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Posts Tagged ‘Conscience’

When it comes to our conscience we need to ask God for guidance.  We need to do some deep soul-searching as to what is right and wrong.  We need to ask ourselves questions such as:

Is it right to intentionally prevent life from being formed, from being created?

Is it right to use contraception just so you can have sex with whom and at any time you wish?

Is it right to murder your offspring – via abortion – just to cover up for consequences brought on by your promiscuous behavior?

The answers related to issues of sexual morality become complex when women’s health issues come to bear such as excessive menstruation accompanied by severe pain, endometriosis, polycystic ovary syndrome, and other problems associated with ovarian cysts.

From Humanae Vitae:

15. On the other hand, the Church does not consider at all illicit the use of those therapeutic means necessary to cure bodily diseases, even if a foreseeable impediment to procreation should result there from—provided such impediment is not directly intended for any motive whatsoever. (19)

Question:  If a woman who is married uses Low-Ogestrel®  for endometriosis and the hitherto infertile married couple continues to be sexually active during the period of time when she takes a pill that is usually used by others for birth control would that be licit under the principle enunciated in paragraph 15 of Humane Vitae?

What of the danger of breakthrough ovulations that could become fertilized but are unable to implant due to the effect of the medication?  Would that situation fall under the principle of double effect?

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This video highlights that the cornerstone of the rights and our most cherished freedoms  - the Constitution – is under attack more pervasively than ever, openly being targeted by the Obama administration.  This is the first time in American history that our constitutional rights have been put in as grave jeopardy as they are now.  One of these most cherished rights is the right to religious freedom and the Obama admin is trying to nullify these rights which are guaranteed by our Creator, specifically the right for Catholics to believe and actively live out the tenets of the Catholic Church, by using coercion to force the faithful to abandon our non-negotiable doctrinal beliefs effectively saying to hell with your conscience.

This Catholic political ad promotes pro-life values such as refraining from voting for those politicians which support abortion and euthanasia which are in accordance with Catholic precepts.  The video does not focus on those issues where a Catholic may use their prudential judgement, such as how we assist the poor whether we believe the private sector or government does it best, environmental concerns, immigration policy or those facets which involve war.  These matters are not obligatory so therefore these issues should not be allowed to carry undue weight when considering whether to for vote for a particular candidate at the expense of the non-negotiable issue of life.   Unfortunately, we have laity these days who treat matters of prudential judgement as if they were doctrine and vice versa.

Question: How could any Catholic morally justify voting for Obama, the Democratic candidate, when his administration has consistently attacked the Catholic Church, and is threatening to undermine Her core beliefs via the HHS mandate, and when he is the most pro-abortion president in the history of our Republic who supports gay “marriage”,  and has been thumbing his nose at the Constitution at every turn?   Wouldn’t a vote for Obama be a vote against the Catholic Church?  Our rights are crumbling from the inside out due to policies being initiated by the Obama administration, just as Alexis de Toqueville warned this nation to avoid so many years ago, so how any person of sound mind but especially Catholics of conscience could possibly think that it is morally licit to vote for Obama (or any Democrat) is beyond me.

If Catholics can actually justify in their minds that it is okay to vote for Obama when he supports unjust laws, pure unadulterated evil, and is openly attacking the Church then what we have is a sad state of affairs regarding the Church my friends.  I wonder if these people would have justified voting for a certain WWII German Chancellor because he was a friend to organized labor, being the candidate of the National Socialist German Worker’s Party?   Would they have been “Personally Opposed But” about the Final Solution?

Here in America the systematic slaughter of unborn babies has by far surpassed the number of people who were killed during the Holocaust.  Even with the knowledge of that fact Catholics keep on voting for Democrat candidates who support the murder of innocent human beings.  Many citizens treat abortion as a side issue, as almost nonexistent since they are unable to see and tangibly touch these human beings in the physical here and now since they are hidden away within another human’s body but instead they give the visible,tangible poor much more consideration when they step into that voting booth.  Since quite a few Catholics today have followed a moral relativistic Hear No Evil See No Evil mentality I wonder had these same people been alive during the 1930′s and 1940′s would they have ignored those Holocaust victims who were also hidden away from public viewing?

TO ALL CITIZENS, ESPECIALLY CATHOLICS: Are you going to sit idly by and allow our sacred rights to drift off into the sunset, or even worse vote for the Party of Death, the tyrannical anti-freedom party, the party which has displayed anti-Catholic bigotry through their various policies or are you going to be a light in this period of darkness, a soldier in St. Michael the Archangel’s army and stand up for the Catholic Church with all of Her goodness stand up to the test of fire?

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H/T XT3.com 

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The issue is not birth control.  Women have access to birth control.  There is no law stopping women from being able to obtain birth control. The issue is a matter of religious liberty and the Obama administration violating people of faith’s religious freedom.  The HHS mandate is unconstitutional. We need a new President and for the GOP to take control of the Senate so people of faith are able to live out their beliefs in their everyday lives.  We need a president who will not force institutions and people of faith to violate their consciences.

Some conservatives may find it odd that I included Fox News Sunday under the umbrella of mainstream media but since Chris Wallace who hosts Fox News Sunday seems to be running with the MSM’s narrative on the HHS mandate I classified him and his show as being apart of the Mainstream Media.

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The past few days I have been sick and am so sorry that I haven’t made my blog rounds in recent days.  I felt better today so Kevin and I took the opportunity to travel to Steubenville, OH (about a 45 minute drive from where we live) to attend a Rick Santorum rally.  I had been wanting to see him in person so it was awesome to be able to see Rick today.  The place where he was speaking was packed with lots of people – at least 500 people were in attendance.  What was really cool though, is that I was able to shake his hand.  Since I am sorta height challenged my sweet hubby recorded all the video footage of Santorum’s speech.  I had a little bit of trouble with YouTube so I will post the videos of the rally tomorrow.  God must have paved the way, granted me temporary healing or something, because now I feel almost as horrible as I did yesterday during the day.

It is almost the beginning of Lent.  We are supposed to fast on Ash Wednesday and avoid eating meat on both Ash Wednesday and all Fridays during Lent.  I asked my husband if he knew the reason behind these traditions, or where they were derived.  He pointed me to the writings of the Early Church Fathers called The Didache.  Here is a passage from the Didache:

Chapter 8. Fasting and Prayer (the Lord’s Prayer). But let not your fasts be with the hypocrites, for they fast on the second and fifth day of the week. Rather, fast on the fourth day and the Preparation (Friday). Do not pray like the hypocrites, but rather as the Lord commanded in His Gospel, like this:

Our Father who art in heaven, hallowed be Thy name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done on earth, as it is in heaven. Give us today our daily (needful) bread, and forgive us our debt as we also forgive our debtors. And bring us not into temptation, but deliver us from the evil one (or, evil); for Thine is the power and the glory for ever..

Pray this three times each day.

 

Here is a prayer from St. Albert the Great on Conscience:

O Lord Jesus Christ, Who seekest those who stray and receivest them when returning, make me approach to Thee through the frequent hearing of They Word, lest I sin against my neighbor by the blindness of human judgement, through the austerity of false justice, through comparing his inferior status, through too much trust in my merits or through ignorance of the Divine Judgement. Guide me to search diligently each corner of my conscience lest the flesh dominate the spirit.

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H/T American Freedom 

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The First Amendment  has a quasi-sacred status in the minds of most Americans because that is the amendment that guarantees freedom of speech and freedom of the press.  On that note, it guarantees the protected status of what I am doing right now in this blog.  This tendency to imagine that the First Amendment is the product of divine inspiration in nearly the same sense if not degree as the Bible is even more prevalent in those who lean toward Libertarianism.  The latter are sometimes tempted to see the U.S. Constitution, and even more so its Bill of Rights (the first ten amendments), especially the First and Second, as akin to holy writ.  For some of us, the First Amendment is the more revered of the two, but not because of the liberty it upholds in the sphere of political speech, but because the first freedom it supports is not that of speech or the press, but the free exercise of religion.

What most people do not know is that we owe the freedom of religion we enjoy here in this constitutional republic in no small part to the efforts of Catholic, most especially Charles Carroll of Carrolton, the only Catholic signer of the Declaration of Independence.   He was a delegate from Maryland, which, of the thirteen original colonies, was the only nominally Catholic one – indeed, the other delegates from Maryland were all Episcopalians.

Prior to his being sent to the Continental Congress, Carroll was elected by the citizens of Annapolis and Anne Arundel County to serve in the Annapolis Convention.  Also known as “The Association of Freemen of Maryland”, it was one of several comittees of correspondence that formed throughout he colonies in reaction to the British cracktown following the Boston Tea Party.   Carroll, along with half a dozen other Catholics in this colonial American anticipation of the Tea Party Movement, had to overcome a great deal of prejudice because of his faith.  Despite his election he was denied an official seat at the assembly because of his Catholicism.   At this time Maryland was vacillating in its support of the colonial resistance, but Carroll never wavered.   When, in January 11, 1776  the convention in Maryland ordered her delegates in Philadelphia  ”to disavow in the most solemn manner, all design in the colonies for independence”, Carroll vigorously protested the move and continued to argue passionately in favor of open revolt.   Carroll’s arguments eventually turned the tide and Maryland changed is standing order to “”to vote in declaring the United States free and independent states.” 1

In February of that year, Charles Carroll, along with his cousin John, a Catholic priest who later became the Archbishop of Baltimore, and Samuel Chase, had been chosen to attempt to secure an alliance between the colonies and Canada.  Despite their lack of success, they were withdrawn in late June and Chase was immediately sent back to Philadelphia, as Maryland was about to change its position and vote in favor of independence.   When July 4, 1776 rolled around, it was determined that, because of his unwavering support for American independence Charles Carroll was primarily responsible for Maryland’s change in their official position, the colony would send him, albeit late by that time, to the Continental Congress.  Though it was too late for him to vote, he was just in time to become the last signer of the document declaring America independent of the British crown.

Charles Carroll knew firsthand and from bitter experience that Catholics in America would continue to be subject to official discrimination and marginalization as long as religious bigotry remained a legally accepted practice.   As long as religious oaths and tests for office remained legal, barring Catholics such as him, as a general rule, from participating in the political process, this country, which Carroll loved more than it loved him, would never be free regardless of whether it achieved independence from England or not.  For this reason Carroll was a great champion of religious liberty, easily the most vocal Catholic of his time to demand this basic freedom that we now take for granted.

When Carroll signed the Declaration of Independence, he saw it as a move toward general religious liberty, though admittedly he initially would only argue that such liberty should be applied to all Christians, not all members of all religions.

Charles Carroll was the most significant Catholic proponent of general toleration and religious liberty.  In 1774 he defended the rights of Catholics to speak out on political matters in Maryland and protested the irrational system that made religious affiliation a civil disability.   In 1776 he helped write the Maryland state constitution which provided for religious liberty, but only for Christians.

Charles Carroll also signed the Declaration of Independence, an act which he later viewed as the first step in a movement toward universal religious liberty.   He told a friend in 1829 that, when he signed that document, he had in view, “not only our independence of England, but the toleration of all sects, professing the Christian Religion, and communicating to them all great rights.” 2

Charles Carroll, his other cousin Daniel Carroll (Father John’s younger brother), and another Catholic Thomas Fitzsimmons, contributed to the eventually successful effort to make the recognition of liberty of conscience the respected civil right and to codify it into the new Bill of Rights.    It was an important part of their vision that religious liberty would be the very first freedom mentioned in the First Amendment, right at the beginning of the Bill of Rights.  Not very long after, in 1806, another Catholic layman by the name of Francis Cooper, a Jeffersonian Republican, provided a strong early test of the First Amendment’s guarantee of religious freedom for the benefit of Catholic holders of political offices in the new republic.  Elected to the state assembly in New York which required its office holders to take a constitutional oath of office which would have required him to renounce foreign allegiance “in all matters ecclesiastical as well as civil”, Cooper refused to take the oath as it would have violated his conscience by requiring him to deny his alleigance as a Catholic to the pope.  As Catholic allegiance to the bishop of Rome was understood to be a spiritual rather than a political matter, Cooper’s fellow parishioners in St. Peter’s Catholic Church in New York City (the oldest Roman Catholic parish and the Mother Church of Catholic New York, one of whose parishioners was the then newly converted former Episcopalian Elizabeth Ann Seton, our first American Catholic saint) signed the petition to remove that clause from the oath on grounds that it violated the First Amendment of the new Constitution of the United States.  The petition succeeded and the First Amendment passed its first significant test, again thanks to Catholics.

Recently I found myself in an email discussion with Joe Hargrave, a fellow Catholic blogger (Non Nobis, The American Catholic) who is an even stronger Traditionalist than I am, indeed very much so, and who could not refrain from spewing the most hostile derogatory adjectives about the Second Vatican Council and all it wrought in the Catholic Church.  He is smarter and more informed than I, and this exchange threw me into a tail-spin, resulting in an acute crisis of faith on my part.   By the grace of God I hope and believe that I am over the worst of it now, but it has prompted me to reconsider some very basic foundational belief structures I have held for as long as I can remember, both as a Catholic and an American, and I will share one of the issues with you now.

One of the major problems he had with Vatican II could be found in Dignitatis Humanae and its embrace of the “heretical” doctrines of religious liberty and liberty of conscience, ideas which he understood as infallibly and eternally condemned by Pius IX in the Syllabus of Errors attached to the encyclical Quanta Cura.  That was far from the only issue raised by him that I felt an urgent need to address for myself, but he considered it his chief doctrinal objection to the validity of Vatican II as a genuine Council of the Catholic Church.  As I looked into the issue further, I found that he was far from alone in this radical Traditionalist view of the Vatican II affirmation of religious liberty as being the principle sign that it was not a valid Council of the Catholic Church.

As an American Catholic, I always took the religious liberty we enjoy in this country as something to be greatly esteemed, even celebrated.  I have known for decades that true religious freedom is not the rule, but the exception, in this world, and that governments often presume a prerogative to subject their citizens to coercion in matters of religious belief and practice.  I also knew that the Catholic Church, in her history, has employed  such measures, sometimes in very ugly ways, and not with any divine guarantees against making grave, catastrophic mistakes in this area, either (the martyrdom of Joan of Arc comes to mind).    But I never suspected that this history was not due to the tendency to sin of fallen humans in the Church but rather due to faithful adherence to an eternal, unchangable teaching of the Catholic Church that the freedom of a human being to seek the truth and follow it wherever it led his or her conscience was not a true right — that it is “not liberty but license.”

It seems like common sense to me that if coercion is routinely used in matters of religion and religious conscience, because human beings have no right whatsoever, on any level, to be spared such a noxious use of force against them,  it will not only be used against false religions.  When the force of law is used to pressure people to conform to the official religion of the state, there is no guarantee that only non-Catholics will suffer violence against their consciences.   Quite the contrary.  The Devil hates the Catholic Church and will happily move Caesar to start throwing Her children to the lions again on the slightest pretext if God allows him to.  If the Church did not recognize that human beings have the right to seek the truth to the best of their ability using an uncompelled faculty of reason and unforced conscience, then why should the world recognize that right for Catholics?   The Church would be providing the perfect excuse for those in league with the Devil to begin watering the ground with the blood of the faithful.  They could even use the same legal structures against Catholics that had been put in place by Catholic soveriegns  to require non-Catholics to convert to the True Religion.

What seems like common sense to me also appealed to the common sense of Charles Carroll, who said that official intolerance in matters of religion could only produce “martyrs and hypocrites,” but certainly no true Christians.  Catholics should be especially sensitive to this, even more especially here in America , a nation with an ugly history of official, government encouraged anti-Catholic bigotry.   Prejudice against Catholics, is, of course, from the Devil, but it does not appear in a vacuum.  It is usually inspired by the memory of past abuses on the part of Catholic authorities against non-Catholics.  The Carroll family had to leave England because England was martyring Catholics, and Catholics didnot have the freedom to profess their faith and worship in public without fear of being murdered.   Why was England so hard on Catholics?  Just because Henry VIII wasn’t allowed to divorce and re-marry?  No, that was not the source of the rage that caused the ground to run red with Catholic blood.  The rage was nurtured in the memory of English royalty, which had a tendency to take it personally when popes such as  Paul IV (also known as the author of the papal bull Cum Nimis Absurdum, by which he established the Roman ghettoes for Jews living in the papal states and ordered that they should wear pointed yellow hats in public and attend Catholic sermons on their sabbath) and Pius V (Regnans in Excelsis) interfered with the rule of Elizabeth I.

…so keenly alive were both Parliament and people to the memory of the Smithfield fires of the Bloody Mary and the Papal Bishops, that they sought to guard against the recurrence of such a danger, by a rigorous exclusion of all Roman clergy from the kingdom of England. The English people had not forgotten that only seventy- three years before, Pope Paul the Fourth forbade Elizabeth to ascend the throne of England until she submitted her pretensions to him, and declared England to be a fief of the Apostolic See. They still remembered that Pius the Fifth, eleven years later, issued a bull against Elizabeth when she had been eleven years England’s glorious Queen, declaring her a “pretended Queen of England,” absolving all her subjects from allegiance to her, and cursing all who adhered to her as excommunicate heretics. Only fifty years before, the ”invincible” Armada of Spain, with the blessing of the Pope, hovered around the shores of England, commissioned by the Pastor Pastorum to convert by the gentle appliances of rack and stake the heretic English to the true faith, and win them back to the loving embrace of the Holy Father. Only thirty years before, the Gunpowder Plot sought to destroy the government by blowing up King, Lords and Commons, when assembled in Parliament. These events all conspired to beget in the English nation such an intense hatred to Roman Catholicism, as dangerous to the peace and liberty of tlie realm, that Parliament, under Elizabeth and James, passed severe repressive laws against the public exercise of the Roman Catholic religion, forbade the entrance of Romish priests within the kingdom, and compelled the English Romanist to attend the public worship of the English Church, under the penalty of twenty pounds per month. Such was the state of the public mind •- of the nation, and such were the laws of England, at the time Lord Baltimore obtained his charter for the territory of Maryland from King Charles. 3

The point of the above is that religious intolerance always begets more religious intolerance.  It is collossally imprudent, no matter whether it is doctinally permissible.  It offends the conscience of people who love liberty, and for now I cannot help but to add that this is rightly so.

I have yet to fully examine both Dignitatis Humanae and Quanta Cura as well as the latter’s attached Syllabus of Errors, so I cannot say with the confidence that I would wish to that Mr.  Hargrave and the other Traditionalists are as wrong as I strongly suspect they are.  When I have read those documents more fully and consulted with others wiser than myself, I will publish a follow-up to this article here in this blog.  For now I merely offer my suspicion that neither document represents infallible Church teaching

I cannot say with any authority what the Catholic Church should teach on the matter of religious tolerance, freedom of conscience, and the right of the state to use force against the latter, but I know where my heart lies.  Until some solemn duty causes me, to my great grief, to abjure it, I affirm freedom.  I affirm liberty.  I affirm conscience and the free search of the individual for the truth without fear that such a search will lead where the state would not wish him to go.  And I  thank my Catholic brethren who I hope are  in heaven for their instrumental role in providing legal protection for my freedom to search diligently for the truth in response to the challenge posed to me by my new friend Joe Hargrave, even if his respect for that same freedom is compromised by his interpretation of papal documents that touch on the subject.  I had enough to worry about that I could eventually lose my soul.   My suffering would certainly have been intolerable if I had to worry that my honest conclusions could have hastened the damnation I feared by putting me in immediate danger of death at the hands of the state for a capital crime, since that is what heresy has been for most of the history of Christendom in the West.

End Notes

1 Hagerty, James. ”Charles Carroll of Carrollton.” The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 3. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1908.17 May 2011 <http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03379c.htm&gt;.

2 Lee, Francis Graham.  All Imaginable Liberty: The Religious Liberty Clauses of the First Amendment.   University Press of America 1995

3  Brown, Benjamin B.F., Early Religious History of Maryland: “Maryland Not A Roman Catholic Colony:  Religious Toleration Not  An Act of Roman Catholic Legislation” , 1876

Note: Where not specifically cited, facts are drawn liberally from the Catholic Encyclopedia and Wikipedia.

					

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