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Kerry's Religious Activist Shows Him How to Score Points with Religion
The Washington Times; Sojourner ^

Posted on 06/18/2004 2:02:02 PM PDT by GarnetGirl04

Edited on 07/12/2004 3:42:27 PM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]

As much as John Kerry criticizes others for making religion an issue in this campaign, but he certainly isn't above making religion an issue to his advantage. As the Washington Times reports today, he's heeding the advice of Rev. Robert Drinan, a Jesuit priest, who's told him to "keep cool" on religion so long as religious issue stack up to his disadvantage.


(Excerpt) Read more at washingtontimes.com ...


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2004; issues; kerry; religiousleft; religiousvote; vanderslice
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1 posted on 06/18/2004 2:02:04 PM PDT by GarnetGirl04
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To: GarnetGirl04

Kerry is one of those who probablly really believes that Jesse Jackson's "prayer vigils" are what prayer is all about!


2 posted on 06/18/2004 2:05:58 PM PDT by JeepInMazar
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As the Washington Times reports today, he's heeding the advice of Rev. Robert Drinan, a Jesuit priest, who's told him to "keep cool" on religion so long as religious issue stack up to his disadvantage.

Catholic World News — Feature — 06/27/1996
Catholic World News is available for daily delivery by email and news stories may be browsed and searched online. For details, visit the Catholic World News web site.
 
THE STRANGE POLITICAL CAREER OF FATHER DRINAN

by James Hitchcock

EWTN News

{The following investigative report is excerpted from a much longer article which appears in the July 1996 issue of Catholic World Report.}

When he wrote to applaud President Clinton's veto of a ban on partial-birth abortions, a controversial Jesuit priest was clearly out of step with the thinking of the Catholic Church. But his behavior was perfectly consistent with an ideological pattern that first became obvious when he ran for Congress--in direct defiance of orders from Rome. In the summer of 1992 a Jesuit graduate student at Harvard, Father Paul Mankowski, completed the background research for an article he planned to write on the relationship between the Society of Jesus and the congressional career of Father Robert Drinan, with a particular focus on Drinan's voting record on abortion. With the knowledge and consent of the archivist for the New England Province of the Society, Mankowski made photocopies of the correspondence and office memos pertinent to the issue. For various reasons Mankowski subsequently decided not to write an article. However, he then sought out the opinion of a professional historian, James Hitchcock, in determining how the various documents could be of use for the historical record. With the re-emergence of Father Drinan as a political player in the abortion debate, the documentation has assumed a new timeliness.

* * * In the United States even many liberal Catholics support Church teaching about abortion. It was therefore shocking that one of the president's strongest defenders was a Jesuit priest, Father Robert Drinan, who published articles in both the National Catholic Reporter and the New York Times attacking the bill and praising the President for having vetoed it. Such open partisanship is unusual among American priests, but it was not surprising in view of the fact that Father Drinan himself for ten years (l97l-8l) served in Congress, as a Democrat, and that while there was perhaps the single most reliable supporter of abortion "rights." In l970 Drinan was a well-known priest-lawyer and an official of Boston College. In February of that year, Father Pedro Arrupe, the Father General of the Jesuits world-wide, queried the provincial of the New England Province, Father William G. Guindon, concerning a rumor that Drinan was planning to run for Congress. Arrupe warned Guindon that Jesuits could not endorse the actions of any political party. About a week after Arrupe's warning, Drinan informed Guindon that he would indeed seek the Democratic nomination for Congress from a suburban Boston district. After Drinan's candidacy was publicly announced, Arrupe on February 25 cabled Guindon, saying flatly that Drinan could not run for office, and if elected could not serve. Although the Jesuit order traditionally laid great stress on obedience, an official of the New England province now told Arrupe that he was refusing to act on the latter's orders because such action would violate Drinan's rights. In March, Father Guindon was in Rome and met with Arrupe, who told the provincial that he must develop a plan whereby Drinan would withdraw from the congressional race. Assuring Guindon that he understood the reasons for the candidacy, the General nonetheless ruled that they were not sufficient to outweigh Jesuit policy. In addition to the permission of his Jesuit superiors, Church law also required that a priest in Drinan's situation receive the permission of the bishops in whose dioceses he was working. At the beginning of his candidacy Drinan told his Jesuit superiors that he had received informal assurances of approval from the Archdiocese of Boston and from the Diocese of Worcester, and the New England Province had forwarded this claim to Rome. However, Arrupe now queried the two bishops and reported that he had received letters from Cardinal Richard J. Cushing of Boston and Bishop Bernard J. Flanagan of Worcester stating that their permission had never been sought and thus had never been granted. Arrupe then requested that Drinan come to Rome to meet with him--a request Drinan apparently ignored as he began his campaign for Congress. Following his election in November, Drinan wrote to Arrupe informing him of his success and stating that he viewed his entry into politics as fully in keeping with the Society's commitment to social justice. Early in l972 the president of the American bishops' conference, Cardinal John J. Krol of Philadelphia, indicated publicly that Drinan's presence in Congress was contrary to Church policy and against the wishes of the bishops. A week later Arrupe formally told Drinan that he could not run for reelection, basing his decision on the judgment of the Americans bishops that the appropriate circumstances did not exist which would justify it. In mid-March, Arrupe informed Drinan that he had received a letter from Bishop Flanagan stating that both he and Archbishop Medeiros disapproved of Drinan's running for reelection. Arrupe then repeated his own prohibition.

In due course Drinan was re-elected and in l974 prepared to run for third term. In the meantime, however, the face of American politics had changed irrevocably by the sudden intrusion of the abortion issue into the national arena after a l973 Supreme Court decision finding a constitutional "right" to abortion. Drinan's position has always been that he fully accepted Catholic teaching on the subject. However, even before the Supreme Court decision he had supported, with increasing passionate intensity, every proposal to make the procedure legal and to fund it with tax money. Shortly after Roe v Wade, Drinan wrote a public defense of the decision, recognizing that it had flaws but finding it on the whole a beneficial judgment. He then proceeded, over the next several years, to compile an almost perfect pro-abortion voting record in Congress. Early in the fall of l974, with another election a few weeks away, the question of Drinan's permission to run again became public, after Drinan told the press "I have permission in black and white." This time Bishop Flanagan stated publicly that he had not given permission, while Cardinal Medeiros merely stated that the issue was an internal one for the Jesuits. Cardinal Medeiros would later reveal that he did not approve of the Jesuit's presence in Congress, while Bishop Flanagan said that the priest's candidacy was a clear violation of Canon Law. Despite these developments, Drinan proceeded with the campaign and was duly returned to Congress by his constituents. He was again re-elected to Congress in November of l976, and again in l978. In February, l980, another election year, Arrupe wrote to Father Edward M. O'Flaherty, now the New England provincial, again urging that Drinan retire from Congress. This time Arrupe expressed the personal opinion that Drinan's position on abortion was indefensible. How far that position actually extended was illustrated in a fundraising letter mailed that year by the National Abortion Rights Action League, which denounced the pro-life movement in the strongest terms and cited Drinan as a friend whose re-election to Congress was essential to the abortion cause. That same year the Holy See issued a general order requiring all priests to withdraw from politics, and in early May Father O'Flaherty announced that indeed Drinan would not be a candidate for re-election. Drinan's departure from Congress hardly marked his departure from politics, as in due course he became president of the liberal Americans for Democratic Action (ADA). He became increasingly vituperative in his criticisms of the pro-life movement, and as head of the ADA sent out a fundraising letter specifically urging the moral necessity of electing pro-abortion candidates to Congress. It is now clear that, despite what Drinan and his supporters often claimed, he never had authority from Father Arrupe to run for Congress. It is equally obvious that Drinan never had the permission of the Archbishop of Boston or the Bishop of Worcester, despite what he told Arrupe. Drinan himself was sometimes eager to emphasize his clerical identity. But to the degree that there were potential conflicts between a priest's duty to the Church and a politician's duties to the voters, this actually proved definitively why priests should not be in politics--Drinan was bound to the Church and to the Society of Jesus by solemn vows much older and deeper than anything which bound him to the citizens of Massachusetts. Although Drinan's publicly expressed views on abortion seemed more moderate before l970 than they would later turn out to be, it was already evident that he was a priest-lawyer with whom Catholic moral teachings sat uneasily at a number of points. Abortion had not yet become a national issue, but the legalization of abortion was one of a widening circle of radical proposals for the reshaping of society, many of them in direct opposition to Catholic doctrine. The Catholic Church would inevitably be a major obstacle to such changes, and it probably occurred to at least some secular liberals that it would be an inestimable advantange to have in Congress a Jesuit priest willing to support virtually all of those changes enthusiastically. How could any layman--especially one who was not a Catholic--be faulted for supporting abortion if the most prominent Catholic priest in public life did the same? Drinan bears heavy responsibility for making the Democratic Party the party of abortion.

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3 posted on 06/18/2004 2:09:27 PM PDT by Polycarp IV (PRO-LIFE orthodox Catholic--without exception, without compromise, without apology. Any questions?)
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To: GarnetGirl04
It is important to understand if you have to be coached on how to project religious character which would be pleasing to voters then the issue is you need consulting to mask a character problem of who you really are..
4 posted on 06/18/2004 2:10:44 PM PDT by Trapper (Max's better half wasn't mulch of a help.)
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To: JeepInMazar

Maybe Kerry meets with God in between meeting with world leaders?


5 posted on 06/18/2004 2:11:54 PM PDT by JeepInMazar
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To: JeepInMazar

Isn't this the woman who was behind ACT-UP's "invasions" of Catholic Masses a few years back? I may be mistaken, but it seems like I remember the name.


6 posted on 06/18/2004 2:13:30 PM PDT by Volunteer (Just so you know, I am ashamed the Dixie Chicks make records in Nashville.)
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To: GarnetGirl04
He's using religion. What contempt this shows.
7 posted on 06/18/2004 2:14:40 PM PDT by firebrand
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To: Volunteer
Right you are. Here's what the head of the Catholic League thinks of her:

Catholic League president William Donohue finds her a curious choice [according to NewsMax.com]:

"Here’s what we know about John Kerry’s religious outreach person. Mara Vanderslice was raised without any faith and didn’t become an evangelical Christian until she attended Earlham College, a Quaker school known for its adherence to pacifism.

"When in college, Mara was active in the Earlham Socialist Alliance, a group that supports the convicted cop killer Mumia Abu-Jamal and openly embraces Marxism-Leninism.

"After graduating, Mara spoke at rallies held by ACT-UP, the anti-Catholic group that disrupted Mass at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in 1989 by spitting the Eucharist on the floor. In 2000, she practiced civil disobedience when she took to the streets of Seattle in a protest against the World Trade Organization. In 2002, she tried to shut down Washington, D.C. in a protest against the IMF and the World Bank."

8 posted on 06/18/2004 2:19:08 PM PDT by firebrand
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To: GarnetGirl04
Obviously Kerry thinks devoutly religious people are stupid. Not coincidentally this is also what the editors of the New York Times, Boston Globe, and Washington Post think. Like members of some jungle cult, he can stand up in front of them and wave some religious symbols around and speak some sacred chants and all those poor retarded religious nitwits will march right off to the polls and pull the lever for John Kerry.

When you've bought into your own propaganda and don't know it, you're really in trouble, Sen. Kerry.

(steely)

9 posted on 06/18/2004 2:28:17 PM PDT by Steely Tom
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To: GarnetGirl04; All
I posted some information on Vanderslice's links to the Communist-connected religious groups Sojourners and Call to Renewal in this thread:

Kerry's Choice for Religious Outreach Director 'Confounding,' Group Says

10 posted on 06/18/2004 2:30:03 PM PDT by Fedora (Smeagol-Gollum 2004: "We can be our own VP, my Precious")
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To: Fedora

Drinan is a truly evil individual dating back to Vietnam era


11 posted on 06/18/2004 2:34:51 PM PDT by Steven W.
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To: firebrand
So, Kerry hires someone to advise him on religion & this person hates his Church, the Roman Catholic Church?
Oh yeah, this guy is just so darn smart. How much longer until I can go vote for W again? He is going to win in a landslide.
12 posted on 06/18/2004 2:36:51 PM PDT by Volunteer (Just so you know, I am ashamed the Dixie Chicks make records in Nashville.)
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To: Steven W.

I've been doing some background research on Drinan for an article I'm writing. Do you (or anyone else on the thread) know any good sources on his Vietnam-era activity? Specifically I'm trying to determine if he had any links to the religious antiwar group Clergy and Laity Concerned About Vietnam (CALCAV), later renamed Clergy and Laity Concerned (CALC).


13 posted on 06/18/2004 2:45:09 PM PDT by Fedora (Smeagol-Gollum 2004: "We can be our own VP, my Precious")
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To: GarnetGirl04

I wouldn't want to have to answer to God for supporting Kerry.


14 posted on 06/18/2004 3:25:44 PM PDT by jmaroneps37 ( Kerry's not "one of us": catholicsagainstkerry.com. needs your help.)
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To: GarnetGirl04

Yeah that's right old "Father Bob" is such a main stream Catholic. I am sure he can jelp JF'nK get it right...WHat a joke. PLease people get out the vote this fall WE CANNOT ALLOW THIS MAN TO WIN


15 posted on 06/18/2004 3:39:14 PM PDT by jnarcus
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To: firebrand
After graduating, Mara spoke at rallies held by ACT-UP, the anti-Catholic group that disrupted Mass at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in 1989 by spitting the Eucharist on the floor.

And this is Kerry's director of religious outreach! Do you suppose he now is recruiting directors of minority outreach from the KKK?

16 posted on 06/18/2004 3:42:16 PM PDT by GraceCoolidge
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To: GraceCoolidge

According to an email posted as an article about an hour ago, Donohue is reporting that the Kerry campaign has muzzled Vanderslice, and will not let her speak to the press.


17 posted on 06/18/2004 3:44:40 PM PDT by sinkspur (There's no problem on the inside of a kid that the outside of a dog can't cure.)
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To: GarnetGirl04

I heard a Kerry quote on the radio about six weeks ago, but I think the quote was further back than that. It was an actual recording of Kerry, saying regarding the abortion issue(I'm paraphrasing) that "Fundamentalist Christians only support the rights of individuals from the point of conception until their birth..." I'd love to get a copy and reference for that quote.


18 posted on 06/18/2004 3:49:12 PM PDT by My2Cents (Well.....there you go again.)
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To: sinkspur

Silenced his own religion advisor. Now, either she's a lousy advisor, for which he should sack her, not simply silence her, or he's uncomfortable talking about religion, which means he's really silenced himself and not her. I love the Kerry campaign! It's so full of nuance.


19 posted on 06/18/2004 3:51:49 PM PDT by My2Cents (Well.....there you go again.)
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To: Steven W.

Drinan even LOOKS Evil. What a disgusting man POSING as a religious person.


20 posted on 06/18/2004 4:01:54 PM PDT by Ann Archy (Abortion: The Human Sacrifice to the god of Convenience.)
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