Many bishops have written their flocks about the 
coming election. Here is Bishop Tobin's article. 
Please read, pray about its message, and pass it 
on to others who will benefit from it. And may 
God guide you in your voting. As one commentator 
wrote, "We are going to have to justify all our 
actions, including our votes, on Judgment Day."
Mercedes
<*}}}><

WITHOUT A DOUBT



<http://thericatholic.com/stories/1612.html>Okay, Here's How You Should Vote

Posted Oct 29, 2008

BY BISHOP THOMAS J. TOBIN

"Those who believe that religion and politics 
aren't connected don't understand either." Those 
words of Mahatma Gandhi, several decades old, 
certainly apply to the situation we find 
ourselves in today as we prepare for our national elections.

As true as Gandhi's words are, though, they don't 
provide much direction for Catholics who want to 
be faithful citizens of both the Kingdom of God and our nation.

Recently I received a letter from a concerned 
couple that said in part: "Dear Bishop Tobin . . 
. We are writing respectfully to ask you to take 
a more active role in communicating to us our 
responsibilities and directing our consciences in 
the upcoming presidential election . . . Unless 
our leadership leads, how are Catholics supposed 
to vote as Catholics? We cannot afford an 'imprudent silence.'"

If you follow my ministry here in Rhode Island at 
all, you know that I haven't been shy about 
speaking out on public affairs, especially when 
they have moral relevance. In reference to 
abortion, the specific concern of my letter 
writers, I've written and spoken repeatedly and 
clearly. Addressing the presidential campaign 
from a Catholic perspective, however, is a 
delicate affair, one that's challenged episcopal 
brains a lot sharper than mine!

Nonetheless, a little context might help Catholic 
voters approach the election faithfully and intelligently.

The Bishops of the United States have explained 
the obligation Catholics have to participate in 
the political process. In the document Faithful 
Citizenship, the Bishops have written: "The 
Church's obligation to participate in shaping the 
moral character of society is a requirement of 
our faith. It is a basic part of the mission we 
have received from Jesus Christ . . . The 
Catholic community brings moral assets to the 
political dialogue about our nation's future."

The Bishops go on to list "seven key themes" that 
serve as the framework of our political 
participation: The Right to Life; Family and 
Community; Rights and Responsibilities; Option 
for the Poor; the Dignity of Work and Workers; 
Solidarity with our Neighbors; and Caring for God's Creation.

In their document the Bishops reject two very 
common approaches to the question of voting in 
good faith: moral equivalency (the belief that 
all moral issues carry the same weight) and 
single issue voting (the tendency to focus only 
on abortion). In other words, while there are 
many questions we should evaluate in deciding how 
to vote, the primary moral issue we face today is 
the right to life and particularly the need to 
fight against the terrible sin of abortion.

To underline their particular concern about 
abortion, the Bishops have forcefully stated 
that, "abortion, the deliberate killing of a 
human being before birth, is never morally 
acceptable and must always be opposed." And as 
I've written previously in this space, while 
there are many issues the Catholic must consider 
in forming moral judgments, "Abortion is 
different. It is always intrinsically evil. There 
are no circumstances that justify abortion. Its 
victims are innocent and defenseless, and number 
in the millions. Abortion is the fallacious 
foundation upon which the culture of death builds 
its ugly edifice." (October 27, 2005)

Cardinal Francis George of Chicago summarized the 
sad state of affairs this way: "Too many 
Americans have no recognition of the fact that 
children continue to be killed by abortion and we 
live, therefore, in a country drenched by blood. 
This can't be something you start playing off 
pragmatically against other issues."

Now, that leads us to the question of specific 
candidates. As has been pointed out many times, 
there are no perfect "Catholic candidates," no 
candidates whose positions exactly reflect all 
the moral teachings of the Catholic Church. So, 
we have to consider all the options and make the best choice we can.

Is it possible for a faithful Catholic to vote 
for a pro-abortion candidate? (And by the way, 
don't be misled by the nuanced language you often 
hear. Candidates who say they aren't 
"pro-abortion" but rather "pro-choice" are in 
fact promoting abortion!) But to answer the 
question: In theory, yes! Faithful Catholics may 
in good conscience vote for a pro-abortion 
candidate if: they're voting for the candidate 
for serious moral reasons other than their 
pro-abortion stance; and if, there are no other viable options.

It's not my role or that of Church leadership to 
tell you for whom you must vote. In fact, the 
attempt to do so is sometimes counter-productive. 
There have been clear examples across the United 
States of certain candidates being elected 
precisely because Church leaders endorsed their 
opponents. That scenario is especially possible 
in a place like Rhode Island where party 
affiliation often trumps allegiance to faith.

Having said that, it is appropriate to remind you 
of how you must vote. You can never separate your 
faith from life (including political life) and so 
it follows closely that you much vote as a person 
of faith, taking your faith and your conscience 
with you into the voting booth. You need to 
support candidates who will promote the common 
good and uphold basic moral values – beginning 
with the right to life, especially for unborn 
children. In that way you can be a "faithful 
citizen" – of our great nation and of the Kingdom of God.

I don't know about you, dear reader, but I could 
never vote for a candidate – of any party for any 
office – who supports laws that promote or allow 
the death of thousands of children in the hideous 
crime of abortion. I just don't want that on my conscience.

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<*}}}>< 
<http://www.fathercorapi.com/election.aspx>An 
Important Message from Fr. Corapi <*}}}><
<*}}}><<http://www.halfthekingdom.org/>Half the Kingdom!<*}}}><

Prayer for Unborn Life:
O GOD OF LIFE AND LOVE, You have given us the 
gift to participate with You to bring new life 
into the world.  But, all too often, the mother's 
womb, which should be a nursery of life, becomes 
instead a place of it's destruction.

Help us to remove this evil and ensure respect 
for all life made in Your image and likeness, 
called to fulfill its promise on this earth,
and destined to find a home with you for all eternity.

We ask this through Jesus Christ, Our Lord, Our God, Our Savior, and Our ALL.
Amen.

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