Other Issues with Grave Moral Dimensions

It seems trite to say that this is the most important election of our lifetime. Why is this such an unusually important election? It can only be because the voters are confronted with making a choice on issues with serious consequences for the nation and generations to come.

Speaking to these issues, the following points of Catholic teaching and facts surrounding each issue will hopefully broaden the moral debate surrounding this year’s choices:

War and Peace

The church has set conditions for a just war which were not considered in the runup to the war of choice in Iraq . Both the Pope, personally and consistently, and the U.S. bishops opposed this war. They strongly urgedinternational approaches and advocated that the United Nations play a key role in resolving the conflict.


Meeting Human Needs

In addition to the 25 th chapter of Matthew’s gospel which unequivocally advocates care for the least among us, U.S. Catholics are guided by their bishops who write: “Our faith reflects God’s special concern for the poor and vulnerable and calls us to make their needs our first priority in public life.” The bishops support “policies that create jobs for all who can work” with “pay which reflects a living wage,” and the right of workers to organize in unions.


Health Care

Through orders of religious women, the Catholic Church has a long history of service in health care. In their 2003 letter, Faithful Citizenship, the U.S. Bishops said "affordable and accessible health care is an essential safeguard of human life, a fundamental human right and an urgent national priority. We need to reform the nation's health care system, and this reform must be rooted in values that respect human dignity, protect human life, and meet the needs of the poor and uninsured."

A political party may play political games. The Catholic Church should not. Catholics are free, and morally obliged, to vote responsibly--to inform themselves and to follow their consciences. All Catholic organizations and spokespersons would do well to follow the advice of the U.S. Bishops in their November 2003 letter, Faithful Citizenship:

"Catholics are urged to vote for candidates "based on the full range of issues, as well as on a candidate's personal integrity , philosophy and performance," remembering that "Catholic moral philosophy does not easily fit the ideologies of the 'right' or 'left' . nor the platform of any party.. Our responsibility is to measure all candidates, policies, parties and platforms by how they protect human life, dignity and the rights of the human person, whether they protect the poor and the vulnerable and advance the common good."

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“Most issues are moral issues. If we take moral issues seriously, we need to vote accordingly.”

– Bishop Thomas Gumbleton
Caucus Co-chair



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