Jul 15, 2008
Forming Consciences for Faithful Citizenship is the most recent update of a document prepared and presented during the previous two election cycles by the Catholic bishops of the United States. The latest version - published last November, just a year before the upcoming presidential election - constitutes a fine synthesis of the principles which the Catholic Church offers to all comers, but particularly to Catholics, who take seriously their Christian vocation and seek to exercise their citizenship in the voting booth.
The document contains three parts. Part II is a summary of policy positions of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) on issues relating to human life, family life, social justice and global solidarity. Part III, entitled, "Goals for Political Life: Challenges for Citizens, Candidates, and Public Officials," is a bulleted list of ten suggested policy goals which the bishops hope will enable "voters and candidates to act on ethical principles rather than particular interests and partisan allegiances." These include protecting the unborn, dissuading the nation from resorting to violence of any kind as a solution to problems, and defining marriage as the permanent and stable union between one man and one woman, among others.
But it is for Part I that the bishops deserve hearty kudos.
This is the doctrinal part of the document that lays down the principles - part of the Church's patrimony of moral and social teaching - on which Parts II and III are based. Central to Part I is the seminal notion of conscience - formation. The bishops laudably point out in no uncertain terms that the first duty of a politically responsible Christian is, first and foremost, to inform his or her conscience with the principles contained in both the natural moral law and divinely revealed law. "The work for justice requires that the mind and the heart of Catholics be educated and formed to know and practice the whole faith," affirm the bishops. The document consequently "highlights the role of the Church in the formation of conscience, and the corresponding moral responsibility of each Catholic to hear, receive, and act upon the Church's teaching in the lifelong task of forming his or her own conscience" (nn. 4-5).