Statement on Responsibilities of Catholics in Public
Life
-- Part Two of Three
Part 1
Part 3
Editor's note.
The following appeared
on the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops' Web
page March 10. It was signed by
Cardinal William H. Keeler
Chairman, USCCB Committee on Pro Life Activities;
Cardinal Theodore E. McCarrick Chairman, USCCB Task
Force on Catholic Bishops and Catholic Politicians; and
Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio Chairman, USCCB Committee on
Domestic Policy.
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A recent public statement by 55 Catholic and Democratic
members of the House of Representatives offers an
opportunity to address several important points about
the responsibilities of Catholics in public life.
We welcome this and other
efforts that seek to examine how Catholic legislators
bring together their faith and their policy choices. As
the Catholic bishops of the United States said in our
June 2004 statement, "Catholics in Political Life":
We need to do more to persuade
all people that human life is precious and human dignity
must be defended. This requires more effective dialogue
and engagement with all public officials, especially
Catholic public officials. We welcome conversation
initiated by political leaders themselves.
Therefore, we welcome the
Representatives' recognition that Catholics in public
life must act seriously and responsibly on many
important moral issues. Our faith has an integral unity
that calls Catholics to defend human life and
human dignity whenever they are threatened. A priority
for the poor, the protection of family life, the pursuit
of justice and the promotion of peace are fundamental
priorities of the Catholic moral tradition which cannot
be ignored or neglected. We encourage and will continue
to work with those in both parties who seek to act on
these essential principles in defense of the poor and
vulnerable.
At the same time, we also
need to reaffirm the Catholic Church's constant teaching
that abortion is a grave violation of the most
fundamental human right – the right to life that is
inherent in all human beings, and that grounds every
other right we possess. Pope John Paul II's apostolic
exhortation on the vocation and mission of the laity,
Christifideles Laici, which the Representatives'
statement cites, declares:
The inviolability of the
person which is a reflection of the absolute
inviolability of God fínds its primary and fundamental
expression in the inviolability of human life.
Above all, the common outcry, which is justly made on
behalf of human rights -- for example, the right to
health, to home, to work, to family, to culture -- is
false and illusory if the right to life, the most
basic and fundamental right and the condition for all
other personal rights, is not defended with maximum
determination…. The human being is entitled to such
rights, in every phase of development, from
conception until natural death; and in every
condition, whether healthy or sick, whole or
handicapped, rich or poor (# 38).
While it is always necessary
to work to reduce the number of abortions by providing
alternatives and help to vulnerable parents and
children, Catholic teaching calls all Catholics to work
actively to restrain, restrict and bring to an end the
destruction of unborn human life.
As the Church carries out
its central responsibility to teach clearly and help
form consciences, and as Catholic legislators seek to
act in accord with their own consciences, it is
essential to remember that conscience must be consistent
with fundamental moral principles. As members of the
Church, all Catholics are obliged to shape our
consciences in accord with the moral teaching of the
Church.
As bishops, we too are
bound by our own consciences to teach faithfully and to
recommit ourselves to continued reflection and
discussion on how Catholic faith and public service can
work together to promote human life and dignity and
advance the common good. Through dialogue, especially
the irreplaceable dialogue between Catholic political
leaders and their own bishops, we hope to promote a
better understanding of how the Church's teaching on
human life and dignity challenges us all.