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June 22, 2007

Just about had it

An AP article on Catholic pols and Communion, featuring Archbishop Chaput:

As most of the nation's 268 active Catholic bishops met for a private retreat this week in New Mexico, questions were building about how prominent their voices will be in the 2008 race.

Will some follow the example of Bishop Thomas Tobin of Providence, R.I., who last month called the pro-abortion rights position of Catholic GOP candidate Rudy Giuliani, "pathetic and confusing?" Will abortion dominate the bishops' statements on the election, or will immigration and poverty?

Denver Archbishop Charles Chaput said in an interview with The Associated Press that official Catholic involvement depends on which candidates and issues emerge from primary season. A vocal proponent of calling on Catholic politicians and voters to follow church teachings, Chaput also made it clear he thinks the time for behind-the-scenes diplomacy with politicians is over.

"I personally think that anybody that is pro-choice as a Catholic is not being faithful to his Catholic identity, and I think that people who are Catholics, when they look at those issues, should take that into consideration when they vote," Chaput said before leaving for the retreat. "I didn't name names last time, and I'm not going to name names this time. But I think if you study people's history and their records, you know the people."

In 2004, scrutiny fell on Democrat John Kerry, a Catholic who supports abortion rights. Archbishop Raymond Burke of St. Louis did name names, saying he would deny Communion to Kerry. Several other bishops, Chaput included, stressed that politicians should refrain from the sacrament if they support abortion rights, which they consider a "foundational" issue.

Chaput helped craft a statement in summer 2004 that left the question of whether to deny Communion to an individual up to each bishop. Some bishops, Chaput said, felt pressured to take a stand after Burke's comments and proposed that no one speak out on important issues without consulting the bishops as a group.

"I think a lot of folks just don't want the pressure to explain themselves," Chaput said.

Chaput said his more aggressive posture grew partly out of frustration from his personal meetings with politicians, who often would just "look at you vacantly."

"I think being more aggressive, more assertive doesn't in any way violate the principles we have to follow" under laws governing nonprofit involvement in politics, he said.

The most effective approach, Chaput argues, is educating Catholic voters, which in turn could influence politicians. However, if bishops conclude the major-party nominees in 2008 are "indifferent to the important issues ... if everybody is taking the same negative position, perhaps there will be no motivation to talk about it at all," he said.

Given that scenario, Archbishop John Myers of Newark, N.J., said in an interview, "the principal involved is to try to figure out which of the candidates comes closest to the full gamut of Catholic teaching, in particular when you talk about the life issues _ which candidate is closer, if one is."

John Allen Jr., a senior correspondent for the independent National Catholic Reporter, said U.S. bishops who want to withhold Communion from Catholic politicians can find support in Pope Benedict XVI's comments _ made to reporters en route to Brazil this year _ that essentially endorsed the idea that Mexican legislators who voted to legalize abortion have separated themselves from the church.

"If you are an American bishop who is inclined to move in that direction, you're going to feel like the pope has got your back," Allen said.

The issues are varied and the distinctions somewhat fine. Bishops, it seems to me, must be wary of how they approach things. What is this about?

1) Is it about individuals and the Sacrament of Eucharist? In that case, the effort needs to be on clarifying what Catholic teaching and tradition is on that score for all of us. Which was the purpose of the document approved last fall Happy Are Those Called to His Supper (pdf).

Along this score, there needs to be clarity and honesty and historical integrity. The relatively small proportion of Catholics receiving Communion was a broad concern in the 20th century Church, and many efforts were made to remedy the situation - but the remedies were not pulling down the walls - the basic remedy you see as you read through accounts of the period - was encouraging frequent Confession and (beginning in the 1940's)  easing the requirements of the pre-Communion fast.

The general point is that Catholicism and Orthodoxy have never been "open Communion" traditions - even interiorly. In the Early Church, the non-initiated were not even allowed to witness the Mysteries, and penance for serious, public sin always involved "ex-communication" in that sense - one was barred from receiving Eucharist for a period of months or even years.

The way this played out through the middle ages into the 20th century certainly had its problematic elements - on the way from the early Church to the modern period, something flipped. We went from having everyone at a Eucharist receiving Communion to hardly anyone receiving Communion to everyone receiving Communion again, but the circumstances and participants are radically different - which tells us that there trying to simply tranfer one practice from one era to the next just doesn't work.

Which is what I mean by honesty and clarity and attention to history. A forthright discussion of this would be welcome - a discussion in which the politician issue would finally make sense.

2) Or is it about how politicians vote? Is the bishops' purpose to stop Catholic politicians from voting for policies that contradict Church teaching? However those might be construed. Even though this seems simple at first, is it actually a real landmine,especially as bishops as individuals, as state conferences and as a national body get involved in political issues. State Catholic conferences regularly issue long laundry-lists of their evaluations of actions forthcoming in legislative sessions, never stating explicitly that anything is the church's position or that Catholics are obliged to vote a certain way. Still, the proliferation of these kinds of statements does blur a line, and very easily lends itself to exploitation by parties on all sides. Further, you can't say, "Church stay out of politics, then," because, you know, for most of its history, the Church has been involved in matters of society and state, in one way or another.

The other side, of course, is that faith is about life - not separate from it. What we do in whatever role we play in society is supposed to reflect our values as disciples of Jesus.

So..can there actually be a separation of Church and state for Catholic politicians? This is the other fundamental issue that is coming more and more into focus after decades of easy platitudes.

Not into clear focus, mind you.

I have always felt that the key thing bishops and other responsible Church parties (aka pastors) should be doing with these politicians is exactly what Bishop Tobin did. Just laying it all out, in plain and simple language and calling these folks on their illogic, sloppy thinking, and crass political motivations. Laying it out in public, laying it out in private. Understanding that these folks are first of all, politicians, and not buying into the tortured Catholic soul routine. Yeah, some in either party are tortured souls, but most live their political lives in the midst of a simple calculus, "If I endorse X, Group Y won't give me money, I will be presented by the media as Z, and my chances of support from the national party for my future political life will be less than zero."

And as for the sacramental life? Again, that is up to individual pastors and bishops. But at the very least, refuse to be used for photo-ops, refuse to bestow honors or give platforms. Start there, preach and teach what the Eucharist is clearly, and see what happens. For all of us.

Posted by Amy Welborn | Permalink

Comments

Great post!

I think Archbishop Chaput will come to the forefront in this area, as he learns to deal with a new Catholic governor who is in bed politically with the pro-abortion forces.

Posted by: RoadRunner at Jun 22, 2007 2:40:06 PM

Perhaps I am being too simplistic, but this discussion seems to have its finger on the pulse of a wide-reaching issue in the Church today: that is, that there is some sort of dichotomy between pastoral charity and the teachings (or norms) of the Church. Whether it be liturgy or social teaching, too many of the faithful are driving a wedge between pastoral charity and Church teaching by assuming that Church teaching isn't already pastorally charitable. The fact is, the teachings and norms of the Church ARE pastorally charitable and "laying it all out there" is one of the most loving things that we can do for the world. And, if you think this is not an exercise of charity, well... at least there would be clarity.

Posted by: Anthony at Jun 22, 2007 3:15:16 PM

No one in the media seemed to complain about separation of Church and State when the archbishop of New Orleans excommunicated 3 prominent politicians for opposing desegregation. I don't see this as any different. Individual bishops would do well here to declare publically the excommunication of pro-choice Catholic politicians. The Church will not fall apart. Such an act would serve as a dynamic teaching moment for all US Catholics.

Posted by: Thornton at Jun 22, 2007 3:16:42 PM

Amy, you wrote: "So..can there actually be a separation of Church and state for Catholic politicians? This is the other fundamental issue that is coming more and more into focus after decades of easy platitudes."

You're mixing up two separate issues. The Establishment Clause prohibits the establishment of a state religion or a state church.

However, politicians are not establishing a state religion if they vote according to the tenets of their faiths. And the Catholic conscience is supposed to be informed by Catholic principles. So a truly Catholic politician would vote in a certain way, informed by his or her Catholic beliefs. But that in no way means that a state church is being established.

Posted by: Cindy at Jun 22, 2007 3:23:30 PM

Reciprocity has become a major theme in Catholic-Islamic relations, and one sees parallels here. The Democratic party expects to be able de facto to exclude pro-life Catholics from national office or party leadership, while at the same time desiring complete silence from the bishops. That kind of unilateral surrender isn't good for Catholics, Democrats, or the country.

Posted by: Kevin Jones at Jun 22, 2007 4:01:53 PM

I think what Amy is getting at in Church/State is that were a politician elected, they would be a legitimate authority. In instances where whoever is going to be elected is a foregone conclusion, one can legitimately wonder whether a bishop would be acting prudently by directly disputing the politician. Pro-abortion politicians aren't elected in a vacuum after all. In regards to the LA excommunications, I would be astounded if there wasn't wide opposition in Lousiana. Citing a NY Times editorial is a cop out. Of course those who support a bishop's proposition will support that bishop's actions, and those who oppose a bishop's action will dispute his authority or his prudence in doing so.

My opinion is that bishop's should pick their battles and discipline the most notorious. Catholics For Choice and Planned Parenthood are a target rich environment. Those who are malformed but still supportive of the Church - as in those who support some right to abortion, but find those who directly attack the Church repulsive - are likely to be receptive to such teaching. I believe that bishops should still teach that abortion evil, even in the election season.

Posted by: M.Z. Forrest at Jun 22, 2007 4:14:32 PM

Another distinction that is relevant is that abortion unlike a host of moral teachings of the Church like the current one on the death penalty is not only a "teaching" but came into infallibility status at this moment in Evangelium Vitae section 62:

" Given such unanimity in the doctrinal and disciplinary tradition of the Church, Paul VI was able to declare that this tradition is unchanged and unchangeable. Therefore, by the authority which Christ conferred upon Peter and his Successors, in communion with the Bishops-who on various occasions have condemned abortion and who in the aforementioned consultation, albeit dispersed throughout the world, have shown unanimous agreement concerning this doctrine-I declare that direct abortion, that is, abortion willed as an end or as a means, always constitutes a grave moral disorder, since it is the deliberate killing of an innocent human being. This doctrine is based upon the natural law and upon the written Word of God, is transmitted by the Church's Tradition and taught by the ordinary and universal Magisterium."

Euthanasia and killing the innocent also came into the same status with almost the identical wording in that same encyclical. The Pope notes that he has polled the world's bishops ("consultation") because within the charism of infallibility, this is how he was able to avoid the sole authorship route of the ex cathedra process though that process refers in the two extant cases also to speaking as the successor to Peter but also refers to the general consensus of the faithful which it does not need but seems to prefer having so far, and in this day and age, such was not a given one could depend on in respect to the laity in light of some bizarre poll results of recent date.
This is different even than some of the issues that John Paul stated were intrinsically wrong in Splendor Veritatis when referring to a list of actions that was in Gaudium et Spes. Fr. Brian Harrison has shown minutely how even there a loophole was left in the area of torture (see his essay on same at Dave Armstrong's site) though the Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church written under the direction of Cardinal Martino does not have a loophole for torture but is of lesser weight than Splendor Veritatis. I note this because there has been a case in recent memory of a child rapist who told police brazenly that his child victim was dying in an abandoned house but he would not give the address (one can in my opinion give pain via needles to the fingertips and do no lasting critical damage to such a person when a child's life is ebbing away...and Islamic terrorists are not interested in our example either way since the hadiths implicitly praise it in some examples).
In any event the prohibition against abortion is not the same status as a host of "teachings" and is final. Bishops then should not fear that being strict on this issue would force them to be similarly strict on issues where infallibility has not taken place. Torture for example was condemned in 866 AD by Pope St. Nicholas I
but was reintroduced in 1252 by Pope Innocent IV and Pope Pius VII forbade it again in 1816. Abortion cannot follow that route due to section 62 of Evangelium Vitae and its wording.

Posted by: bill bannon at Jun 22, 2007 4:29:20 PM

Cathy has it exactly right; and Amy's question is one all Catholics should ask themselves. Can you separate your Catholic beliefs from your daily American behavior? Or put another way; are you Catholic first and American second?

There is a separation of church and state in America, it will not be any different in our lifetimes. But as Catholics, we're required to be Catholic Americans, which means a voting record that aligns with our True Faith.

Posted by: Marty at Jun 22, 2007 4:41:46 PM

Tony Blair's about to convert, and in the pope's presence. His record on human life, from Iraq to UK abortions, is not good.

Posted by: adrian at Jun 22, 2007 5:57:54 PM

Dear Amy,

I thought your question 2), 'is it about how politicians vote?', was a very good one and got to the heart of the matter. The answer to this question is no. It is about the worthy reception of the Eucharist - which should not be profaned by its reception by sinners: and about the necessary conditions for life as a member of the Church. People often argue that refusing communion to pro-choice politicians would backfire politically, and give the resulting supposed harm to the pro-life cause as a reason for not doing it. That's just not relevant to the issue. It is a shame if denying the Eucharist would do political harm to the pro-life cause, but we are not talking here about something that is open to proportionalist calculations.
People may object that one ought not to be judgmental etc. - that no-one has a right to judge that people are in a state of sin, and hence that no-one can say that pro-choice politicians ought not to receive the Eucharist because they are in a state of sin. But this view is very implausible in itself, and goes contrary to the whole tradition of the Church on discipline. If someone is a notorious public sinner - is openly doing something that everyone including themselves clearly accepts is condemned by the Church as a dreadful evil - then we can say that there is a presumption that they really are guilty; and hence that they ought not to profane the Eucharist by receiving it in a state of mortal sin. This is recognised by canon law:

'Can. 1311 The Church has the innate and proper right to coerce offending members of the Christian faithful with penal sanctions.

Can. 1321 §1. No one is punished unless the external violation of a law or precept, committed by the person, is gravely imputable by reason of malice or negligence.
...
§3. When an external violation has occurred, imputability is presumed unless it is otherwise apparent.'

When it comes to the Eucharist, it does not seem that we even have to presume guilt in the person; we just have to be able to presume that there is a serious chance of guilt - in which case the Eucharist ought to be denied. No-one has a right to the Eucharist, and if this guilt does not really exist, God is capable of providing the graces that the person would have received from the Eucharists that they were denied.
As for necessary conditions for being a member of the Church; really, if not supporting the legal status of murder of the innocents is not such a condition, what is? What point is there in saying that you have to do anything at all to be a Catholic in good standing who can receive the Eucharist, if you do not have to do this?

Posted by: John Lamont at Jun 22, 2007 9:35:10 PM

Well, praise the Lord if he converts away from that record then, eh, Adrian? Alleluia.

Posted by: Franklin Jennings at Jun 22, 2007 10:16:36 PM

I view this more simply. The Church is trying to force its political views on Catholic legislators who accept its moral teaching but reject its narrow prescriptions. Since the Church obviously can't use moral suasion effectively to get its own members to stop contracepting and having abortions, it is attempting to use the power of the state, at almost any level, to get its way. This misguided strategy will fail, as it has in the past.

Posted by: George C. at Jun 22, 2007 11:14:47 PM

George C.
I view this more simply.

No, *you* view it more complicatedly. Presumably you think your complicated viewpoint has merit, but it's actually *simpler* to believe the bishops are straightforward rather than underhanded.

Or in fewer words, Don't use "simple" as a synonym for "better".

Posted by: Eileen R at Jun 22, 2007 11:41:54 PM

/sarcasm/

But it's all the same ground and people have the right to their own consciences, Frances Kissling says so:

"... But hypocrisy is not the exclusive domain of liberals. It couls also be said that conservatives are guilty of the same sin. They applaud bishops who seek to sanction Catholic legislators who support abortion rights...[list of progressive causes elided].. but claim freedom of conscience to disagree with the church on war and capital punishment ... in spite of a long history of encyclicals as well as the example set in the Sermon on the Mount. .... liberal Catholics ... are all correct to speak out for the right of those in public life to remain Catholic in good standing and disagree with policy positions adopted by popes and bishops. "

... and so on.

letter in the dead tree edition of the WSJ today.

/sarcasm off.


Even I, "Mary Catholic' can see the problems with her letter which blurs abortion which is not negotiable, with other things, like war which have always been prudential judgements and under the jurisdiction of secular authorities.


Bah, humbug. I'm sure she's confusing some readers, though.


Posted by: Elaine at Jun 23, 2007 12:04:31 AM

"I think a lot of folks just don't want the pressure to explain themselves," Chaput said.

They don't need to "explain themselves"
...actions speak louder than words.

Posted by: Lynn at Jun 23, 2007 12:25:56 AM

"The Church is trying to force its political views on Catholic legislators who accept its moral teaching but reject its narrow prescriptions."

Oh yeah. They accept that the unborn child is a human being, and then vote to provide the unborn less protection than a dog has in our society. My opinion of Catholic pro-abort legislators has always been pretty low George, but if I believed what you suggest my opinion would even be lower.

Posted by: Donald R. McClarey at Jun 23, 2007 8:10:45 AM

Thanks for the post. This is a theme I take up in my homily this weekend, and had been feeling some reservations about coming on too strong. Not any more. It is good to have proper episcopal leadership; it helps put spine into the rest of us.

Posted by: Mike Walsh, MM at Jun 23, 2007 8:12:45 AM

Doesn't anyone think that this is a bit odd? Last time around, in 2004, some bishops such as Burke and Chaput were unequivocal in their statements regarding pro-choice politicians and communion. That was when, on abortion, the Republican candidate was "pro-life" and the Democratic candidate was "pro-choice," and many Democratic Catholics were (unsuccessfully) making the case that you had to look at the entirety of the politician's work, and not only one issue. That most Democratic candidates were 100% in line with the Church on all life and social issues other than abortion, and that very very few Republicans were in line with the Church on anything other than abortion.

They were told by bishops such as Chaput that abortion was a foundational issue, a deal-breaker for a Catholic politician; that it didn't matter what else was going on, but that a candidate had to be pro-life when it came to abortion (and that they could vote their conscience on all other life and social issues, even if they were in direct contrast to the Church).

Now that it appears that a pro-choice Catholic Republican has a chance at becoming the nominee, Chaput suddenly changes his tune to "look at the entirety of the politician, not just one issue." Hmmm.

For some bishops, it appears that this isn't solely an abortion issue; it's a political issue, and they're grasping at straws to find ways to support the "conservative" candidate without blatantly violating the law.

Posted by: Anonymous at Jun 23, 2007 10:51:35 AM

Marty says,
"Or put another way; are you Catholic first and American second?" Not in the American catholic church!!

Posted by: ohevin at Jun 23, 2007 11:40:17 AM

Marty ask:
Or put another way; are you Catholic first and American second? Well, not in the American catholic church!!

Posted by: ohevin at Jun 23, 2007 11:41:45 AM

"they're grasping at straws to find ways to support the "conservative" candidate without blatantly violating the law."

Or, gosh, maybe they actually MEAN what they say about abortion being a non-negotiable issue. Have a problem with the pro-life candidates all being "conservatives"? Sounds like your problem should be with the "liberal" party who still can't seem to let go of the idea of "pro-choice" being a non-negotiable.

Posted by: Chris Molter at Jun 23, 2007 12:22:54 PM

"Or, gosh, maybe they actually MEAN what they say about abortion being a non-negotiable issue."

Chris: you miss the point. They're NOT meaning what they say; in 2004 they claimed abortion was non-negotiable. Now that Giuliani - a pro-CHOICE politician - has a shot at the nomination, they CHANGE their stance, and say things like "the principal involved is to try to figure out which of the candidates comes closest to the full gamut of Catholic teaching."

Ie, now that the party - the Republicans - that they want to support might nominate a pro-choice candidate, they change the limit; now it's no longer rejection of a pro-choice candidate, it's "let's look at the whole individual." Which is inconsistent, hypocritical, and blatant.

Posted by: Anonymous at Jun 23, 2007 1:01:34 PM

Partly, the stand we take is about money, in the form of our tax exemption. Do we want money? Do we want to proclaim the Gospel in all its fullness, in season and out of season? What happens when these desires collide? In my opinion, we would feel freer to proclaim the Gospel if we didn't have a tax exemption. The continuing tax exemption requires the Church to mince words, and to run every public comment past the lawyers.

With its teachings intact, the Church has survived Roman persecutions, barbarian invasions, Islamic attacks, the Enlightenment, Nazis and communists. Will it survive the lawyers and the tax code?

Posted by: Fr. John at Jun 23, 2007 2:07:10 PM

Heaven help the Catholic Church in the USA without tax dollars be they positively given as in tax exemptions on real estate or negatively given as in tax deductions to donors. Whatever we preach or teach, we are bounden to whichever political party finds ways to give us the most economic support. Father John is right. A free Church in a free state takes not a nickel from government, no exemptions, no deductions, no tax money to finance our charities. No nothing.

Posted by: Caroline at Jun 23, 2007 7:50:37 PM