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Catholic bishops silent on issues affecting poor

 

When it comes to certain political issues, there’s no group more vocal today than the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. They are quick to speak out. And they make sure you know where they stand.

No doubt about it. On abortion, Catholic bishops are against it. On homosexuality, Catholic bishops are against it. On same-sex marriage, Catholic bishops are against it. On contraception, Catholic bishops are against it. And they actively lobby Congress to pass laws supporting their position. Recently, the Conference of Bishops even identified their top priority for 2012 as persuading Congress to overturn President Obama’s mandatory coverage of birth control in all health plans. Two years ago, they opposed passage of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.

Now, we all understand. These political positions reflect the teachings of the official Roman Catholic Church. In many ways, U.S. bishops are only doing what the Vatican demands. But still, as a Catholic, what I want to know is: Why are the bishops so quick and eager to speak out about issues involving sex — yet remain totally silent on so many other established teachings of the Church?

The Catholic Church, for example, officially opposes the death penalty as cruel and unusual punishment. But when is the last time you heard the bishops decry application of the death penalty? According to the Death Penalty Information Center, as of October 2011 there were 3,199 persons on death row in the United States. Shouldn’t that also be one of the bishops’ top priorities? Yet, to my knowledge, the bishops have never denied communion to any politician who voted in support of the death penalty, though they did deny the sacraments to Geraldine Ferraro, John Kerry, Joe Biden, and other pro-choice Catholics.

Same with the war in Iraq. Pope John Paul II was outspoken in his opposition to the Gulf War in 1991 and the war in Iraq in 2003. “War is never just another means that one can choose to employ for settling differences between nations,” declared the pope in January 2003, two months before the invasion of Iraq. But, again: American bishops never pressured Congress to vote against the war and never criticized Catholic members of Congress who eagerly voted for it. [More]

SOURCE

Bill Press/Chicago Tribune

 
 
 
 

3 Comments

  1. Robert H Boyer says:

    I am grateful to Mr. Press for sharing both the quotations from Church teachings and also his own opinion. I recommend a similar approach by David Carroll Cochran, a professor at Loras College in Dubuque, Iowa, and author of “The Catholic Vote: A Guide for the Perplexed.” His article, “Plutocracy or Democracy? How Bad Politics Brought Us a New Gilded Age,” appeared in “Commonweal” magazine, Feb. 10, 2012. More about the Church’s teachings on economic justice, and where the Catholic bishops of the U.S. stand, or don’t stand.

  2. Marilyn Bell says:

    All these positons do reflect the teachings of the Catholic Church, However there is much more.. Our Lord taught to love others, to feed and clothe the poor, visit the sick or those in prison, share the gospel and not to judge others.(ie the autor is just a hack) May God forgive us for the things we who call ourselves “Catholic” have failed in.

  3. John says:

    As soon as I read the words “U.S. bishops are only doing what the Vatican demands” shows me the author is just a hack, posing questions only to diminish the churches teachings. The bishops only need to act when there is a failure by the laity. Not the other way around.

 
 

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