A PASTORAL LETTER
TO THE CATHOLIC FAITHFUL
OF THE DIOCESE OF COLORADO SPRINGS
ON THE DUTIES OF CATHOLIC POLITICIANS AND VOTERS
Dear brothers and sisters in Christ,
This coming November we
Americans will participate in one of the most
important national elections in recent history. The president, senators and
congressmen
who are placed in office by our votes will serve at a time in which issues
that are critical
to the very survival of our civilization will be at the top of the political
agenda. As we
prepare for these elections I consider it my duty as your bishop to write to
you about
these matters so that you might go to the polls this fall with a
well-informed conscience.
The Church teaches that
"man has the right to act in conscience
and in freedom so
as personally to make moral decisions." (1) Often we hear people claim that
they are
making decisions in accord with conscience even when those decisions defy
the natural
law and the revealed teachings of Jesus Christ. This is because of a
widespread
misunderstanding of the very meaning of conscience. For many, conscience is
no more
than personal preference or even a vague sense or feeling that something is
right or
wrong, often based on information drawn from sources that have nothing to do
with the
law of God.
The right judgment of
conscience is not a matter of personal preference nor has it
anything to do with feelings. It has only to do with objective truth.
"Conscience must be
informed and moral judgment enlightened.
A well-formed conscience is upright and
truthful. It formulates its judgments according to reason, in conformity
with the true good
willed by the wisdom of the Creator.
The education of conscience is indispensable for
human beings who are subjected to negative influences and tempted by sin to
prefer their
own judgment and to reject authoritative teachings." (2)
All
people have a grave obligation to form their consciences by adhering to the
truth, precisely as that truth is found in the natural law and in the
revelation of God. As
Catholics we have the further obligation to give assent to the doctrinal and
moral
teachings of the Church because "to
the Church belongs the right always and everywhere
to announce moral principles, including those pertaining to the social
order, and to make
judgments on any human affairs to the extent that they are required by the
fundamental
rights of the human person or the salvation of souls." (3) In other words,
as people who
profess the Catholic faith,
we must "have the mind of Christ" in every judgment and act.
Among the
many distortions
and misrepresentations
that prevail
in the current
debates about the relationship between religion and the social order (politics)
is the
assertion that faith and politics are to be kept separated. This,
apparently, is based upon
the American doctrine of the separation of church and state. In fact, the
wall that
separates church and state is the safeguard against both the establishment
of a state
religion and the imposition of sectarian religious beliefs and practices,
such as particular
denominational forms of worship or theological tenets. In no way does the
American
doctrine of separation of church and state even suggest that the well-formed
consciences
of religious people should not be brought to bear on their political
choices.
The Second Vatican Council
was abundantly clear on this matter. "Nor,
on the
contrary, are they any less wide of the mark who think that religion
consists in acts of
worship alone and in the discharge of certain moral obligations, and who
imagine they
can plunge themselves into earthly affairs in such a way as to imply that
these are
altogether divorced from the religious life. This split between the faith
which many
profess and their daily lives deserves to be counted among the more serious
errors of our
age. Long since, the Prophets of the Old Testament fought vehemently
against this
scandal and even more so did Jesus Christ Himself in the New Testament
threaten it with
grave punishments. Therefore, let there be no false opposition between
professional and
social activities on the one part, and
religious life on the other." (4)
When Catholics are elected
to public office or when Catholics go to the polls to
vote, they take their consciences with them. Pope John Paul II has
consistently taught
this as, for example, when he said that those who are directly involved in
lawmaking
bodies have a "grave and clear obligation to oppose" any law that
attacks human life. (5)
The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith has declared that, "in this
context, it must
be noted also that a well-formed Christian conscience does not permit one to
vote for a
political program or an individual law which contradicts the fundamental
contents of faith
and morals." (6) Anyone who professes the Catholic faith with his lips while
at the same
time publicly supporting legislation or candidates that defy God's law makes
a mockery
of that faith and belies his identity as a Catholic.
In November we will once
again have the privilege of exercising our most
precious right as citizens - the right to vote. Our choices will be made
from among an
array of candidates who take a variety of positions with regard to many
important issues.
In the midst of what could be a difficult
and confusing exercise it is very important to
remember that not all issues are of equal gravity. As men and women of good
will we
strive to achieve true justice for all people and to preserve their rights
as human beings.
There is, however, one right that is "inalienable", and that is the RIGHT TO
LIFE. This
is the FIRST right. This is the right that grounds all other human rights.
This is the issue
that trumps all other issues.
The November elections
will be critical in the battle to restore the right to life to
all citizens, especially the unborn and the elderly and infirm.
As a result of the pro-life
efforts of countless Americans the number of abortions performed in our
country is now
declining for the first time since the appalling Supreme Court decision of
1973 that made
it legal" to kill
our children. We cannot allow the
progress that has been made
to be
reversed by a pro-abortion President, Senate or House of
Representatives. Neither can
we permit illicit stem cell research that makes use of aborted babies. Any
movement to
promote and legalize euthanasia must be halted. Our votes have me power to
stop these
abominations.
There must be no confusion
in these matters. Any Catholic
politicians who
advocate for abortion, for illicit stem cell research or for any form of
euthanasia ipso
facto place themselves outside full communion with the Church and
so jeopardize their
salvation. Any Catholics who vote for candidates who stand for abortion,
illicit stem cell
research or euthanasia suffer the same fateful consequences. It is for this
reason that
these Catholics, whether candidates for office or those who would vote for
them, may not
receive Holy Communion until they have recanted their positions and been
reconciled
with God and the Church in the Sacrament of Penance.
In recent months another
issue has reached the level of our legislatures. It is so-
called "same- sex marriage." Those who now promote this
deviancy often present it as a
human right denied homosexual persons and thus illegally discriminating
against them.
But, in fact, no one has a right to that which flies
in the face of God's own design.
Marriage is not an invention of individuals or even of societies. Rather it
is an element of
God's creation. It is God who created us male and female. It is God who
joined man and
woman so that they could be fruitful and multiply and fill
the earth. Every civilization
known to mankind has understood marriage as the union of a man and a woman
for the
procreation and rearing of children. And yet now, in 21st century America,
there are those
who would want us to believe that all people of all times have been mistaken
about the
true nature and purpose of marriage. No one can simply redefine marriage to
suit a
political or social agenda.
Once again, we must be
clear about this matter. The future of our world depends
upon the strength of the family, the basic unit of society. The future of
the family
depends on the state of marriage. The family - father, mother and children -
reflects the
nature of God Himself, who is a communion of selfless and self-giving
love. For this
reason marriage and family life cannot be whatever we want them to be. They
are only
and always as God has created them. As in the matter of abortion, any
Catholic politician
who would promote so-called "same-sex marriage" and any Catholic who would
vote for
that political candidate place themselves outside the full communion of the
Church and
may not receive Holy Communion until they have recanted their positions and
been
reconciled by the Sacrament of Penance.
The Church never directs
citizens to vote for any specific
candidate. The Church
does, however, have the right and the obligation to teach clearly and fully
the objective
truth about the dignity and rights of the human person. These teachings, in
turn, must
inform the consciences of voters. "By its intervention in this area, the
Church's
Magisterium does not wish to exercise
political power or eliminate the freedom of
opinion of Catholics regarding
contingent questions. Instead, it intends - as is its proper
function - to instruct and illuminate the consciences of the faithful,
particularly those
involved
in political
life, so that their
actions may always serve the integral promotion of
the human person and the common good." (7)
Dear friends in Christ, 1
exhort you with all my heart to take courage and proclaim
the Gospel of Life to those who will stand for elected office
this fall. It is by your prayers
and by your votes that politicians who
are unconditionally pro-life and pro-family will
serve our country. Conversely, if our voices remain silent or if.
God forbid, we vote
contrary to our informed consciences, we will see our country led down a
short path to
ruin. We want freedom for all, but there can be no freedom without truth. In
the words
of our Holy Father: "When freedom is detached from objective truth it
becomes
impossible to establish personal rights on a firm
rational basis; and the ground is laid for
society to be at the mercy of the unrestrained will of individuals or the
oppressive
totalitarianism of public authority." (8)
Let us
all pray for those politicians who claim to be Catholic yet continue to
oppose the law of God and the rights of persons that, by the grace of God,
they will be
converted once again to the full and authentic articulation and practice of
the faith.
Finally, I wish to affirm
my brother bishops who have proclaimed the truth of
these critical matters and who have admonished those Catholic politicians
who place
themselves at odds with the truth of God. May that truth which is the
foundation of
genuine freedom prevail in our country.
Given at the Chancery on this first
day of May 2004, the Feast of St. Joseph the
Worker.

Most Reverend Michael J. Sheridan
Bishop of Colorado Springs
Endnotes
(1) Catechism of the Catholic Church, 1782.
(2) ibid, 1783.
(3) ibid., 2032 and Code of Canon Law 747.2.
(4) Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modem World {Gaudium et spes), 43.
(5) John Paul II, The Gospel of Life (Evcrngelium vitae), 73.
(6) Congregation for the Doctrine of
the Faith, "Doctrinal Notes on Some Questions
Regarding the Participation of Catholics in Political Life", 4.
(7) ibid., 6.
f8) The Gospel of Life, 101.
NOTE: THIS PASTORAL LETTER IS BEING PUBLISHED TO THIS WEBSITE WITH THE WRITTEN PERMISSION OF MR. PETER HOWARD, BISHOP SHERIDAN'S EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT O6/28/04
FMOWEB 272 PASTORAL LETTER COLO SPRGS 05-04