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Canadian Bishop Questions Catholic Credentials
of Canada's Prime Minister Abortion the Issue DATE:
June 9, 2004
US CONTACT: J.C. Willke, MD, President Life Issues Institute 1821
W. Galbraith Rd. Cincinnati OH, 45239 513. 729.3600 info@lifeissues.org
CANADA CONTACT: Jim Hughes, President Campaign Life Coalition 104
Bond Street, Ste. 300 Toronto Ontario M5B 1X9 416.204.9749 Society
is currently engaged in a vigorous debate over the practice of giving communion
to politicians who claim to be Catholic, but openly defy the Church on the doctrine
of abortion.
Now, a new voice from Canada. Bishop Fred Henry of Calgary
has issued a statement regarding such a political figure, none other than Canada's
Prime Minister, Paul Martin. We publish his comments for your information. Pastoral
Letter of Calgary Bishop Fred Henry on Scandal of Prime Minister Paul Martin's
"moral incoherence" Letter sent to all parishes in diocese of Calgary
for inclusion in Sunday church bulletins June 6, 2004 My Dear Brothers
and Sisters in Christ: In much of the secular media Prime Minister Paul
Martin is frequently described as a "devout Catholic." However, his
recently clarified position re abortion and same sex unions is a source of scandal
in the Catholic community and reflects a fundamental moral incoherence. The
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith offered guidance relative to the role
religious faith should play in the 'public square' or in the governing of modern
democratic society in its "Doctrinal Note on Some Questions Regarding the
Participation of Catholics in Political Life (November 24, 2002). The Note
is a reminder to Catholic politicians of their duty to be morally coherent: "There
cannot be two parallel lives in their existence: on the one hand the so-called
'spiritual life,' with its values and demands; and on the other, the so-called
'secular' life, that is, life in family, at work ... in the responsibilities of
public life and in culture." (Note, 6) In undertaking any public initiative,
it is morally incoherent to leave out completely one's own fundamental convictions,
whether for noble or pragmatic reasons. The truth regarding the human person and
our obligations to uphold this truth do not change when we leave the security
of our homes and venture into the secular or political sphere. In all that he
or she does, the Catholic politician must work to proclaim and put into action
the truth about man and the world. Rights are rooted in the dignity of the
human person, a dignity bestowed upon the human person by God. From this perspective
there is no right to have an abortion. No Catholic can responsibly take a 'pro-choice'
stand when the 'choice' in question involves the taking of innocent life. Nor
is there a right of couples in same sex unions to marry. One cannot invent a meaning
of sexuality to suit one's own wishes or tastes. Marriage is a union of one man
and one woman to the exclusion of all others. All Catholic politicians,
including the Prime Minister, would do well to imitate the example of St. Thomas
More, who by his life and death taught that man cannot be separated from God,
nor politics from morality. In him, there was no sign of a split between faith
and culture, between timeless principles and daily life, but rather a convergence
of political commitment. While serving all, More knew well how to serve his king,
that is the state, but above all wanted to serve God - "The king's good servant,
but God's first." Wishing you all the best, I remain, Sincerely
yours in Christ, F. B. Henry Bishop of Calgary. ### Life
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