Spirit & LifeĀ®
"The words I spoke to you are spirit and life." (Jn 6:63)
Human Life International e-Newsletter
Volume 03, Number 39 | Friday, October 24, 2008
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<http://www.hli.org/>www.hli.org

The Catholic Vote

I have been asked by many people to help clarify 
Catholic teaching on exercising one's voting 
rights, especially with respect to the abortion 
issue. There are many candidates across the 
nation running on many issues, and Catholics are 
trying to sort through them all, so I will state 
the Church's position as unequivocally as 
possible for the education of the faithful and 
not as an endorsement of any particular candidate 
or candidates: true Catholics are not 
"single-issue" voters - we are principled voters. 
That determines which candidates we give our vote 
to and it determines the state of our souls after we vote.

With respect to the abortion issue, the principle 
in question is the moral impossibility for a 
Catholic to cooperate in an act or an institution 
that is "intrinsically evil." Now, something that 
is "intrinsically evil" is not just a bad thing - 
it is a heinous thing, trumping all other moral 
considerations, and we can never legitimately 
commit the act ourselves or approve of it in 
anyone else. Casting a vote for a candidate who 
forcefully advocates the killing of innocent 
unborn babies shows approval or unacceptable 
toleration of that heinous crime against 
humanity, and Catholics can never do it in good 
conscience. The Catechism of the Catholic Church 
calls such an attitude and action "formal 
cooperation" in evil (#2272). This does not mean 
that I commit the evil myself. It means that I 
agree with it and have made it possible for a 
person in public office to continue and/or advance that evil in my society.

Formal cooperation in the evil act of another is 
a sin, and depending on the gravity of the 
person's evil act, formal cooperation in it can 
be a mortal sin. Since procured abortion is an 
intrinsically evil act, and all promotion of it 
fits into the same moral category, voting for a 
person who forcefully advocates it must be a 
mortal sin. Add to the sin of formal cooperation 
in evil the sin of disobedience to legitimate 
Church authority. To date the USCCB and more than 
a dozen US bishops and state bishops' conferences 
have clarified these principles for Catholics, 
and their teachings couldn't be clearer.

Further, add the sin of scandal that a 
regrettable number of priests and religious are 
giving by their appalling disingenuousness about 
Church teachings both in and out of the pulpit. 
Catholic parents and teachers equally give 
scandal when they do not teach their children the 
principles that undergird moral behavior or 
properly form their consciences according to the Truth that is in Christ.

Some ask if a Catholic may vote for someone whose 
policies would advance an agenda that is mostly 
in line with the Catholic Church's teaching? 
Also, what if the Catholic disagrees with the 
candidate's position on abortion but still wants 
to vote for this candidate for other reasons 
consistent with our values? Here the Church uses 
the term "proportionate reason" to indicate that 
there must be some kind of balance in the 
candidate's position that indicates it is likely 
that a greater good would be accomplished for 
society despite the evil he or she advocates. 
Proportionate reasoning usually has to do with 
positions that are not intrinsically evil in 
themselves or that, if they are, would constitute 
such a minimal part of the platform that they 
would be "outweighed" somehow in the grand scheme 
of the candidate's public service. According to 
the above principle, however, the degree to which 
the candidate would promote something as heinous 
as abortion can literally nullify all the other 
"good" that he or she would do for humanity! When 
the fundamental right to life is denied in 
society, all other rights and goods are therefore 
threatened. The very moral foundation of a people 
is eroded. So the answer has to be no, it is not 
legitimate to disagree on abortion and still vote 
for a radical abortion candidate.

May a Catholic vote for an "imperfect" candidate 
if the radical abortion candidate is worse? The 
Church says yes, but only if the vote is not 
expressed as an agreement with the "imperfect" 
elements of the candidate's policies and only if 
the vote is intended to limit the evil that other 
candidate would inevitably do.

It is truly regretful that we have gotten to the 
point where we might have to surrender some of 
our basic values in the voting booth because we 
have not successfully insisted on the very best 
candidates for public office to serve the common 
good. That is a discussion for another day, but I 
anticipate that if Catholics do not assert 
Catholic values forcefully in elections and 
public policy from here on out, we may be faced 
in future elections with no choice whatsoever 
that can morally satisfy the Catholic conscience. 
Heaven help and guide us all on November 4th.


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SL Action Items

    * 
<http://www.catholic.org/politics/story.php?id=29839>Bishop 
Robert W. Finn: Freedom of Choice Act Would 
Remove All Limitations on Abortions
    * 
<http://www.lifesitenews.com/ldn/2008/sep/08091203.html>Bishop 
Vasa: Pro-Abortion Candidates are "Disqualified" 
- Clarifies "Faithful Citizenship"
    * 
<http://www.usccb.org/faithfulcitizenship/FCStatement.pdf>Bishops' 
Statement: Forming Conscience for Faithful Citizenship

Sincerely Yours in Christ,

[]

Rev. Thomas J. Euteneuer,
President, Human Life International

<http://www.hli.org/>
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Lord, may everything we do begin with Your 
inspiration and continue with Your help,
so that all our prayers and works may begin in You and by You be happily ended.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.
Amen.

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