NPR on the U.S. bishops, including interviews with Rep. Bart Stupak, Archbishop John Myers, George Weigel and yours truly. It is, to my mind, a fair overview of the bishops' new activism.
NPR: Bishops Flex Their "Political Muscle"
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I use a motorized wheelchair and communication device because of my disability, cerebral palsy. Parishes were not prepared to accommodate my needs nor were they always willing to recognize my abilities.
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The bishops do not "oppose the president because he is a democrat", as you tell the NRP interviewer, but the oppose the president because he is the most powerful promoter of abortion on demand (that is, the slaughter of innocent human life) in the world today.
The Catholic Church has not changed in its position; it is the radical liberal expansion on goverment power and their promotion of immoral policies (such as expansion of the funding of abortion both nationally and internationally) that has cause the bishops rightly to speak out.
How ironic that certain liberal catholics do not call evil (such as the expansion of WAR and ABORTION) by its name because of their policial ideology and desire to welcomed in the liberal press.
Where is the post calling the nobel-peace-prize winning president's escalation of the war on evil? Where is the post calling the killing of innocent life in the womb evil?
Blindness...
And thank goodness the reporter did a good job of indicating who and what were "conservative Catholics." Sheesh.
Do you really think of JPII as a clerical "republican," more or less?
This is essentially the message you projected on NPR and one that the Democrats repeat when they speak of Church "intereference" in policy (and possible IRS review for this offense).
I guess we can all forget about the sacred and, instead, focus on and relate all matters via the profane (esp. through politics of extreme liberation and equality).
Thank God there are many among the laity who resist being controlled by the clerics.
Look at Beth Cioffoletti's post as well, it seems pretty clear to people both rushing to defend the Bishops and those rushing to castigate them that you tossed a few miters under the bus. It's just a matter of whether they think the miters ought to be there or not.
This bishops are acting on longstanding, fundamental Catholic values (respect for life, being first and foremost) and are acting on principle, not politics. The Catholic Church stands with neither party - just look at opposition to the war or pro immigrant policies if you need proof that they are not "right-wingers."
Those who accuse the bishops of "interfering with politics" in a partisian (rather than principled nature) are attempting to remove any reference to moral principle out of the debate and to neturalize or discredit opposition to federal power and the new federal "morality" (abortion on demand, expanded war, centralized bureaucracy etc.).
This essentially is an attempt to neutralize the any organized, independent moral voice out side of the national government - and the Catholic Church is one of the last of these standing in our modern era.
Jim Martin, as a member of the Church, is essential helping those who want to silence moral dissent; he is lending his stature as a clergymen to claim that the opposition to immoral policies is political posturing rather than what it is - true opposition based on Christian principle. This the same principle that Dr. King used in the civil rights movement to defeat immoral government policies of his time.
This is a serious topic and derserves a response - do you speak truth to power? Or do you distort the truth in the service of power?
It seems to be the latter, but I would be happy to be corrected.
In spite of many pro- life documents written by the Bishops Conference, collectively, their focus remains primarily a single issue, anti- abortion. I can only imagine the results if such efforts were dedicated toward all the other pro-life issues.
fr. rich broderick
cambridge, ny
As a priest you should know that the child in the womb is the most vulnerable of all humans considering their innocence and helplessness. And the sheer numbers - the millions of lives lost since Roe v Wade (no war in this time period has come close) - should help you understand the imperitive.
Also, the pope did vocally oppose the war in Iraq - more than can be said for the liberal NYTs or the liberal American magazine regarding the recent escalation in Afganastan by our noble peace prize laureate...
Somethings are more important than others and, as any person knows, priorities are set. So we oppose abortion...but we also provide disaster relief, homeless shelters, soup kitchens, hospitals and universities etc.
Do you still think your Church does'nt care for the living? Or is that just somthing liberal love to say to discredit religious and you have picked it up?
Are we a pro-life people, or are we not?