Posted on 10/15/2004 8:36:54 PM PDT by Salvation
On Wednesday, Georgetown Universitys Catholic Studies Election Forum presented, Why should a Catholic Vote Republican Democratic? The forum, moderated by Georgetowns Father John Langan, S.J., featured a surrogate for President George W. Bush and for Senator John Kerry. Each campaign representative made the case for why he believes his candidate is the best choice for Catholics in November.
Father Langan, the Cardinal Bernardin Chair of Catholic Social Thought at Georgetown, kicked off the program by saying the election is the third most important conflict we currently face. The most important, he felt is the Iraqi war, and joked that this was followed by the Red Sox-Yankees baseball playoffs. He noted that a recent political program had identified Catholics and working women as voting blocs still in play for both candidates. Therefore, the purpose of the forum was to see which candidate makes the strongest case for Catholic support. Each surrogate had fifteen minutes to make his argument followed by questions and answers from the audience.
Leonard A. Leo, Executive Vice President of the Federalist Society for Law & Public Policy Studies in Washington, D.C, represented President Bush and spoke first. He stated emphatically that because Senator Kerry opposes the Churchs teaching on culture of life issues, Catholic voters must disqualify him. Therefore, the real question is can Catholics vote for President Bush based on Church teaching.
Leo said his rejection of Senator Kerry as an alternative for Catholics is not based on Kerrys faith. The only objective criteria are the senators stated positions and voting record. This record must be examined in light of the Churchs social teachings. At the core of these teachings is the right to life, which is paramount to living the Gospel of Life.
He then presented Kerrys scandalous abortion record. Kerry is against any sensible limits on the practice. He voted against the partial- birth abortion ban six times. He opposes parental notification laws, and he is the first presidential candidate Planned Parenthood has ever endorsed. He also supports human cloning and supports reversing President Bushs ban on new lines for embryonic stem-cell research. He noted Kerrys commitment to filibuster any judicial nominee who is pro-life, and pointed out how the senator voted against the unborn victims' act.
Leo also dismissed the senators claim in the second debate that while he personally opposes abortion, he is not going to impose his religious views on others. He noted religion takes a position on an issue like abortion not as an article of faith, but because it is inherently morally wrong. He also addressed another popular claim by Kerry and others on the Left that Kerry is more pro-life because of the social spending he supports, which somehow leads to a decrease in women relying on abortions. Leo said abortions have declined in America not because of social spending, but because people are waking up to the horrible nature of the procedure. He also noted that you cannot measure someones commitment to Catholic social teaching by how much money he spends on social programs.
After presenting why Catholics who take the Churchs social teachings seriously could not vote for Kerry, Leo made his case for President Bush. He said Catholics can support the president after examining three main areas: the culture of life, social policies, and the Iraq war.
About the culture of life, he noted that President Bush signed the partial- birth abortion ban and unborn victims' act, and supports parental notification legislation. The president has also tried to make abortion rarer by promoting abstinence and advocating adoption as an alternative. He has banned tax money for overseas abortions. The president has placed a ban on federal embryonic stem-cell research beyond those lines already in existence from previously destroyed embryos and he supports adult stem-cell research. He also opposes human cloning.
Leo then presented President Bushs compassionate conservative social agenda. He noted that many of his conservative friends have bemoaned the fact that this administration has spent so much on social spending. He said President Bush has sought to lessen peoples tax burden, and introduced programs like prison counseling. He has also launched the faith-based initiative. Most of all, President Bush recognizes that when individuals are empowered to live their own lives, society recognizes their inherent dignity, which is the crux of Catholic social teaching.
Given the setting and the number of students in the audience fiercely opposed to the Iraq war, Leos toughest task was to present the presidents justification for the invasion. He said the war was the last resort for the administration. Saddam Hussein was a vicious butcher who represented a threat to his own people, the Middle East, the United States, and the entire world. Further, Hussein continually ignored the United Nations' 17 resolutions addressing the Iraq crisis.
Representing Senator Kerry was Robert Otto Valdez, Ph.D., M.H.S.A., a Senior Health Scientist at RAND and a Senior Fellow at the Leonard Davis Institute for Health Economics at the University of Pennsylvania Wharton School of Business. He began by noting that Catholics are interested in all issues despite the fact that the media likes to portray them as a single bloc only interested in one or two issues.
Valedez said that political exploitation was at an all-time low and to distort Kerrys position on moral issues was outrageous. He spoke of the Churchs spiritual renewal since Vatican II, which promotes religious liberty, human dignity, respect for an individuals conscience, openness in policy, and the rights of all believers. He then took a shot at what he called Pre-Vatican II believers, whom he claims are in the business of rolling back reforms.
About Gospel values, he argued that John Kerrys vision comes closest to that of Catholics. He said Kerry is the better of the two candidates on a whole spectrum of social justice issues, including abortion, the death penalty, and social spending. Valedez then claimed that moral theology is not stagnant nor was it set in stone a couple of thousands of years ago. He argued it is wrong to believe that we have already uncovered all the moral issues facing humanity. It is rather a constant search for the truth.
He then made a not-so-veiled attack on Evangelicals, including the president, who he believes use the Bible as a means of demonizing others to promote their own agenda. He labeled this the politics of exclusion and claimed Kerrys view of the Gospel is one of openness, tolerance, and inclusion. He also said Kerry is someone who prays in secret and contrasted this to the Pharisee in the Gospel who seeks to bring attention to himself through ostentatious worship. The senator knows how to keep his faith and politics separate, he noted. Again, a not-so-subtle comparison to the president.
Valedez then launched a scathing attack on the President Bushs economic policies. He said real GDP is the lowest in memory. Employment is contracted, bankruptcies are up sharply, the stock market is lower then when Bush took office, and the poverty rate is up. The income inequality has grown, the budget surplus has disappeared, and in its place is a huge deficit, he argued.
He closed by noting when policies are extreme, which go to the breaking points, they hurt everyone. This is clearly against the Churchs teaching on social justice. Kerry and Edwards are the right choice to restore the economic health of the country. More of the same isnt going to work. Freedom, equality, justice, and humanity are the values represented by the Democratic ticket, he said.
In general, the questions were thoughtful, although some could not resist the opportunity to make political points, particularly when it came to opposing the war. Some raised the issue of capital punishment and President Bushs support for the action, particularly as governor. Leo admitted this is one of the more vexing issues for him as a Catholic, but also noted that Kerry and the president share a similar position. Kerry has not made it a moral issue, according to Leo, because he is on record as supporting the use of capital punishment for terrorists.
As the election approaches, it is clear both campaigns are desperate for Catholic voters, as witnessed in the third debate in which Kerry employed Scripture, professed his Catholic faith, and mentioned his service as an altar boy. Now is decision time.
Catholics approaching the election have a clear choice. If they believe issues like abortion and euthanasia are non-negotiable, and that a candidates support for such positions disqualifies him for consideration, they must do as Leo suggests. They must reject Senator Kerry and support President Bush or not vote a practice the Church does not encourage.
Alternatively, they can ignore the Churchs clear teaching on life and the primacy she places on it when it comes to voting, and support Senator Kerry. Before doing so, however, they should consider the words of Denvers Archbishop Charles Chaput, who said recently that many Catholic Democrats have used the seamless garment as an excuse to sideline the abortion issue, making it one among many others. And, we cant do that. He noted that the doctrine of the Holy Trinity and the dignity of human life are at the heart of Catholic theology. He warns Catholics not to violate this doctrine. Whether its the creation of embryos for embryonic stem cell research or abortion, [these] are violations of the dignity of human beings, from our perspective. And you can never justify it.
St. Thomas More, pray for us.
© Copyright 2004 Catholic Exchange
Craig Richardson is the founder of the recently launched Catholic Action Network, an organization committed to calling Catholics to authentic and faithful citizenship particularly on issues of life and family.
My parish priest has made it very clear that we have a litmus test for the president and that is abortion. Kerry fails that test.
Catholics are most certainly Christians. Is there any doubt among those of faith that God has his hand on George W. Bush. He is most certainly a man of God, of deep, sincere and unapologetic faith. In these desperate times it is a comfort to me to know that my President is on his knees in prayer seeking God's wisdom and guidance.
Does it bother anyone else that this country has gotten to the point that the news media wants the President to apologize for his faith? I am astonished at the negative comments made following each time our President tells of his faith, his prayers, and his devotion to God. We do live in strange times.
I am Catholic and I would never vote for BUSH!
A guy named John Kerry says the same thing. What is your point?
I was just making a statement
A Catholic in good standing is one whose conscience is formed by the Doctrine's of the Catholic Church.
If that is truely your only concern then yes it does.
Ah yes, history is replete with bad bishops, just out of curiosity who is your bishop? I'm sure it isn't Chaput or Burke, I doubt it is even Maida.
The catholic church has become filled with bishops who are PC driven. The great moral debate in the church should be, as in days gone past, if you vote for an individual who practices genocide against the unborn, then do you not also participate directly in that sin? Does you soul not bear the same mark of eternal damnation?
many of our bishops, in their attempted teaching of their flock, have been blinded by PC and may have earned unto themselves the mark of eternal damnation.
She was speechless.
Excellent repost. Where I live and in my family, the Catholics from 50 yoa and down are voting for Bush (not that it will do much good in Illinois) while those somewhat older are voting Kerry. I presume that it is the "Catholic/Democrat" label reminiscent of John Kennedy.
The one way of quieting the louder Kerry supporters is to bring up the abortion issue. They simply quit arguing. Don't know if that changes any votes, but it does seem to end the political discussions.
"I'll make this a very blunt and straight statement, I don't know how anyone can go to church on Sunday, and vote for a democrat the following Tuesday."
A Catholic like any other legal citizen should vote for whom they feel is best to serve.....as long as it's Bush
It's very simple. If one of the persons is pro-choice and one is not, unless there are some very other outstanding reasons, you are cooperating with the evil of being pro abortion if you vote for the pro-abortion candidate.
I have some other reasons I don't hve problems with this as well. I think Bush has a lot more integrity, cares more for his people and less for his power than Kerry. I love the way he walks his faith walk, even if he isn't Catholic. I cringe every time I hear that Kerry receives communion. I LIKE Bush, I TRUST Bush, and I don't Kerry. Even if they were both pro-life, I would vote for Bush.
W'04!
BTTT!
There was a longish piece I saw in the WSJ maybe a year or two ago -- a statement by a group of about 100 OB-GYNs stating that PBA is not and has never been a recognized medical procedure because there is no circumstance that calls for it. I'll try to google it, but it's hard to think how to search, since I can't recall any of the names (and I'm vague on when it appeared).
Bump for truth
Then you madam, are not different than John f'n kerry.CINO.That is Catholic in Name Only. Please leave this board and my Church. Neither have any need for phony's.
PARTIAL-BIRTH ABORTION BAN ACT OF 1995--VETO MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES (H. DOC. NO. 104-198) -- (BY NANCY ROMER, PAMELA SMITH, CURTIS R. COOK, AND JOSEPH L. DECOOK). You'll have to scroll down a bit for the text.
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