Sep 4, 2008
(Yes, this article has to do with economics)
Recently, my wife and I went to visit some relatives of hers who are generally Catholic, and some of those are seriously practicing Catholics. One of the latter said that she was in favor of Obama, the radically pro-abortion candidate; the one who also voted against the prohibition of partial-birth abortion, perhaps the most barbaric procedure done in the recent West.
So, how can this relative, and so many other rank-and-file Catholics, support radically pro-abortion candidates? Well, excuses abound. One of the most commonly heard is the one about not being a one-issue voter. But abortion is different than whether we should put this million dollars into road construction or into Medicare. This is because those kinds of issues are prudential, and different people can have differing views on these, both of which are moral.
When I was in Catholic grammar school, I learned, and again many more times, that one is not permitted to perform an evil act, even if it would save the whole world. The fact that abortion is clearly evil has been explained in countless Church pronouncements and written about by numerous theologians. The bishops themselves have issued statements and booklets like Faithful Citizenship, which explain the moral obligations of Catholic citizens rather well. But much of this presumes that the faithful actually read. The people in my true example read only regular newspapers. To my knowledge, they never have even brought home a diocesan newspaper. The only books in the house are on the subject of music. This means that the teaching of the Church on abortion must come from the pulpit. Ordinary Catholics must be told what to do, becausey the do not read!