Refusing
Communion to Pro-abortion Politicians
CFC-FFL
is committed to support the
Magisterium of the Church and
her authentic Catholic teaching.
On this issue of refusing Communion
to pro-abortion politicians,
we stand with the Holy See and
such prelates as Archbp Burke.
If you have the opportunity
to speak with pastors, please
articulate your clear pro-life
stand and your support of not
giving Communion to such pro-abortion
politicians.
Once
again I reiterate that in the
culture wars we are into intense
spiritual warfare. We need to
speak the truth clearly and
stand up for the truth consistently.
We have to stand for what is
right and just. We cannot be
politically correct or pastorally
naive. This is a life-and-death
struggle, literally! Abortion
is the most heinous of crimes
and the greatest of sins. Speak
out against it!
God
bless,
frank
Vatican
Official: Bishops Have no Choice
But to Refuse Communion to Pro-Abort
Politicians
By
Hilary White
ROME,
January 30, 2009 (LifeSiteNews.com)
- Archbishop Raymond Burke,
in an exclusive interview last
week, told LifeSiteNews.com
that the issue of pro-abortion
politicians continuing to receive
Holy Communion is still one
of major concern and that it
is the duty of bishops to ensure
that they are refused.
He
told LifeSiteNews.com, "I
don't understand the continual
debate that goes on about it.
There's not a question that
a Catholic who publicly, and
after admonition, supports pro-abortion
legislation is not to receive
Holy Communion and is not to
be given Holy Communion."
"The
Church's law is very clear,"
said Archbishop Burke, who was
appointed last year by Pope
Benedict XVI as the head of
the Church's highest court,
the Apostolic Signatura. "The
person who persists publicly
in grave sin is to be denied
Holy Communion, and it [Canon
Law] doesn't say that the bishop
shall decide this. It's an absolute."
Among
the US bishops directly to address
the issue, Archbishop Burke
was one of around a dozen who
vigorously supported a directive
of the Vatican that said pro-abortion
Catholic politicians "must
be refused" Holy Communion
if they attempt to receive at
Mass. Others have refused to
abide by the Vatican instruction
and the Church's own Code of
Canon Law, saying they would
rather focus on "education"
of such politicians.
Archbishop
Burke called "nonsense"
the accusation, regularly made
by some bishops, that refusing
Holy Communion "makes the
Communion rail a [political]
battle ground". In fact,
he said, the precise opposite
is true. The politician who
insists on being seen receiving
Holy Communion, despite his
opposition to the Church's central
teachings, is using that reception
for political leverage.
In
2004, when self-proclaimed Catholic
and candidate for the Democrat
party, Sen. John Kerry, was
frequently photographed receiving
Holy Communion despite his vigorous
support of abortion, the US
Bishops Conference issued a
document which said only that
it is up to individual bishops
whether to implement the Church's
code of Canon Law and refuse
Communion. The issue has remained
prominent with the appointment
of Joe Biden, another pro-abortion
Catholic politician, as Vice
President of the United States
of America.
Archbishop
Burke recalled previous experiences
with Kerry, pointing to the
several occasions when the senator
was pictured in Time magazine
receiving Communion from Papal
representatives at various public
events. Burke said that it is
clear that Kerry was using his
reception of Holy Communion
to send a message.
"He
wants to not only receive Holy
Communion from a bishop but
from the papal representative.
I think that's what his point
was. Get it in Time magazine,
so people read it and say to
themselves, 'He must be in good
standing'."
"What
are they doing? They're using
the Eucharist as a political
tool."
In
refusing, far from politicising
the Eucharist, the Church is
returning the matter to its
religious reality. The most
important reasons to refuse,
he said, are pastoral and religious
in nature.
"The
Holy Eucharist, the most sacred
reality of our life in the Church,
has to be protected against
sacrilege. At the same time,
individuals have to be protected
for the sake of their own salvation
from committing one of the gravest
sins, namely to receive Holy
Communion unworthily."
Archbishop
Burke also dismissed the commonly
proffered excuse that such politicians
need more "education".
Speaking from his own direct
experience, he said that Catholic
politicians who are informed
by their pastors or bishops
that their positions in support
of pro-abortion legislation
makes it impossible for them
to receive Holy Communion, "I've
always found that they don't
come forward."
"When
you talk to these people, they
know," he said. "They
know what they're doing is very
wrong. They have to answer to
God for that, but why through
our pastoral negligence add
on to that, that they have to
answer to God for who knows
how many unworthy receptions
of Holy Communion?"
Archbishop
Burke said that the issue had
been debated enough. He rejected
the idea that the matter should
be left to the US Conference
of Catholic Bishops, saying
the Conference has no authority
in the matter. "This is
a law of the universal Church
and it should be applied."
"I
think this argument too is being
used by people who don't want
to confront the issue, this
whole 'wait 'til the Conference
decides'...well the Conference
has been discussing this since
at least 2004. And nothing happens."
When
asked what the solution was,
he responded, "Individual
bishops and priests simply have
to do their duty. They have
to confront politicians, Catholic
politicians, who are sinning
gravely and publicly in this
regard. And that's their duty.
"And
if they carry it out, not only
can they not be reproached for
that, but they should be praised
for confronting this situation."
"For
to me life is Christ, and death
is gain." (Phil 1:21)