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Four decades
after John Kennedy, too many American Catholics no longer connect
their political choices with their religious faith in any consistent
way. The "Catholic vote," as a meaningful bloc, probably doesn't
exist anymore. And a prolife Democrat like the late Governor Bob
Casey - who was Irish and Catholic, just like John Kennedy - finds
himself barred from speaking at his own party's convention in 1992,
and ignored by his party's leadership until his death.
That's the
legacy of accommodating our Catholic faith to politics, instead
of forming and informing our politics through our faith. Forty years
later -- despite the excitement and pride so many of us felt after
John Kennedy's election -- it's difficult, if not impossible, for
a person who is publicly loyal to the Catholic faith on "sanctity-of-life"
issues to hold any major national leadership position in John Kennedy's
own party.
My point is
not that one political party is "bad," and another is "good." From
a Catholic point of view, both major parties have strengths and
weaknesses. No, my point is that St. Paul's words, "Woe to me if
I do not preach the Gospel," apply to all of us, every single day,
in all our choices. St. Paul wasn't afraid of an angry God who would
punish him for not preaching Jesus Christ. That's not the kind of
"woe" he was worried about. Paul was afraid of losing the treasure
he had. Paul understood that if we don't act on our faith and
share it, we lose it. We have to give it to others to nourish it
in our own hearts. The joy of Jesus Christ is in living Him and
sharing Him.
That's why
the Christian faith is always personal but never private.
It always has social consequences - and that means cultural and
political consequences. Democracy thrives on those consequences.
God is good for democracy. Catholic faith creates and sustains good
citizenship. So whenever you hear that tired old argument that Catholics
shouldn't "impose their views" on society, it's time to hit the
bamboozle alarm -- because that argument is almost always advanced
by people who have every intention of imposing their own
views on society.
Of course,
that shouldn't surprise anyone. In a sense, all laws and all public
policies involve the "imposition" of one set of moral convictions
on the culture at large. The purpose of the democratic process is
to winnow out the good ideas from the bad ones; in other words,
to allow -- in fact, to encourage -- people of strong moral convictions
to disagree with one another vigorously . . . and to pursue their
convictions into law by every peaceful, ethical means at their disposal.
Therefore,
when Catholic candidates and officials use "pluralism" as an excuse
for their inaction on abortion, for example, they misread what real
pluralism is. In fact, that sort of Catholic self-censorship, especially
in public leaders but in individual voters as well, undermines real
democracy and very easily becomes a kind of opportunism or even
cowardice.
All of us who
are baptized are meant to be missionaries -- in ways appropriate
to our vocations, but with no exceptions. Vatican II reminded us
that the Church "is the universal sacrament of salvation;" that
we each share "the obligation of spreading the faith;" and that
"the whole Church is missionary and the work of evangelization [is]
the fundamental task of the people of God."
We either preach
Jesus Christ in our words and actions, or we lose Him. Throughout
the weeks ahead, all of us need to remember that we're living in
a Jubilee Year - a time to re-anchor our hearts in God and to renew
our vocation as apostles.
In Crossing
the Threshold of Hope, John Paul II reminds us that all
Christians are involved in "a struggle for the soul of the contemporary
world." In every compartment of our lives -- from our families,
to our jobs, and even to the solitude of the voting booth -- God
asks us to be His witnesses, His apostles. Let's remember that as
we consider our political choices.
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