ZE08111011 - 2008-11-10
Permalink: http://www.zenit.org/article-24218?l=english


Cardinal George Points to a Different Hope


Opens Bishops' Meeting With Plea to Promote Common Good

BALTIMORE, Maryland, NOV. 10, 2008 
(<http://www.zenit.org>Zenit.org).- Meeting amidst "enormous 
challenges" in the Church and the nation, the president of the U.S. 
episcopal conference is encouraging the faithful to place their hope 
in "what lasts forever."

Cardinal Francis George, the archbishop of Chicago, said today upon 
delivering the opening address of the bishops' fall general assembly, 
being held in Baltimore through Thursday.

The meeting takes place one week after Barack Obama won his bid for 
the U.S. presidency, which the cardinal said ended an election cycle 
in which "both candidates invited us to hope in change."

The cardinal contrasted this message with that of Benedict XVI, who 
"invites us to place our hope in what lasts forever."

"Perhaps that is the difference between a vision that looks at what 
is ultimate and one that, by the very nature of things, is most 
concerned with what is less than ultimate," he said. "No political 
order conforms fully to the Kingdom of God.

"Separation is built into our faith itself, yet we can hope and work 
and pray that things political and economic not impede or contest the 
things that are of God."

Reason to rejoice

Commenting on the historic win of President-elect Barack Obama, the 
first African-American to be elected president in the country, 
Cardinal George said "we can rejoice today with those who, following 
heroic figures like the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., were part 
of a movement to bring our country's civil rights, our legal order, 
into better accord with universal human rights, God's order."

"We are, perhaps, at a moment when, with the grace of God, all races 
are safely within the American consensus," the cardinal continued. 
"We are not at the point, however, when Catholics, especially in 
public life, can be considered full partners in the American 
experience unless they are willing to put aside some fundamental 
Catholic teachings on a just moral and political order."

Cardinal George remarked that this "makes America herself far less 
than she claims to be in this world."

He added: "What is of major importance to us, as bishops of the 
Church, is that the Church remain true to herself and her Lord in the 
years to come, for only in being authentically herself will the 
Church serve society and its members, in time and in eternity.

"In working for the common good of our society, racial justice is one 
pillar of our social doctrine. Economic justice, especially for the 
poor both here and abroad, is another.

"But the Church comes also and always and everywhere with the memory, 
the conviction, that the Eternal Word of God became man, took flesh 
in the womb of the Virgin Mary, nine months before Jesus was born in 
Bethlehem. This truth is celebrated in our liturgy because it is 
branded into our spirit.

"The common good can never be adequately incarnated in any society 
when those waiting to be born can be legally killed at choice."

"If the Supreme Court's Dred Scott decision that African Americans 
were other people's property and somehow less than persons were still 
settled constitutional law," continued Cardinal George, "Mr. Obama 
would not be president of the United States. Today, as was the case a 
hundred and fifty years ago, common ground cannot be found by 
destroying the common good."

Divided world

The cardinal recalled that 50 years ago Pope John XXIII initiated the 
Second Vatican Council: "The Pope looked at a divided world and hoped 
that the Church could act as 'Lumen Gentium' calls us, as the 
'sacrament of the unity of the human race.'"

"Those who would weaken our internal unity render the Church's 
external mission to the world more difficult if not impossible," he 
noted. "Jesus promised that the world would believe in him if we are 
one: one in faith and doctrine, one in prayer and sacrament, one in 
governance and shepherding.

"The Church and her life and teaching do not fit easily into the 
prior narratives that shape our public discussions. As bishops, we 
can only insist that those who would impose their own agenda on the 
Church, those who believe and act self-righteously, answerable only 
to themselves, whether ideologically on the left or the right, betray 
the Lord Jesus Christ."

The episcopal conference, the president reminded the bishops present, 
is an "instrument for shaping spiritual unity, for creating the bonds 
of affection that help us to govern in communion with each other, 
especially in a divided world and in a Church that knows dissent from 
some of her teachings and dissatisfaction with aspects of her governance."

He continued: "As we all know, the Church was born without episcopal 
conferences, as she was born without parishes and without dioceses, 
although all these structures have been helpful pastorally throughout 
the centuries.

"The Church was born only with shepherds, with apostolic pastors, 
whose relationship to their people keeps them one with Christ, from 
whom comes authority to govern the Church.

"Strengthening people's relationship with Christ remains our primary 
concern and duty as bishops."

We extend that pastoral concern, especially at the beginning of a new 
administration and a new Congress, to Catholics of either major party 
who serve others in government," said Cardinal George. "We respect 
you and we love you, and we pray that the Catholic faith will shape 
your decisions so that our communion may be full."


<*}}}>< <http://www.holypostage.com/>Holy Postage <*}}}><
<*}}}><<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.


<*}}}>< <http://www.holypostage.com/>Holy Postage <*}}}><
<*}}}><<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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