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Associated Press, July 23, 2004
Catholic Lawmakers Ignore Bishops'
Warning
Scores of leading Roman Catholic politicians
across the country appear undaunted by election-year
warnings from bishops that those who support
abortion rights may be unworthy to receive
Holy Communion. In Associated Press interviews
with more than 75 such politicians, none said
that they are abstaining from the sacrament
over the issue, and many said they believed
voting for legalized abortion did not jeopardize
their standing with the church.
AP reporters spoke to governors, state legislators,
congressional representatives, U.S. senators
and other public officials, who all said they
were at peace with their political and religious
practices.
"I believe that what I do as a public servant
is in accord with church teaching,'' said Virginia
Lt. Gov Tim Kaine, the presumptive Democratic
candidate for governor next year. He supports
abortion rights with restrictions such as requiring
parental consent for minors and banning late-term
abortions. "It hasn't caused me discomfort
as a Catholic personally,'' he said.
Individually, American bishops disagree over
whether Communion should be used as a sanction.
But together they issued a statement last month
saying lawmakers who consistently back abortion
rights risk "cooperating in evil'' and
must examine whether they should receive the
sacrament. Communion affirms a Catholic's bond
with God, and asking a parishioner not to participate
is a harsh punishment.
A few of the best-known Catholic lawmakers who
back abortion rights -- such as Republican
New York Gov. George Pataki and U.S. Sen. Patrick
Leahy, a Vermont Democrat -- said their faith
was a personal matter and would not comment.
Two others officials were not taking the sacrament
because they had divorced without a church
annulment -- not because of their policies
on abortion.
U.S. Rep. Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio, who became
an abortion rights supporter last year, said
he would abstain at the request of his bishop,
but his prelate has not asked him to do so.
And New Jersey Gov. James McGreevey said he would
not seek Communion in public after warnings
from two local bishops in May, leaving open
the possibility that he might do so in private.
The remainder of those interviewed said they
would not change how they worship -- with many
saying they resented any attempt to link the
sacrament to politics.
"I am very comfortable with my status, and
quite frankly, my relationship with God is
direct and personal and the church is merely
a guest in that relationship,'' said U.S. Rep.
James Langevin, a Democrat from Rhode Island,
the state with the nation's highest percentage
of Catholics.
Langevin believes abortion should be allowed
only in cases of rape, incest or if a mother's
life is in danger. But Catholic opposition
to abortion is based on the earliest church
teachings and is unequivocal -- extending to
those cases.
Deal Hudson, editor of the conservative Catholic
magazine Crisis, has been highly critical of
bishops who fail to take a hard line against
dissenting Catholic lawmakers, and said he
wasn't surprised that the politicians hadn't
reconsidered their positions.
"Bishops have been ignoring this issue for
30 years, so (politicians) don't take the bishops
seriously,'' Hudson said.
However, Bill Ryan, a spokesman for the U.S.
Conference of Catholic Bishops, said it was
too soon to know whether the bishops have been
effective, since they are focused on building
relationships with Catholic politicians and
educating them about church teaching.
"The bishops want to have a dialogue with
Catholic officials,'' Ryan said. "If an
elected official were to say that he or she
did not choose to give consideration to these
matters, that would be unfortunate, but it
would not be a reflection on the Catholic bishops.''
The Communion debate gained national attention
after Archbishop Raymond Burke of St. Louis
said in January he would deny the sacrament
to John Kerry, a Catholic who supports abortion
rights. When Kerry is officially selected as
the Democratic presidential candidate next
week, he'll be the first Catholic at the top
of a major party ticket since John F. Kennedy
ran in 1960.
U.S. Rep. William Lacy Clay, a Missouri Democrat
who favors abortion rights, met with Burke
this month to discuss the issue, but neither
would release details of their talk. However,
Clay said he would continue taking Communion,
and if a priest refused him, "I would
stand there.''
"I think Archbishop Burke has gone too far,''
Clay said.
Kerry has said he is personally opposed to abortion,
but sees the bishops' appeals as breaching
the separation of church and state. Many of
the lawmakers the AP interviewed expressed
similar views. Some feared that singling out
Catholic lawmakers would revive suspicions
that their first loyalty was to their church
not their country. Others said they were obligated
to formulate policy based on the views of all
their constituents.
"As a practicing Catholic, I respect the
church's view that abortion is wrong,'' said
Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine. "As a United
States senator, however, I will not make criminals
of those women who do not agree with the Catholic
Church's position on this difficult issue.''
<< Associated Press -- 7/23/04 >>
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