Posted on 11/04/2002 10:14:57 AM PST by Maximilian
Voting, practicality and moral absolutes
By Patrick Delaney
Director, Associate Relations
American Life League
In recent articles and essays released by the Priests for Life organization, the group discusses and promotes what it believes to be authentic principles for practical voting. They lament that due to a lack of participation by Christians in the voting process, our national policies have become less and less Christian.
The main focus of their attention, however, centers on the moral dilemma faced by Christian voters in political races where neither of the two major party candidates is perfect. In one piece they conclude by stating that voters may choose to support the imperfect candidate whom is clearly closer in his/her convictions to the Gospel; and they can do this without being compromised, dirty, or tainted.
At face value, such an assessment seems harmless and accurate. But with a closer look it is clear that the wording and reasoning here is not altogether acceptable. Following one dictum of John Paul II in Evangelium Vitae, we agree that given such a grave situation, as we face today with decriminalized abortion, we need now more than ever to have the courage to look the truth in the eye and to call things by their proper name, without yielding to convenient compromises or to the temptation of self-deception.
In this light, our first objection to PFLs reasoning has to do with their consistent selection of the benign adjective imperfect to describe these particular men and women running for public office. Is it not true that every single person that has ever run for public office is imperfect? This most general classification serves to veil the gravity of the positions these candidates hold. What Priests for Life really means here is that these races include two major party imperfect candidates who both happen to support the legal slicing and dicing of preborn boys and girls. Both of these individuals believe and promise to uphold some degree of a bigger persons right to slaughter little babies.
It is the position of Priests for Life that conscientious Christians shouldnt feel compromised, dirty, or tainted when they vote for such a person to assume the reigns of public power. Their one qualification is that the voter should perceive their chosen candidate as being closer in their convictions to the Gospel than their opponent.
What does this mean? Can we classify some pro-aborts as being closer to the Gospel than other pro-aborts?
Moral absolutes
Christianity confirms and adopts basic universal ethics that can be grasped by the light of reason alone. One fundamental precept in this universal natural law is that it is always wrong to intentionally kill an innocent human being. The Catholic Church calls this a moral absolute. The dignity of the human person and indeed the entire objective moral order is dependant upon this principle. Should this principle be denied, even in exceptional cases, the result is a radical break with the Christian (natural law) worldview and a venture into the malaise of moral relativism.
Therefore, pro-abortion candidates who either support child killing broadly, or only in exceptional cases, are at radical odds with the truth and the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Indeed they reject any objective external limits to the power of government by professing that civil law can legitimately deprive little boys and girls in the womb, or anybody else for that matter, of their inherent right to life. In denying such natural and divine limits, they affirm the culture-of-death by asserting that human life is negotiable, and that man does not have to honor the law of God. They join the harangue of the so-called enlightenment with the likes of Nietzsche, Voltaire and Marx, shaking their fists with the defiant chant, God is dead!
In one PFL column, the authors presentation continues to further obfuscate the issue by stating that a vote for such a culture-of-death candidate is not a vote for canonization, nor is it a declaration that one agrees with every position the candidate takes. Yes, indeed. Though Christians and all people of good will are not obliged to require a high level of saintly perfection from candidates who they place in power, they do have a right to expect that such candidates will not favor the slaughtering of innocent people, particularly the killing of preborn children. Voters have a right, and arguably a positive obligation, to only place candidates in office that will honor this most basic duty of government: to ensure the protection of all innocent human beings. This is not a quality of high personal sanctity, but of mere human decency, and a bottom-line requirement of all sane, mature adults.
The sad fact is that Christians have continually compromised this truth and principle over the course of the last few decades by being drawn into the false conflict between two major parties that exhibit support for the same general policies. The lesser evil continues to become progressively worse as time goes on, and with each passing day the carnage of children grows.
Why dont our public policies reflect Christian principles? Simple. Christians continue to support politicians in both major parties (some who are endorsed by big pro-life organizations) that are positively committed to the legal slaughter of at least some preborn children. These policies are radically opposed to the truth of Christianity and the basic requirements of civil government.
How can we turn it around? Christians and all people of good will need to commit to never again support a candidate for public office who abdicates his or her most basic responsibility to protect innocent human life. Such candidates should rightly be rejected as being unqualified to serve, and disqualified from receiving just one Christian dime, vote, or recognition of legitimacy in our publications.
Yes, this may require voting for a third party candidate or writing in a name in the short run (heaven forbid!); for our commitment to truth must exceed our loyalty to a particular political party. Truth is eternal. Political parties are not. If a political party is not willing to accept its responsibility to honor the basic truth of human dignity, the moral absolute that innocents can never be intentionally killed, it has no right to exist and should not be empowered by Christians to do so.
Christian policies are not present in our government because Christian voters, and their leaders, fail to insist upon such policies with their votes. It is perfectly legitimate and indeed praiseworthy to reserve ones vote only for candidates who understand that slaughtering babies is always morally and legally wrong. Only in this way is it possible to reestablish the integrity of government.
So, what are we waiting for?
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Copyright 2002 American Life League, Inc.
Other questions? Write us at jbrown@all.org
This is pure idiocy.
There is only one political party that is consistenly pro-life and that is the Republican party. Is every member? No.
But voting for Republicans will advance the pro-life cause more than voting for the anti-life Democrat Party, or a third party candidate who stands no chance of winning.
Voting for Democrats and third parties is a total waste of time if one wants to actually do something about abortion, beginning with partial-birth abortion.
The American Life League consistently, (like the schismatic trads) makes the perfect the enemy of the good.
Listen to Priests for Life, not Judie Brown.
Is there some obscure Right-to-Life Party candidate on the ballot? Or a Constitutional Party buffoon?
THAT'S who Judy would have you vote for. A total waste of a vote.
This was very informative........and God help us if Rendell should become Governor!
I agree with you, Sinkspur! I got the e-mail from Fr. Pavone last week, and thought it made perfect sense.
We can bitch and moan about there not being perfect pro-life candidates, then shaft unborn babies royally by voting for fringe candidates who don't have a snowball's chance in hell of being elected, and NOT electing a Republican because that person is not as pro-life as we might like. The upshot of voting for the Repub., especially for national races, is that the Repub. party would control that legislative body and it would be more likely that pro-life legislation will come out of Congress. Having Repubs. in control of the House and Senate will make Pres. Bush's job of appointing more conservative judges infinitely easier! It is possible that Roe v Wade could be repealed in this Presidential term, IF he has Legislators who won't make it impossible for him to get the judges he wants!
Your guy has no chance of winning, which means he can do zip for the pro-life cause.
Your position may make you feel good, but it is a wasted vote.
What other party has done anything at all to turn back or restrict abortion?
Only Republicans. It's not as much as you or I want, but you make the perfect the enemy of the good.
That's a brain-dead exercise.
My sentiments exactly, and I am a pro-life Catholic. Unless the 'conservatives' have control, they can't accomplish things.
I find their criticisms of Priests for Life particularly interesting given the shake-up in command effected by the American hierarchy clearly anxious to capitalize on the wooing of AmChurch by the RNC WASP elite ... the "I'm personally opposed BUT" crowd who like to dangle their "pro-life" stands during the campaign only to turn around and announce the utilitarian use of "Excess" human beings for hopeful research.
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