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Were our Hearts Not Burning? (Lk 24:32)
Fr. Paul Ward
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Vatican dismay: Memo on politicians touches nerve
in U.S. campaign
By John Thavis
Catholic News Service
VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- When Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger
sent out a brief memo in June about politicians and Communion, he probably never
imagined it would ignite a heated discussion about Catholics and voting.
The document, leaked to an Italian reporter but never officially acknowledged by
the Vatican, focused on the grounds for denying Communion to pro-abortion
Catholic politicians.
Almost as an afterthought, it added two sentences about Catholic voters:
First, it said, a Catholic who deliberately voted for a candidate precisely
because of the candidate's pro-abortion (or pro-euthanasia) stand would be
guilty of "formal cooperation in evil" and should exclude himself from receiving
Communion.
Second, when a Catholic does not share a candidate's stand in favor of abortion
but votes for that candidate for other reasons, it is considered "remote
material cooperation," which is "permitted in the presence of proportionate
reasons."
Reaction to those two sentences has been simmering all summer, fueled in part by
election-year politics.
One self-styled "traditional" Catholic publication criticized Cardinal
Ratzinger, who heads the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, saying his
words would be taken as a "license to vote for pro-abortion politicians."
In a New York Daily News column headlined "Catholics can vote for Kerry," Father
Andrew Greeley said Cardinal Ratzinger had correctly underlined that Catholics
should not be single-issue voters, but should weigh all the issues.
Other conservative Catholic Web sites have criticized Father Greeley's column
and disputed the idea that Cardinal Ratzinger has given a green -- or at least
yellow -- light to Catholic voters who intend to vote for pro-abortion
candidates.
At the Vatican, officials are dismayed for several reasons, starting with the
fact that a private communication was leaked. Moreover, they say, the ensuing
discussion has mixed up two very different issues -- the public actions of
Catholic politicians and the private moral decisions faced by Catholic voters.
Vatican officials also are concerned that the discussion of "leeway" in voting
for pro-abortion candidates may eclipse a more important point Pope John Paul II
and others have been hammering home for years: That Catholics are morally
obligated to try to limit the evil of abortion and euthanasia, and that those
life-and-death issues should have unique moral weight with Catholic voters.
The one-page memo that started the discussion was sent with a letter from
Cardinal Ratzinger to Cardinal Theodore E. McCarrick of Washington, who heads
the U.S. bishops' Task Force on Catholic Bishops and Catholic Politicians.
Sources described the memo as an unsigned "staff document" aimed at summarizing
basic principles. They said it did not begin to explore the complexity of the
issue of voting and sin, which, in the words of one official, is pretty much
"terra incognita" for moral theologians.
"The memo was certainly not intended to clear the way for Catholics to vote for
candidates who are in favor of laws permitting abortion or euthanasia, but
rather to clarify that the simple act of voting for such candidates might not
per se justify one's exclusion from Holy Communion," said U.S. Dominican Father
Augustine DiNoia, undersecretary of the Vatican's doctrinal congregation.
The problem is that it's difficult to determine the purpose, or "moral object,"
of an act of voting, Father DiNoia said.
"The only thing we could say is, a person might come to be in the state of
mortal sin and therefore unworthy to receive Communion if they voted precisely
with the moral object of extending abortion or the provision of abortion," he
said.
"But that would be the only case where that would happen," he said.
For the church, there's no question about the sinfulness of abortion, but there
are serious questions about how far culpability extends beyond those directly
involved in abortion.
That's where the concepts of "formal" and "material" cooperation come in. These
are traditional terms in theology, although their application to the act of
voting is quite new.
Cooperation in evil concerns people who are drawn into the bad act of another
person. In general, "formal" cooperation means culpability, whereas "material"
cooperation -- being more remote -- does not, Father DiNoia said.
In the case of abortion, the church considers as the principal agents the person
procuring it and the doctor performing it. In his 1995 encyclical, "Evangelium
Vitae," Pope John Paul II spoke at length about cooperation in acts against
human life -- but did not mention voting.
"Christians, like all people of good will, are called upon under grave
obligation of conscience not to cooperate formally in practices which, even if
permitted by civil legislation, are contrary to God's law," the pope said.
"Such cooperation occurs when an action, either by its very nature or by the
form it takes in a concrete situation, can be defined as a direct participation
in an act against innocent human life or a sharing in the immoral intention of
the person committing it," he said.
The recent doctrinal memo's mention of "proportionate reasons" has led some
people to suggest a set of reasons that could justify voting for pro-abortion
politicians -- or to argue that no "proportionate reason" can exist in such a
case.
Father DiNoia said one obvious proportionate reason would be when, as often
occurs, Catholic voters must choose between two candidates who support legalized
abortion but to widely differing degrees. In that situation, not to vote at all
would seem to go against a Christian's responsibility to participate
politically.
But further defining what may or may not be "proportionate reasons" in these
cases is extremely difficult, Father DiNoia said. The situation of individual
Catholic voters is different, so it's impossible to have a standard list of
acceptable reasons, he said.
In the end, then, theology is not able to say categorically in every
circumstance when a Catholic voter sins or does not sin. What it can do -- and
what the recent memo attempted to do -- is offer principles that are applied to
the different situations.
Vatican officials have been reluctant to comment at all on the voting issue,
saying it is a complex question that is easily muddled. They say the best thing
that could come out of the recent discussion is that Catholics in general think
more seriously about their worthiness for Communion.
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