Catholic Culture Overview
Catholic Culture Overview

Priorities for Catholic Voters

by Archbishop Edwin F. O'Brien

Descriptive Title

Letter for Pro-Life Sunday 2000

Description

Archbishop O'Brien's letter of 2000 that forcefully upholds the Church's teaching that the right to life has primacy over other social concerns. Writing on the priorities for Catholic voters, he said, "One subject stands out as preeminent —foundational to every other. And that is the sacred dignity of human life and the right to life itself !" The Vatican has named Edwin F. O'Brien Archbishop for the Military Services as the coordinator for the "apostolic visitation," or systematic investigation and evaluation of the formation offered to prospective priests in seminaries in the United States.

Publisher & Date

Archdiocese for the Miltary Services, USA, October 1, 2000

To All Priests and People of Our Archdiocese

Dear Friends in Christ:

As our Nation approaches this first national election of the new millennium, I write to you, our faithful Catholic people in the Armed Services and Veterans Administration in the hope that you will take an active interest in the issues of the election and cast your responsible vote on November 7th.

In November, 1998, the General Meeting of our National Conference of Catholic Bishops approved a document, "Living the Gospel of Life: A Challenge to American Catholics." Last September, the Administrative Board of the same conference again spoke out on the issues of political responsibility when it published "Faithful Citizenship: Civic Responsibility for a New Millennium." Both documents stress the urgency of this significant hour in our Nation's history. As we prepare to elect leaders on the national, state and local level, I think it timely to be reminded of the moral obligation that is ours to influence the course of our Country. When deployments, distant assignments or extended hospitalization precludes a return to a home voting place, absentee ballots offer our military and Veterans Administration personnel an effective means to exercise their rights and fulfill their moral obligations.

Catholics in our Armed Forces have pledged their lives in the defense of our Nation and in promoting worldwide peace and justice. They and their families have special concerns in electing the officials who will guide the destiny of our Country. Their pledge to self-sacrifice in support of our national defense should be complemented in their making every effort to elect public servants who will maintain the ideals and values which our military is sworn to uphold.

Understandably, service members have very special concerns in some matters of public policy. These concerns are not linked to a particular political party but rather are focused on electing officials at all levels who understand and appreciate the sacrifices being made daily by Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen, Marines Coast Guard personnel and their families.

They have every right to be concerned, for example, that adequate care be given those who have served in uniform and are now in need of the medical treatment. Those now on active duty should receive adequate compensation so that their families will be fed, sheltered and educated at standards corresponding to the valuable contributions our military renders our Nation. Professionally, our Services should be assured of sufficient personnel to carry out their mission. Their leadership must address the repetitive and lengthy deployments which are increasingly destructive of family life. They should be equipped with materiel and supplies sufficient and up to date for the task.

More basic still, those who serve our Country at home and in so many overseas stations should examine closely the foreign policies being advocated by candidates for national executive and legislative offices. The world's most powerful nation must be all the more sensitive to a just, balanced and reasonable employment of our military power, while encouraging other countries to engage in regional peace keeping operations.

Catholics in the service of our Nation are, of course, citizens with concerns for the common good of all Americans. We are the most economically prosperous society on earth but can we say that we are living the message of the Gospel to care for the least privileged in our own society? We must. We must also care about conditions which threaten the moral fabric of country. Our bishops' statements remind us that there are any number of moral concerns facing our electorate:

  • almost one in five of our pre-school children is growing up in poverty;
  • basic health care and dignified housing are still out of the reach of many, and various forms of racial, ethnic and religious discrimination divide our citizens;
  • poor families are not free to send their children to schools of choice;
  • violent and life-threatening conditions have become commonplace in many of our neighborhoods and schools, as even the very young are drawn into America's drug culture;
  • the death penalty, which our Holy Father calls both cruel and unnecessary.

But among these and many other matters of moral concern, one subject stands out as preeminent—foundational to every other. And that is the sacred dignity of human life and the right to life itself!

Nowhere is the disregard for human life more heinous than in abortion and the increasing acceptance of euthanasia. Indeed, the infanticide of partial birth abortion is promoted as a right even by some Catholic politicians pandering for votes at the price of killing of the innocent. It is critical for Catholics in our Armed Forces and Veteran Administration to realize that abortion and euthanasia strike at the foundation of every other human right. Laws that promote the right to kill innocent human life are unjust, not to be obeyed and, surely, not to be promoted by any elected official who holds human life sacred.

In the words of our Catholic bishops:

"No public official, especially one claiming to be a faithful and serious Catholic, can responsibly, advocate for or actively support direct attacks on innocent human life."

And to the voting Catholic, our bishops advise:

"... (W)e urge our fellow citizens to see beyond party politics, to analyze campaign rhetoric critically and to choose their political leaders according to principle, not party affiliation or mere self-interest."

Every election is an opportunity to remind our believing Catholics that we are not second class citizens. Our voices must be heard, our convictions must be registered in the voting booths. Our Catholic faith and our American tradition demand that we speak out when evil is enshrined in law and that we use every moral means to change such law.

One day we shall be judged accordingly — surely by God and most probably by history.

Thank you for all you do each day to witness to the surpassing value of human life.

In the Lord,

+ Edwin F. O'Brien

Archbishop for the Military Services, USA

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