
Part
II

Faithful Catholics vote according
to issues, not parties
By Lou Baldwin
Special to The CS&T
Should a conscientious Catholic be a Democrat or Republican?
The answer Catholic voters themselves provided in the presidential
election in 2004 is ambiguous at best.
In that election, most of the states with the largest percentage
of Catholics backed the Democratic ticket. On the other
hand, across the entire nation, 52 percent of the Catholic
electorate voted Republican, compared to 47 percent who
voted Democratic.
Clearly, the Democratic Party, which could once count on
huge Catholic majorities, can no longer do so. Just as clearly,
at 27 percent of the electorate, the Catholic vote affects
the outcome, and neither party can really claim to control
it.
This is as it should be, according to Catholic teaching.
“People have to realize their consciences need to
be formed,” Cardinal Justin Rigali said in a November
interview with The National Catholic Register newspaper,
“and being a Christian is so much more basic to us
than automatically following a Democratic or Republican
agenda.”
In “Forming Consciences for Faithful Citizenship:
The U.S. Catholic Bishops’ Reflection on Catholic
Teaching and Political Life,” a document issued last
November, the bishops examine a number of issues of conscience.
Heading that list is the right to life and the dignity of
the human person.
The right to life and the dignity of the human person
“Human life is sacred. The dignity of the human person
is the foundation of a moral vision for society. Direct
attacks on innocent persons are never morally acceptable,
at any stage or in any condition,” the bishops state
in their document. “In our society, human life is
especially under direct attack from abortion. Other direct
threats to the sanctity of human life include euthanasia,
human cloning and the destruction of human embryos for research.”
But things are not always simple. For example, how does
one vote when all of the viable candidates fail to oppose
legal abortion always and emphatically?
The bishops suggest a pragmatic approach: “The voter
may decide to vote for the candidate deemed less likely
to advance such a morally flawed position and more likely
to pursue other authentic human goods.”
Catholic teachings about the dignity of life, the bishops
say, also call us to oppose torture, unjust wars and use
of the death penalty; to prevent genocide and attacks against
non-combatants; to oppose racism, and to overcome poverty
and suffering.
A call to family, community and participation
Under their “Call to Family, Community and Participation,”
the bishops stress that the family — based on marriage
between a man and a woman — is the first and fundamental
unit of society, and must be defended and strengthened rather
than redefined or undermined by permitting same-sex unions
or other distortions of marriage.
Rights and responsibilities
The informed citizen has both rights and responsibilities.
The right to life, the bishops say, is “the fundamental
right that makes all other rights possible.” Other
rights include religious freedom as well as access to food,
shelter, education, employment, health care and housing.
With those rights comes responsibility to one another, our
families and the larger society.
In making decisions on such matters, the bishops tell us:
“It is essential for Catholics to be guided by a well-formed
conscience that recognizes that all issues do not carry
the same moral weight.”
“It’s not just about political issues”
“I’ve read the document and I think it is excellent.
It’s not just about political issues. It is a call
to the faithful to look at all of the life issues and see
their importance across the board,” said Susan Vadas,
a former Catholic school educator and principal who is now
the director of the archdiocesan Respect Life Office.
“There are many assaults on the sanctity of human
life, and the life issues are not just limited to the unborn,”
Vada said. “It is really from conception until natural
death, and many things can occur in that time. It’s
significant that the bishops address the seven themes of
Catholic social teaching.”
If anyone has concerns or questions about life issues, Vadas
said they may call her office at (215) 587-5661.
Next week: Option for the Poor and Vulnerable, Dignity of
Work and the Rights of Workers, Solidarity and Caring for
God’s Creation.
Lou Baldwin is a member of St. Leo parish and a freelance
writer.
Did
you know
that within the geographic boundaries of the Philadelphia
Archdiocese at least 32 percent of the population is Catholic?
That means Catholics potentially can have a significant
impact on the outcome of an election.
According to figures supplied by Robert Miller, director
of the archdiocesan Office for Research and Planning, there
were 3,761,421 residents in the five-county area in 2005,
the most recent available year for U.S. census data.
In that year, 1,210,135 individuals were registered with
parishes. The real number of Catholics is somewhat higher
because some Catholics, including transients, students,
nursing home residents and others, are not registered with
a parish. The best estimate for the actual number of Catholics
is 1,460,758, Miller said.
Full data is available through the archdio-cesan Web site:
archphila.org/pastplan.
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