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KARL KEATING'S E-LETTER

June 1, 2004

TOPICS:    Discuss

MRS. KENNEDY, CANONIST
BISHOP SHERIDAN, PASTOR
MR. LYNN, ANTI-CATHOLIC
TAX EXEMPTIONS, EXPENDABLE


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Dear Friend of Catholic Answers:

Today is the feast of St. Justin Martyr, patron of apologists and of Catholic Answers. The son of pagans, he lived from 100-165 and was martyred in Rome. His chief writing was "Dialogue with Trypho the Jew," a defense of Christian beliefs. Justin is commonly considered the Church's first "professional" apologist.

Hundreds of Justin wannabes (they wannabe apologists but not necessarily martyrs!) can be found at our new discussion forums. In a bit over two weeks, more than 2,600 people have registered at the forums. They have written 13,000 messages on 1,000 topics and have made our site the fastest-growing and most active Catholic discussion site in the English-speaking world.

Why not stop by and see who's having all the fun? Use your browser to go to:
http://forums.catholic.com

TED'S WIFE STANDS UP FOR HER MAN

Last week the "Washington Post" published an op-ed piece by Victoria Kennedy, the wife of Sen. Ted Kennedy. She is an attorney who "works with non-profit groups to reduce violence and improve the quality of life for women, children, and families," according to her biographical squib. Now she is expanding her areas of concern to include instructing the Catholic bishops on canon law and on the real meaning of Vatican II.

Mrs. Kennedy says that the denial of Communion to pro-abortion (she calls them "pro-choice") politicians such as her husband is a "harsh penalty" that is the result of a "flawed and intellectually dishonest argument" that sees "a vote not to criminalize abortion" as the "equivalent of the act of abortion itself." She says those who advocate the denial of Communion are misusing canon law and misinterpret "Dignitatis Humanae," Vatican II's declaration on religious liberty.

There indeed is a "flawed and intellectually dishonest argument," but it is Mrs. Kennedy's, not the bishops'. They and the Church they lead have not made the puerile argument that refusing to outlaw abortion is equivalent to abortion itself. They have said that the promotion of abortion by politicians--and this is what we really are talking about--is a grave sin that leads others to commit the grave sin of abortion. The sin of promoting abortion is enough to keep one away from Communion, if that sin is "manifest," which is to say public, and if it is persisted in.

Not good enough, says Mrs. Kennedy. This "completely ignores the freedom-of-conscience provisions that are integral to the practice of our Catholic faith." She says "Pro-choice politicians ... do not support legislation to require or even encourage women to have abortions; they simply refuse to make abortion a crime punishable under non-church law." Their consciences lead them to this position, and their conscientious decision should be respected.

The Church nowhere says that freedom of conscience gives one carte blanche. You cannot be a good Catholic and endorse an intrinsic evil. If such an endorsement doesn't prick your conscience, then your conscience is malfunctioning and needs to go to the repair shop.

Besides, we're not talking here about an especially convoluted question or one that only recently has come to the attention of moral theologians. Abortion is an easy issue to deal with at the moral level. There is no reason to scratch one's head and wonder, "Is abortion morally permissible? Is it something that I, as a Catholic, can endorse? Is it something that I, as a Catholic politician, can foster?" Freedom of conscience just doesn't enter into the equation.

I appreciate what I suspect to be Mrs. Kennedy's chief motive, spousal loyalty. She's watching out for her husband, whom many consider to be the chief Catholic proponent of abortion in the federal government. No doubt Mrs. Kennedy's essay was vetted by the Senator's staff--perhaps was written by his staff--and surely was intended to deflect criticism away from him and from other pro-abortion politicians and onto the bishops themselves.

The bishops, you see, are the real problem. They are intruding their beliefs into the public square. They are not respecting the tender consciences of other Catholics. In fact, they are trying to impose their own consciences on other people, as though they had a hotline to God. The effrontery!

MANIFESTING MORAL PRINCIPLES IN COLORADO SPRINGS

One bishop who is taking a lot of heat is Michael Sheridan of Colorado Springs. In a recent pastoral letter he instructed politicians who support abortion, euthanasia, and homosexual marriage not to receive Communion. He named no names. He just spelled out a principle: If you are a Catholic who persists in public and grave sin, you aren't eligible to be in the Communion line.

His reasoning was simple: Someone who persists in a public and grave sin is not in the state of grace, and you must be in the state of grace to receive Communion worthily (see 1 Cor. 11:27-29). If you are not in the state of grace, for this or any other reason, remain seated in the pew at Communion time.

Mrs. Kennedy must know, if she is as conversant with canon law as she implies she is, that what Bishop Sheridan wrote falls under canon 915 of the Code of Canon Law. That canon states that "Those who ... obstinately persist in manifest [that is, public] grave sin are not to be admitted to Holy Communion."

Abortion is a grave sin, which means promoting abortion is a grave sin. Promoting abortion publicly is a public (or manifest) grave sin. Doing so repeatedly is to persist in a manifest grave sin. Refusing to stop promoting abortion after having become aware of the sinfulness of abortion is to "obstinately persist in manifest grave sin."

"SEPARATION OF CHURCH AND STATE" OR "SEPARATION OF STATE AND CHURCH"?

Barry Lynn is the head of Americans United for Separation of Church and State. The organization was founded by Paul Blanshard more than half a century ago, and it originally was called Protestants and Others United for Separation of Church and State. It began as an anti-Catholic organization and essentially remains one.

Lynn sent a letter to the IRS, asking it to investigate "electioneering" by the Diocese of Colorado Springs. He says that Bishop Sheridan's pastoral letter amounts to saying "vote Republican." The diocese should lose its tax exemption, thinks Lynn.

I wonder why those who say the Church should stay out of politics do not hesitate to say that politics should intrude itself into the Church. If the Church isn't supposed to tell the government what to do, why should the government be at liberty to tell the Church what to do? Is "separation" a one-way street?

Now I don't think much of the principle however it is phrased. But if you're going to squawk "Separation!" each time a bishop has the temerity to issue a statement on morals, shouldn't you refrain from yelling "Let's have a government crackdown"?

WHO NEEDS TAX EXEMPTIONS ANYWAY?

I wouldn't mind seeing the Church being taken to court over something like this. Let's bring in all the dioceses as defendants. Let's have a big brouhaha. Either way, the Church wins.

If the court throws out the case, that's one threat that disappears, and people such as Barry Lynn have that much less clout.

If the court removes the dioceses' tax exemptions, the Church is freed from the fear of what the IRS might do. That fear has been responsible, in part, for the timidity of many bishops. Ask their staffs why they have not taken hardline positions in public, and you're told that "we can't risk losing our tax exemption."

Why not? The only thing a tax exemption provides is more money. In theory, if you have a tax exemption, donors will donate more because the tax bite to them is lessened. This is true so far as it goes, but it doesn't go far enough.

If American dioceses had their tax exemptions yanked, if they were perceived as being persecuted by the government, Catholics would rush to their aid. The people in the pews would show their loyalty to the Church through their pocketbooks.

I think donations would soar, far more than offsetting the value of the tax exemption. Lay Catholics would not worry much about whether their donations were deductible. They would give because they would be defending their Church from government intrusion.

Of course, I'd prefer to have it both ways. I'd like Lynn's letter to be ignored by the IRS. I'd like the Church to maintain its tax-exempt status. And I'd like the bishops to take a hardline approach, even harder than that taken by Bishop Sheridan. I'd like them to name names.

Until next time,

Karl

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