The Archbishop and the Politicians

CRISIS Magazine - e-Letter

December 5, 2003

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Dear Friend,

I have a challenge for you -- see if you can tell me what all these
quotes have in common:

*  "I'm spiritual. I'm religious. I'm a strong Christian and I'm a
Catholic but I go to Presbyterian Church. Occasionally I go to the
Catholic church too. I take communion. I haven't transferred my
membership or anything. My wife and I consider ourselves -- she
considers herself a Catholic."  --Gen. Wesley Clark, in an interview
with Beliefnet 

*  "Under the Constitution, the public has a right to know that, in
the end, the votes I cast are driven by my own independent judgment
and conscience, not by a set of marching orders given by any church
hierarchy, prelate, or associated lobby group."  --U.S. Rep. David
Obey (D-Wis.)

*  "Certainly, the bishop has every right to express his own views
to an elected official. But to invoke the moral authority of the
church in a threatening way to a legislator seems to cross over a
line that has been very carefully drawn and is very well-respected in
this country."  --William Bablitch, former Wisconsin Supreme Court
justice

*  "I represent more than just Catholics. I've sworn to uphold the
Constitution. ...It's not for people to decide whether I'm a bad
Catholic because I'm going about my job in a consistent way; that's
for God to decide."  --Wisconsin State Rep. Pedro Colon
(D-Milwaukee)

*  "I'm concerned that the bishop would pressure legislators to vote
according to the dictates of the church instead of the wishes of
their constituents because that is not consistent with our Democratic
ideals. ...When I was elected, I swore an oath to uphold the
Constitution, and that means I have to represent all the people of
all faiths in my district."  -- Wisconsin State Sen. Julie Lassa
(D-Stevens Point)

Sadly, but not surprisingly, these are all quotes from current
legislators and leading politicians demonstrating their idea of what
it means to be a faithful Catholic in the political arena. For them,
it's easy -- you really don't have to do much of anything.

Gen. Clark, still hot in pursuit of the Democratic nomination for
President, finally clarifies his real religious convictions --
namely, he doesn't seem to have any. I said in an e-letter about two
months ago that his campaign told us he was a Catholic who later
converted to the Presbyterian faith. At least that would have been
respectable -- if you have theological differences with a particular
religion, it only makes sense to belong to the one you truly believe
to be right.

Unfortunately, Clark doesn't see anything wrong with calling himself
one thing and doing another. And that goes for the others listed, as
well. None of them realize what should be perfectly obvious: There's
a world of difference between calling yourself a Catholic and
actually living that faith in your public life.

Take the other politicians on the list. These comments were all in
response to a letter sent to three Wisconsin State politicians from
their then-bishop, Raymond L. Burke of La Crosse. Burke pointed out
to these individuals that their political actions were directly in
conflict with the faith they professed -- a troubling disconnect that
could be dangerous for their spiritual well-being.

"As a faithful member of the Catholic Church, you have an obligation
to fulfill the duties of your office with regard not only to the laws
of the state, but also with regard to the moral law," Burke wrote. In
a later interview, he explained that if these politicians persisted
in their anti-Catholic legislation, "I would simply have to ask them
not to present themselves to receive the sacraments because they
would not be Catholics in good standing."

Here I have to take my hat off to Bishop Burke -- or I should say,
Archbishop Burke. He was recently appointed to the archdiocese of St.
Louis, something which I'm sure is great news for Catholics there.
Burke is joining the ranks of other brave bishops, like Bishop
Weigand in California and Bishop Carlson in South Dakota, who aren't
afraid to stand up for the faith and confront the politicians in
their dioceses about their anti-life lawmaking.

Bishop Burke sent private letters to these politicians, urging them
to reconsider their positions, and included a copy of "Living the
Gospel of Life," inviting them to read it and schedule an appointment
with him to discuss it. It wasn't a grab for attention or a political
move on Burke's part -- he was simply doing his pastoral duty by
looking out for the spiritual well-being of his flock.

And those are the "marching orders" the lawmakers are bristling at.
Their responses to the bishop's letter sound like those of every
other dissenting Catholic politician that has gone before them. Yet
they're completely missing the point.

For one, appeals to the Constitution and "separation of church and
state" are ridiculous. These politicians have it exactly backwards --
they believe the first amendment means that religion can have no role
in public life, when any high-school civics student could tell you it
means that government can have no role in restricting religious
practice.

Of course, here's where the politicians cry, but what about our
non-Catholic constituents? Surely we can't impose "Catholic morality"
on them. Again, this is missing the point -- right-to-life issues
aren't strictly Catholic. They are held by Protestants, Jews,
Muslims, atheists... people of all religious backgrounds. That's
because this isn't an issue of religion but of human dignity and can
be embraced by anyone, regardless of their beliefs.

Bishop Burke isn't demanding that the seven Sacraments be legally
recognized; he's asking that lawmakers not act contrary to their
Faith. There's a world of difference between the two.

Look, the bottom line is this. If you can't win an election by being
faithful to the beliefs you profess by calling yourself Catholic, you
can't simply abandon those beliefs to win. And if you do, you
certainly can't blame your constituents for your actions. If you're
willing to sacrifice your beliefs to be elected, then it's pointless
to pretend you value those beliefs at all. Your priorities lie
elsewhere.

My apologies if I ended the week on a down note, but I thought that
needed to be said. The positive side is that one of our shepherds is
standing up against these people. Our sincerest congratulations go to
soon-to-be Archbishop Burke for his fine example of spiritual
leadership.

I hope you have a restful weekend,

Deal

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