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"Conscience and
Catholic Voting"
Edward Mechmann, the
Assistant Director of the Family Life/Respect
Life Office, will be giving a presentation on
voting with an informed Catholic conscience at
various places in the Archdiocese:
-
October 9 at 7:00
at St.
Paul's Church in Yonkers
-
October 15 at 7:30
at the
Knights of Columbus Hall (389 Broadway), St. Joseph's in
Kingston
-
October 21 at 7:00
at Holy
Rosary Church in the Bronx
-
October 27 at 7:30
at Immaculate Conception Church in Tuckahoe
-
October 30 at 7:30
at St.
John and Mary Church in Chappaqua
For a flyer advertising
these talks, click
here.

"Voter Guides"
During the election
season, many people are interested in receiving
information about the candidates and their
positions, for example through a "Voter Guide"
that lists the candidates' position on various
issues.
Many such guides are produced, by various
organizations, and we are
frequently asked if they may be distributed
through our parishes.
The bishops of the
United States, in their document
Forming Consciences for Faithful
Citizenship, said "We encourage
Catholics to seek those resources that are
authorized by their own bishops, their state
Catholic conferences, and the United States
Conference of Catholic Bishops."
At this time,
approval has not been given by the Archdiocese
of New York for the distribution of any "Voter
Guide" prepared by outside organizations.
At the same
time, Catholics should be informing themselves
about the positions of the Church on important
public policy issues. Check
here
for how to form your conscience for voting, and
here for
ways to inform yourself on the issues.

Cardinal's Statement on Remarks by Public
Officials
In response to remarks made by Speaker of the
House Nancy Pelosi misrepresenting the Church's
teaching on abortion and respect for human life, Cardinal Egan has issued a
statement.
Many other bishops have
responded to these remarks, and similar remarks
by Senator Joseph Biden. For more
information:
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The
Church's Non-Negotiables
In an
address to members of the European Parliament
(March 2006), Pope Benedict XVI laid out
the public policy priorities for the
Church:
As far as the
Catholic Church is concerned, the principal
focus of her interventions in the public
arena is the protection and promotion of the
dignity of the person, and she is thereby
consciously drawing particular attention to
principles which are not negotiable. Among
these the following emerge clearly today:
* protection of life in all its stages, from
the first moment of conception until natural
death;
* recognition and promotion of the natural
structure of the family--as a union between
a man and a woman based on marriage--and its
defense from attempts to make it juridically
equivalent to radically different forms of
union which in reality harm it and
contribute to its destabilization, obscuring
its particular character and its
irreplaceable social role;
* the protection of the right of parents to
educate their children.
In his great
encyclical letter,
The Gospel of Life, Pope John Paul II said:
"It is impossible to further the common
good without acknowledging and defending the
right to life, upon which all the other
inalienable rights of individuals are
founded and from which they develop."
In their statement
Living the Gospel of Life, the Bishops of
the United States said:
Opposition to abortion and euthanasia
does not excuse indifference to those who
suffer from poverty, violence and injustice.
Any politics of human life must work to
resist the violence of war and the scandal
of capital punishment. Any politics of human
dignity must seriously address issues of
racism, poverty, hunger, employment,
education, housing, and health care.
Therefore, Catholics should eagerly involve
themselves as advocates for the weak and
marginalized in all these areas. Catholic
public officials are obliged to address each
of these issues as they seek to build
consistent policies which promote respect
for the human person at all stages of life.
But being 'right' in such matters can never
excuse a wrong choice regarding direct
attacks on innocent human life.
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Forming
Conscience for Voting
The Bishops of New
York State have issued a statement "Our
Cherished Right, Our Solemn Duty", to help
Catholics form their consciences in preparation
for the election. It can be downloaded
from the New York State Catholic Conference
website
here, and may be distributed in our
parishes. In this statement, the Bishops
say:
The
inalienable right to life of every innocent
human person outweighs other concerns where
Catholics may use prudential judgment, such
as how best to meet the needs of the poor or
to increase access to health care for all.
In their newly-issued document for the
2008 elections,
Forming Consciences for Faithful
Citizenship, the Bishops of the
United States offer the following
guidance on making a morally responsible
voting decision:
34. Catholics often face difficult
choices about how to vote. This is why
it is so important to vote according to
a well-formed conscience that perceives
the proper relationship among moral
goods. A Catholic cannot vote for a
candidate who takes a position in favor
of an intrinsic evil, such as abortion
or racism, if the voter's intent is to
support that position. In such cases a
Catholic would be guilty of formal
cooperation in grave evil. At the same
time, a voter should not use a
candidate's opposition to an intrinsic
evil to justify indifference or
inattentiveness to other important moral
issues involving human life and dignity.
35. There may be times when a Catholic
who rejects a candidate's unacceptable
position may decide to vote for that
candidate for other morally grave
reasons. Voting in this way would be
permissible only for truly grave moral
reasons, not to advance narrow interests
or partisan preferences or to ignore a
fundamental moral evil.
36. When all candidates hold a position
in favor of an intrinsic evil, the
conscientious voter faces a dilemma. The
voter may decide to take the
extraordinary step of not voting for any
candidate or, after careful
deliberation, may decide to vote for the
candidate deemed less likely to advance
such a morally flawed position and more
likely to pursue other authentic human
goods.
37. In making these decisions, it is
essential for Catholics to be guided by
a well-formed conscience that recognizes
that all issues do not carry the same
moral weight and that the moral
obligation to oppose intrinsically evil
acts has a special claim on our
consciences and our actions. These
decisions should take into account a
candidate’s commitments, character,
integrity, and ability to influence a
given issue. In the end, this is a
decision to be made by each Catholic
guided by a conscience formed by
Catholic moral teaching.
38. It is important to be clear that
the political choices faced by citizens
not only have an impact on general peace
and prosperity but also may affect the
individual’s salvation. Similarly,
the kinds of laws and policies supported
by public officials affect their
spiritual well-being...
40. The consistent ethic of life
provides a moral framework for
principled Catholic engagement in
political life and, rightly understood,
neither treats all issues as morally
equivalent nor reduces Catholic teaching
to one or two issues. It anchors the
Catholic commitment to defend human
life, from conception until natural
death, in the fundamental moral
obligation to respect the dignity of
every person as a child of God. It
unites us as a “people of life and for
life” (Evangelium Vitae, no. 6) pledged
to build what Pope John Paul II called a
“culture of life” (Evangelium Vitae, no.
77). This culture of life begins with
the preeminent obligation to protect
innocent life from direct attack and
extends to defending life whenever it is
threatened or diminished.
41. Catholic voters should use the
framework of Catholic teaching to
examine candidates’ positions on issues
affecting human life and dignity as well
as issues of justice and peace, and they
should consider candidates’ integrity,
philosophy, and performance. It is
important for all citizens “to see
beyond party politics, to analyze
campaign rhetoric critically, and to
choose their political leaders according
to principle, not party affiliation or
mere self interest” (Living the Gospel of
Life, no. 33).
42. As Catholics we are not
single-issue voters. A candidate’s
position on a single issue is not
sufficient to guarantee a voter’s
support. Yet a candidate’s position on a
single issue that involves an intrinsic
evil, such as support for legal abortion
or the promotion of racism, may
legitimately lead a voter to disqualify
a candidate from receiving support.
The USCCB has also published a very useful
article on forming conscience for the voting
decision. It and other valuable
resources on Faithful Citizenship can be downloaded
here.
Other resources on
Catholics and Voting:
All of these resources may be distributed in the
parishes to educate our Catholic voters.
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Information on Issues
The best and most user-friendly summary of
the Church's positions on issues of interest can
be found in the document
Forming Consciences for Faithful
Citizenship. Resources are
also available, such as bulletin inserts,
issue-related flyers, etc.
For more detailed information on the position of the United
States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) and the
New York State Catholic Conference on various
issues on interest, check out these links:
Abortion
Stem Cell Research
and Cloning
Marriage
Climate Change
Criminal Justice
Education
Health Care
Immigration
Poverty
Torture
War in Iraq
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Links to
Election Resources
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Prayer Resources
The USCCB has suggested that Catholics pray a
novena in anticipation of the November Election.
For more information, go
here.
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