Clarity
from Archbishop Chaput
Here
are excellent inputs from Archbishop
Chaput on burning issues of
the day. He speaks clearly,
amidst the disinformation and
confusion within Catholic circles.
Particularly
interesting is how what he says
in effect addresses the issues
faced by CFC. The crisis was
caused by the veering away by
those leading GK, and the support
of the IC to them. TM claims
to be Catholic, but he has not
proved it by his behavior. He
finds nothing wrong with partnering
with pharmas producing/marketing
contraceptives (to this day
such partnerships exist). He
praises Obama and claims a personal
affinity to him. He looks to
someone like Obama for hope.
Archbp
Chaput stresses the foundational
issues of life and marriage
(read: family). CFC-FFL is on
the right track, doing its mission
to renew the family and to defend
life.
God
bless.
frank
Denver
Archbishop To Toronto Audience:
"We Can't Build a Just
Society With the Blood of Unborn
Children"
Warns that party loyalty can
be "a lethal kind of moral
laziness", " a dead
end"
By
Steve Jalsevac
TORONTO,
Ontario, February, 25, 2009
(LifeSiteNews.com) - On a bitter
cold February 23rd night at
St. Basils Church on the campus
St. Michael's College, the University
of Toronto, Denver Archbishop
Charles J. Chaput delivered
to a near capacity audience
what was likely the most forthright
and challenging talk on Catholic
political responsibility ever
given in Canada by a bishop.
The
Archbishop had been invited
to address the themes from his
book, "Render Unto Caesar:
Serving the Nation by Living
our Catholic Beliefs in Political
Life." He presented some
background and thoughts on the
book and then discussed the
US election and the meaning
of true hope.
Chaput
began by noting the powerful
negative effect of today's culture
on the public's ability to think
clearly about political implications
and responsibilities. He stated,
"American consumer culture
is a very powerful narcotic.
Moral reasoning can be hard,
and TV is a great painkiller.
This has political implications.
Real freedom demands an ability
to think, and a great deal of
modern life…seems deliberately
designed to discourage that."
The
Denver prelate emphasized the
importance of forming "a
strong and genuinely Catholic
conscience" and following
that conscience when voting.
However,
Catholics with such consciences
are often intimidated for doing
so. Chaput explained that was
one of the reasons he wrote
his book: "Frankly, I just
got tired of hearing outsiders
and insiders tell Catholics
to keep quiet about our religious
and moral views in the big public
debates that involve all of
us as a society. That's a kind
of bullying. I don't think Catholics
should accept it."
Catholic
participation in politics concerns
our obligation to "the
pursuit of justice and the common
good in the public square"
and "is part of the history
of salvation", the Denver
bishop proclaimed. He indicated
that few are exempt since "Tolerating
grave evil within a society
is itself a form of serious
evil."
He
expanded, "we have a duty
to be politically engaged. Why?
Because politics is the exercise
of power, and the use of power
always has moral content and
human consequences." Chaput
challenged, "if we claim
to be 'Catholic,' we need to
prove it by our behaviour. And
serving other people by working
for justice, charity and truth
in our nation's political life
is one of the very important
ways we do that."
As
for those who separate their
faith from their political actions,
the author of "Render Unto
Caesar" called it a denial
of Christ. "That kind of
separation would require Christians
to deny who we are; to repudiate
Jesus."
The
archbishop revealed that he
was previously a long time Democrat
who worked on political campaigns,
including that of Jimmy Carter,
but he no longer belongs to
any political party. He warned,
"The sooner Catholics feel
at home in any political party,
the sooner that party takes
them for granted and then ignores
their concerns." Many Christians
have complained of this in recent
decades.
Driving
the point home forcefully Chaput
added, "Party loyalty for
the sake of habit, or family
tradition, or ethnic or class
interest is a form of tribalism.
It's a lethal kind of moral
laziness. Issues matter. Character
matters. Acting on principle
matters. But party loyalty for
the sake of party loyalty is
a dead end."
Pro-life,
pro-family leaders have often
been dismayed by their Christian
leaders' lack of courage on
the issues that matter. Chaput
addressed this, again with his
unusual frankness for a bishop:
"modern life, including
life in the Church, suffers
from a phony unwillingness to
offend that poses as prudence
and good manners, but too often
turns out to be cowardice."
Some
of the Archbishops harshest
words, yet still delivered in
his calm, friendly speaking
manner, were for those Catholics
who supported the election of
President Obama.
"A
spirit of adulation bordering
on servility already exists
among some of the same Democratic-friendly
Catholic writers, scholars,
editors and activists who once
accused prolifers of being too
cozy with Republicans."
Chaput
explained, "all political
leaders draw their authority
from God. We owe no leader any
submission or cooperation in
the pursuit of grave evil."
He
continued that Catholics must
witness to their faith and moral
convictions, "without excuses
or apologies" and that
"in democracies, we elect
public servants, not messiahs"
as so many have referred to
Obama.
Barack
Obama was elected "to fix
an economic crisis", Chaput
stated, and not "to retool
American culture on the issues
of marriage and the family,
sexuality, bioethics, religion
in public life and abortion."
He warned, however that this
"could easily happen"
and "will happen"
- "but only if Catholics
and other religious believers
allow it."
The
archbishop's frank admission
of the Church's culpability
for the current situation was
likely something few in the
audience had ever heard from
a Catholic bishop. Chaput confessed,
"The Church in the United
States has done a poor job of
forming the faith and conscience
of Catholics for more than 40
years. And now we're harvesting
the results -- in the public
square, in our families and
in the confusion of our personal
lives."
On
abortion, Archbishop Chaput,
was as direct and blunt as any
pro-life leader could dream
to finally hear from a Catholic
bishop. He insisted that for
Catholics, abortion should be
a litmus test. "One of
the defining things that set
early Christians apart from
the pagan culture around them
was their respect for human
life; and specifically their
rejection of abortion and infanticide.
We can't be Catholic and be
evasive or indulgent about the
killing of unborn life. We can't
claim to be "Catholic"
and "pro-choice" at
the same time without owning
the responsibility for where
the choice leads - to a dead
unborn child."
Addressing
the recent increase in pro-life
spokesmen stating that efforts
to change laws are futile and
we should instead attempt to
lessen the numbers of abortions,
Chaput stated, "We can't
talk piously about programs
to reduce the abortion body
count without also working vigorously
to change the laws that make
the killing possible."
Chaput
challenged the hypocrisy of
Catholics calling themselves
Catholic and then voting like
pagans, He stated, "if
we don't really believe in the
humanity of the unborn child
from the moment life begins,
then we should stop lying to
ourselves and others, and even
to God, by claiming we're something
we're not."
Although
it was admitted that Catholics
need to "do a much better
job of helping women who face
problem pregnancies", Chaput
added the crucial perspective
that, "we don't "help"
anyone by allowing or funding
an intimate, lethal act of violence.
We can't build a just society
with the blood of unborn children."
On
the issue of hope, proclaimed
incessantly by the Obama campaign,
the archbishop taught that real
hope "has nothing to do
with the cheesy optimism of
election campaigns. Hope assumes
and demands a spine in believers"
and "for a Christian --
hope sustains us when the real
answer to the problems or hard
choices in life is "no,
we can't," instead of "yes,
we can."
"The
word "hope" on a campaign
poster may give us a little
thrill of righteousness,"
said the Denver Archbishop,
"but the world will still
be a wreck when the drug wears
off. We can only attain hope
through truth. And what that
means is this: From the moment
Jesus said, "I am the way,
the truth and the life,"
the most important political
statement anyone can make is
"Jesus Christ is Lord."
During
the question and answer session
following the lecture, a question
was asked about the sometimes
unmet responsibility of bishops
to prevent pro-abortion speakers
from addressing Catholic college
functions.
Archbishop
Chaput stated that bishops "welcome
the input of the laity"
and added, "If they disagree
with us (bishops) it's really
important that we hear that.
We need your support, but we
also need to hear your concerns
if you think we make decisions
that are contrary to the good
of the Church." That was
a surpringly refreshing response
to some listeners who have experienced
very different results from
contacting their bishops on
such matters.
In
response to a question on the
serious problems with the Catholicity
of Catholic schools, Chaput
emphasized the importance of
"working on the principals
and the people who manage the
schools" as the best way
to improve the Catholicity of
the teachers.
On
the abortion issue again, the
archbishop said he was "astonished
at the number of Catholics in
my diocese who are pro-choice
and who come to Mass every day."
He repeated, "I am astonished."
In
response to a question on ecumenical
relations, he stated that Catholics
now "have very little in
common with the mainline protestant
churches because we separate
on the issues of life and marriage
and embryonic stem cell research".
Chaput noted that the Church
has recently developed a deeper
relationship with Evaneglicals
"because we share a passion
for the foundational issue of
life and for the in some ways
equally foundational issue of
the meaning of marriage.
In
response to a question about
the possible excommunication
of pro-choice Catholics, the
archbishop was emphatic that
he saw it as being completely
ineffective and counterproductive.
He stated it would be "percived
as random use of his POWER to
hurt people rather than to deal
with issues of the truth."
The archbishop further derided
that use of a bishop's authority
and concluded, " I don't
think it works and that is why
I don't do it. I don't think
there are bishops who think
it does work. We just don't
go about that business these
days."
To
read the text of Archbishop
Chaput's entire address see:
http://www.lifesitenews.com/ldn/2009/feb/090225a.html
"For
to me life is Christ, and death
is gain." (Phil 1:21)