when one has, through public or private action, separated oneself from unity with Christ and His Church, is objectively dishonest. It is an expression of communion by ones action that is objectively not in accordance with ones heart, mind, and choices.
Communion is Not Private
Because the Eucharist is the source and summit of our faith, the most sacred action of our Church, to misuse the Eucharistic symbol by reducing it to ones private feeling of communion with Christ and His Church while objectively not being in such union is gravely disordered.
This is particularly true when it comes to the area of protecting human life. Abortion and infanticide are, as Vatican Council II stated, abominable crimes (Gaudium et Spes, Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World, 51). The fact that all too many U.S. citizens have grown comfortable with the on-going injustice of abortion on demand is quite upsetting. That some Catholics, who claim to believe what the Church believes, are willing to allow others to continue directly to kill the innocent is a grave scandal. The situation is much much worse when these same leaders receive the Eucharist when they are not objectively in communion with Christ and His Church. Their objective dishonesty serves to compound the scandal.
Some might argue that the Church has many social teachings and the teaching on abortion is only one of them. This is, of course, correct. The Churchs social teaching is a diverse and rich tradition of moral truths and biblical insights applied to the political, economic, and cultural aspects of our society. All Catholics should form and inform their conscience in accordance with these teachings. But reasonable Catholics can (and do) disagree about how to apply these teachings in various situations.
For example, our preferential option for the poor is a fundamental aspect of this teaching. But, there are legitimate disagreements about the best way or ways truly to help the poor in our society. No Catholic can legitimately say, I do not care about the poor. If he or she did so this person would not be objectively in communion with Christ and His Church. But, both those who propose welfare increases and those who propose tax cuts to stimulate the economy may in all sincerity believe that their way is the best method really to help the poor. This is a matter of prudential judgment made by those entrusted with the care of the common good. It is a matter of conscience in the proper sense.
Injustices Are Impermissible
But with abortion (and for example slavery, racism, euthanasia and trafficking in human persons) there can be no legitimate diversity of opinion. The direct killing of the innocent is always a grave injustice. One should not permit unjust killing any more than one should permit slave-holding, racist actions, or other grave injustices. From the perspective of justice, to say I am personally opposed to abortion but
is like saying I personally am against slavery, but I can not impose my personal beliefs on my neighbor. Obviously, recognizing the grave injustice of slavery requires one to ensure that no one suffers such degradation. Similarly recognizing that abortion is unjust killing requires onein love and justiceto work to overcome the injustice.
Among my most important responsibilities is that of pastor and teacher. In light of recent developments in our nation, I wish once again to affirm the teaching of the Church. Human life is a gift from God and as Catholics we have a most grave obligation to defend all human life from the moment of conception until natural death. God help us if we fail in this most fundamental obligation.
Catholics have an obligation to be right on issues of justice, natural law, and human rights which are not esoteric mystical theological mysteries of "belief" but very clear issues within the realm of reason.
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