INTRODUCTION
CATHOLICS AND WHITE EVANGELICALS TOGETHER FOR TRUMP
The great expectations of progress for the
anti-abortion movement under a Donald Trump
presidency indicates why Roman Catholics and white
Evangelicals supported his presidential candidacy,
and continue to support him in spite of his gross
deficiencies of character and glaring unfitness for
the office. Opposition to abortion is the cement
that binds Catholics and white Evangelicals together
in the political arena:
Trump and the Demise of the Catholic Single-Issue
Voter (Petra Turner)
Donald Trump’s emergence as the Republicans’
presumptive nominee has profound consequences for
those Catholics who have aligned their vote with
socially conservative concerns, especially the
issues of gay marriage and abortion. These Catholics
have also traditionally had a certain devotion to
the pope. With Trump, however, they are faced with a
candidate who, while ostensibly adhering to socially
conservative positions, has no specific agenda to
effect the change conservative Catholics desire. Add
this to the recent spat between Trump and Pope
Francis over immigration, and conservative Catholics
have a difficult choice before them come November.
A Brief History
In order to understand this
conundrum, it is important to understand that since
Roe v. Wade in 1973, the pro-life position has
served as the primary issue that has motivated many
socially conservative Christians to vote. In 1968
the United States Catholic Conference (USCC) Family
Life Bureau organized the National Right to Life
Committee. Formally incorporated as an independent
organization in 1973, the NRLC sought to appeal
beyond its Catholic membership, and to work at the
local and national levels on behalf of the unborn
right to life. In the 1970s, the Christian Right,
made up primarily of white evangelical Protestants,
began mobilizing, and by the end of the decade had
turned its focus to the abortion issue, as well. The
two movements, Catholic and evangelical, did not
really begin to work together until the 1980s.
The emergence of the pro-life cause did make
abortion a key issue in the 1980 presidential
election, however. Catholics, who had in the 1950s
and 60s largely voted for Democrats, began a move
toward the Republicans in the 1970s, and at the same
time southern evangelical Protestants began to drift
away from the Democrats, as well.
The adoption of a pro-life
position in the 1980 Republican platform cemented
the political allegiances of a large number of
socially conservative Catholics and evangelical
Protestants.
(Underscored emphasis added.)
A RIGHTEOUS ALLIANCE OR AN UNHOLY MOTIVATION?
This "pro-life position" enabled the publication
Christian Today to confidently predict the
[white] Evangelical vote in the 2016 election.
Hillary Clinton never had a chance with this bloc of
voters:
Abortion: How it became the issue that will sink
Clinton for evangelicals
Evangelicals – and white
evangelicals in particular – are planning to vote
for Donald Trump over Hillary Clinton in droves.
Both candidates suffer from low approval and
'likeability' ratings and many evangelicals are
planning to abstain or vote for a third candidate as
a protest. But in Clinton's case, the issue that
makes her absolutely unelectable is that she is
pro-choice – in favour of a woman's more or less
unrestricted right to choose to abort her baby.
For most US evangelicals and
Roman Catholics, life begins at conception. This is
not a view evangelicals have always held – the
Southern Baptist Convention in 1971 called for
legislation to allow abortion under conditions such
as rape, incest, severe foetal deformity, or damage
to the emotional, mental, and physical health of the
mother. It later expressed regret for its
stance. After the crucial Roe v Wade ruling in 1973
that legalised abortion, even such a doughty
conservative as Walter Criswell welcomed it, saying:
"I have always felt that it was only after a child
was born and had a life separate from its mother
that it became an individual person," he said, "and
it has always, therefore, seemed to me that what is
best for the mother and for the future should be
allowed."
Neither is it the case that abortion has always been
a political dealbreaker for evangelicals, or decided
along party lines. Republican president Ronald
Reagan was personally pro-life but when he was
governor of California he signed into law the
Therapeutic Abortion Act to reduce the number of
back-street abortions.
But abortion became a key political battleground
with the rise of the religious right and its
ideological identification with the Republican
party. And according to Randall Balmer, a Columbia
University professor and author of Thy Kingdom Come,
this was a deliberate policy rather than a
spontaneous revulsion at the consequences of Roe v
Wade.
In his book, subtitled An Evangelical's Lament,
Balmer says most evangelical leaders did not respond
to Roe v Wade. He recalls a meeting at which one of
the founders of the Moral Majority movement, Paul
Weyrich, spoke animatedly about the formation of the
Religious Right in the late 1970s. It came about, he
said, as a result of efforts by Jimmy Carter to deny
segregationist colleges tax-exempt status. Weyrich,
corroborated by others, told Balmer conservatives
held a conference call to discuss their strategy and
find a unifying issue. "Several callers made
suggestions, and then,
according to Weyrich, a voice
on the end of one of the lines said, 'How about
abortion?' And that is how abortion was cobbled into
the political agenda of the Religious Right," says
Balmer.
There are two issues here. One is whether abortion
was cynically used by the right as a way of getting
evangelical Christians onside in a struggle for
political influence. On Balmer's evidence, it was.
But the other issue is about
the thing itself. Whatever the origins of the
abortion lobby, most evangelicals have been
convinced by the argument that life begins at
conception and that abortion is, to one degree or
another, profoundly wrong. This is a line
argued passionately by campaigners such as Francis
Schaeffer, Harold Brown and C Everett Koop in the
1970s, and particularly in Koop's bombshell book
Whatever Happened to the Human Race? (1979). Their
campaigns, and Koop's book in particular, helped
persuade a generation of evangelicals that abortion
is profoundly evil – and they haven't changed their
minds. . . (Underscored
emphasis added.)
From the above history it is established out of the
mouth of the mastermind responsible for the
formation of the
Religious Right
alliance of Catholics and Evangelicals that
what brought the leadership together was not
abortion, but the threat of governmental action
against segregationist colleges. This could not be
openly acknowledged, so they had to find some other
unifying issue. It can reasonably be opined that
this was because a movement requires followers as
well as leaders. The genius of choosing abortion as
that unifying issue is demonstrated by the end
result described in the last paragraph above.
The cynical use of abortion "by the right as a way
of getting evangelical Christians onside in a
struggle for political influence" is brought into
glaring relief by the following report:
The Real Origins of the Religious Right
They’ll tell you it was abortion. Sorry, the
historical record’s clear: It was segregation.
One of the most durable myths in recent history is
that the religious right, the coalition of
conservative evangelicals and fundamentalists,
emerged as a political movement in response to the
U.S. Supreme Court’s 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling
legalizing abortion. The tale goes something like
this: Evangelicals, who had been politically
quiescent for decades, were so morally outraged by
Roe that they resolved to organize in order to
overturn it.
This myth of origins is oft repeated by the
movement’s leaders. In his 2005 book, Jerry Falwell,
the firebrand fundamentalist preacher, recounts his
distress upon reading about the ruling in the Jan.
23, 1973, edition of the Lynchburg News: “I sat
there staring at the Roe v. Wade story,” Falwell
writes, “growing more and more fearful of the
consequences of the Supreme Court’s act and
wondering why so few voices had been raised against
it.” Evangelicals, he decided, needed to organize.
Some of these anti- Roe crusaders even went so far
as to call themselves “new abolitionists,” invoking
their antebellum predecessors who had fought to
eradicate slavery.
But the abortion myth quickly collapses under
historical scrutiny. In fact, it wasn’t until 1979—a
full six years after Roe—that evangelical leaders,
at the behest of conservative activist Paul Weyrich,
seized on abortion not for moral reasons, but as a
rallying-cry to deny President Jimmy Carter a second
term. Why? Because the anti-abortion crusade was
more palatable than the religious right’s real
motive: protecting segregated schools. So much for
the new abolitionism. . .
So what then were the real origins of the religious
right? It turns out that the movement can trace its
political roots back to a court ruling, but not Roe
v. Wade.
In May 1969, a group of African-American parents in
Holmes County, Mississippi, sued the Treasury
Department to prevent three new whites-only K-12
private academies from securing full tax-exempt
status, arguing that their discriminatory policies
prevented them from being considered “charitable”
institutions. The schools had been founded in the
mid-1960s in response to the desegregation of public
schools set in motion by the Brown v. Board of
Education decision of 1954. In 1969, the first year
of desegregation, the number of white students
enrolled in public schools in Holmes County dropped
from 771 to 28; the following year, that number fell
to zero.
In Green v. Kennedy (David Kennedy was secretary of
the treasury at the time), decided in January 1970,
the plaintiffs won a preliminary injunction, which
denied the “segregation academies” tax-exempt status
until further review. In the meantime, the
government was solidifying its position on such
schools. Later that year, President Richard Nixon
ordered the Internal Revenue Service to enact a new
policy denying tax exemptions to all segregated
schools in the United States. Under the provisions
of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, which forbade
racial segregation and discrimination,
discriminatory schools were not—by
definition—“charitable” educational organizations,
and therefore they had no claims to tax-exempt
status; similarly, donations to such organizations
would no longer qualify as tax-deductible
contributions.
On June 30, 1971, the United States District Court
for the District of Columbia issued its ruling in
the case, now Green v. Connally (John Connally had
replaced David Kennedy as secretary of the
Treasury). The decision upheld the new IRS policy:
“Under the Internal Revenue Code, properly
construed, racially discriminatory private schools
are not entitled to the Federal tax exemption
provided for charitable, educational institutions,
and persons making gifts to such schools are not
entitled to the deductions provided in case of gifts
to charitable, educational institutions.”
Paul Weyrich, the late religious conservative
political activist and co-founder of the Heritage
Foundation, saw his opening.
In the decades following World War II, evangelicals,
especially white evangelicals in the North, had
drifted toward the Republican Party—inclined in that
direction by general Cold War anxieties, vestigial
suspicions of Catholicism and well-known evangelist
Billy Graham’s very public friendship with Dwight
Eisenhower and Richard Nixon. Despite these
predilections, though, evangelicals had largely
stayed out of the political arena, at least in any
organized way. If he could change that, Weyrich
reasoned, their large numbers would constitute a
formidable voting bloc—one that he could easily
marshal behind conservative causes.
“The new political philosophy must be defined by us
[conservatives] in moral terms, packaged in
non-religious language, and propagated throughout
the country by our new coalition,” Weyrich wrote in
the mid-1970s. “When political power is achieved,
the moral majority will have the opportunity to
re-create this great nation.” Weyrich believed that
the political possibilities of such a coalition were
unlimited. “The leadership, moral philosophy, and
workable vehicle are at hand just waiting to be
blended and activated,” he wrote. “If the moral
majority acts, results could well exceed our wildest
dreams.”But this hypothetical “moral majority” needed a
catalyst—a standard around which to rally. For
nearly two decades, Weyrich, by his own account, had
been trying out different issues, hoping one might
pique evangelical interest: pornography, prayer in
schools, the proposed Equal Rights Amendment to the
Constitution, even abortion. “I was trying to get
these people interested in those issues and I
utterly failed,” Weyrich recalled at a conference in
1990.
The Green v. Connally ruling provided a necessary
first step: It captured the attention of evangelical
leaders , especially as the IRS began sending
questionnaires to church-related “segregation
academies,” including Falwell’s own Lynchburg
Christian School, inquiring about their racial
policies. Falwell was furious. “In some states,” he
famously complained, “It’s easier to open a massage
parlor than a Christian school.”
One such school, Bob Jones University—a
fundamentalist college in Greenville, South
Carolina—was especially obdurate. The IRS had sent
its first letter to Bob Jones University in November
1970 to ascertain whether or not it discriminated on
the basis of race. The school responded defiantly:
It did not admit African Americans. . .
(Underscored emphasis added) [The entire
article is highly educational, and provides insight
into continuing current events bearing on the
fulfillment of prophecy.]
It should be self-evident that God does not work
through lies and deceptions, or racial prejudice. The foregoing lengthy
history recounts how the political union of
Catholics and Protestants was achieved by a
hypocritical use of the abortion issue. Arguably of
greater significance was and is the misapplication
of Bible texts to support the anti-abortion crusade.
It is a crusade which embraces deadly error packaged
to ensnare minds genuinely concerned about
widespread moral degeneration. Here it is worthy of
note that just as hypocrisy was involved in the
political movement,
it
is particularly deep-seated in the Church of Rome.
A DECEPTIVE TERM MASKING A DEADLY THEOLOGICAL
FALSEHOOD
The term "pro-life" is deceptive, conjuring up in
the minds of sensitive men and women a living human being
in the womb of a woman. Nevertheless, upon close
examination it is also revealing. In reality the
primary meaning of "life" in this context is not the
cluster of living cells changing and developing in
the woman's womb. It is the unbiblical dogma of an
immortal soul, with the time of "ensoulment"
determining when life begins. (Cf.
Immortality?
(SDA;)
The
origins of the doctrine of the “immortality of the
soul” (Non-denominational. N.B. Citation does not
imply support for any theology on the
hyperlinked website contrary to the theology of
Adventistlaymen.com) From the last citations, it is
obvious that belief in the immortality of the soul
is not unique to Roman Catholicism. In fact, there
is "almost universal adherence to the immortality of
the soul within contemporary Christendom" (The
immortality of the soul: Could Christianity survive
without it? (Part 1 of 2).) It has never been a
part of Seventh-day Adventist theology; and happily
there still remain some other Protestant
denominations which have resisted this false
theology.) Also, the concept of "ensoulment" is not
unique to Roman Catholicism (Cf.
The
Breath of Life: Christian Perspectives on Conception
and Ensoulment, by two Anglican essayists.) All
of this emphasizes the mountain of false theology
that confronts those who do not believe in the
immortality of the soul. It is in this environment
that the abortion controversy puts the immortality
of the soul to the front and center of the
"pro-life" movement. The activism of the Roman
Catholic Church, joined in recent decades by
Protestant Evangelicals, threatens to force
acceptance of this false doctrine by all who do not have the fortitude to
resist the word of man in opposition to the Word of
God. The contest between the Word of God and the
dictates of man is what the final battle of Armageddon is
all about, and the conflict is now building towards
its climax as the unclean spirits of Rev. 16:13-14
are busily driving the world towards the final
climactic confrontation of
Rev. 17:8, 11-14. The choice for each of us is
between the Truth of God and the lies and deceptions
of spirits of devils, and it determines whether we
receive the Seal of God or the Mark of the Beast,
which
Beast is the Roman Catholic Church. It is
therefore of profound significance that while
theories of "ensoulment" cross denominational
boundaries, it is the Church of Rome that has made
it the centerpiece of its anti-abortion crusade.
Therefore the importance of examining the theological
basis cannot be exaggerated:
THE COMPLEX PROBLEM OF ABORTION
Roman Catholic Teaching on Abortion
It seems to be almost universally assumed in public
debate that the Roman Catholic position on abortion
has always been clear, straightforward, and
historically consistent. It is indeed true that the
Roman Church has always condemned the vast majority
of abortions, but this condemnation has over the
years been made with greatly differing force, on the
basis of a variety of reasons, and with a changing
list of exceptions and qualifications.
Catholic
theologians have disputed at great length about the
moral implications of Christianity, but many of
their arguments, which have been highly influential
in determining the development of the Church’s
official doctrine, would probably now seem very
questionable to many of those who nevertheless
ascribe great authority to the current official
position. This position is that the fetus is to be
treated as a human person from the “first instant”
of conception, and that abortion is therefore
tantamount to homicide, excusable only in cases
where it is an indirect effect of medical
intervention whose direct intention is to save the
mother’s life, as in the case of the removal of a
Fallopian tube in an ectopic pregnancy, or the
removal of a cancerous uterus. We shall see that it
is far from clear whether modern Roman Catholics
should feel themselves committed to endorsing such a
doctrine.
Much of the historical Christian debate was centred
around the interpretation of Exodus 21:22-25, [Cf.
The Bible passage Exodus 21:22-25] the only
passage of obvious relevance in the Old Testament.
In the Revised Standard Version this is translated
as follows:
22 When men strive together, and hurt a
woman with child, so that there is a miscarriage,
and yet no harm follows, the one who hurt her shall
be fined, according as the woman’s husband shall lay
upon him; and he shall pay as the judges determine.
23 If any harm follows, then you shall
give life for life, 24 eye for eye, tooth
for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot, 25
burn for burn, wound for wound, stripe for stripe.
It is clear from the context that “harm” here means
harm to the woman, but in the influential Greek
Septuagint version, this passage was mistranslated
to state that “you shall give life for life” not
only where the mother dies, but also where a
“formed” fetus dies (that is, a fetus sufficiently
developed to have a recognisably human form).
Over
the centuries most prominent moral theologians (e.g.
Jerome, Augustine, Gratian, Lombard, Aquinas,
Sanchez, Liguori) accordingly drew a distinction
between the abortion of an early (“unformed”) and of
a late fetus, usually taking only the latter, at
most, to be equivalent to homicide, on the grounds
that only a “formed” fetus could be “ensouled”. The
Septuagint mistranslation may have been indirectly
influenced by the Aristotelian theory of progressive
ensoulment, which was itself to have a significant
independent impact on scholastic thought
(principally through Aquinas) after Aristotle’s
major biological writings had been translated into
Latin near the beginning of the thirteenth century.
According to Aristotle the fetus is initially
infused with a nutritive or vegetative soul, then a
sensitive or animal soul, and finally manifests a
rational or human soul at the (misleadingly named)
stage of “animation”, occurring after about 40 days
of gestation in the case of males, and 80 to 90 days
in the case of females. Like the Exodus passage from
the Septuagint, this theory was understood to imply
that early abortion is not homicide, since it does
not involve the killing of a being with a human
soul.
None of this should be taken to suggest that the
Church condoned early abortion, except in a small
number of very special cases. For early abortion was
indeed condemned, sometimes as strongly as late
abortion, but not on the grounds that it was
tantamount to homicide. The usual complaint was
instead that it was “contrary to nature”, so that
early abortion would thus be on the same level as
the supposedly fairly serious sin of contraception.
Most took the two to be roughly equivalent, though
Sanchez, for example, thought contraception to be
the more unequivocally evil, because of its
association with sexual pleasure, whereas early
abortion he took to be sometimes permissible.
It was
not until after the Second Vatican Council in 1965
that the modern distinction was clearly drawn, with
abortion at any stage, but not contraception, being
declared a “horrible crime”.
The distinction between early
and late abortion seems to have lost favour for two
principal reasons. First, medical advances began to
suggest that the development of the fetus was
gradual from conception onwards, with no sharp
discontinuity to mark the supposed event of
ensoulment. The Medico-Legal Questions (1621)
of Paolo Zacchia was particularly influential in
thus undermining the Aristotelian orthodoxy in
medical circles (and, much later, amongst
theologians), though Zacchia himself retained the
idea that late abortion was significantly more
serious than early abortion.
The second, and theologically more crucial,
objection to progressive ensoulment came in the
nineteenth century from the increasingly popular
cult of the Immaculate Conception of Mary: the
doctrine (with no biblical foundation) that Jesus’
mother was herself conceived without sin. The point
here was that the feast of the Immaculate Conception
had been finally settled in the previous century as
8th December, exactly nine months prior to the feast
of her birth on 8th September. This looked quite
illogical unless Mary’s sinless rational soul had
come into being at the time of her physical
conception, and accordingly, when Pius IX in 1854
“infallibly” proclaimed the Immaculate Conception as
a dogma of the church, he stated that Mary had been
free from sin “in the first instant of her
conception”. Consistently, it was this same Pope
who, in 1869, finally gave implicit official
endorsement to the doctrine of immediate animation,
by extending the ultimate punishment of
excommunication to all abortions, with no
distinction between early and late.
From all this it can be seen that the Roman Catholic
position on abortion has developed over a long
period subject to many influences, including the
interpretation and (mis-) translation of biblical
texts, prominent philosophical theories, the
development of biological science, many moral
judgements about related issues such as
contraception and sexual behaviour, and, not least,
consistency with theological doctrines.
A strict
Roman Catholic may be confident that the seal of
Papal Infallibility on the Immaculate Conception is
sufficient to guarantee the doctrine of immediate
animation, and therefore to demonstrate that all
abortion is homicide. But for any Christian who has
no such confidence, and in particular, for one who
denies the traditional belief in the wrongness of
contraception and the associated negative attitude
to sex, it is far from clear that the Church’s
historical debate on abortion provides any
convincing evidence for the claim that Christian
principles require opposition to abortion in
virtually all cases, let alone for the extreme Roman
Catholic view that all abortion is homicide. . .
(Underscored emphasis added.)
Notice in the above historical record that
"ensoulment" is the constant in deciding whether or
not an abortion is homicide. Although early abortion
was condemned by Rome as "contrary to nature," it
was not regarded as homicide, "since it does not
involve the killing of a being with a human soul."
Of great significance is the central contribution of
philosophy to the developing Roman Catholic
theological position. Consider the contribution of
Aristotle:
"According to Aristotle the fetus is initially
infused with a nutritive or vegetative soul, then a
sensitive or animal soul, and finally manifests a
rational or human soul . . ."
Note two passages from the essay:
(1) "First, medical advances began to suggest that
the development of the fetus was gradual from
conception onwards, with no sharp discontinuity to
mark the supposed event of ensoulment."
(2) "The second, and theologically more crucial,
objection to progressive ensoulment came in the
nineteenth century from the increasingly popular
cult of the Immaculate Conception of Mary: the
doctrine (with no biblical foundation) that Jesus’
mother was herself conceived without sin."
ON THE OFFENSIVE IN DEFENCE OF ROMAN CATHOLIC DOGMA
The facts stated in the two passages above reveal
the arbitrary setting of spurious feast dates
clashing with the theory of progressive ensoulment,
and leading to the promulgation of the blasphemous
dogma of the Immaculate Conception, absolutely
without biblical foundation (Cf.
Four
Great Marian Dogmas.) How easily are those
ensnared who abhor blasphemous Roman Catholic dogmas
and yet are either active proponents of the
anti-abortion movement or even simply assent to what
it advocates!
The role of dogma in Rome's opposition to abortion
is brought into sharp relief in the light of Pope
Pius IX's biography:
Pope Pius IX (1792-1878)
Pope Pius IX was also highly involved in reforming
church doctrine. His long time devotion to Mary led
to the establishment of the dogma of Immaculate
Conception of Mary on 8 December 1854. On 8 December
1869, Pope Pius IX opened the Vatican Counsel in the
Basilica of St. Peter in Rome. Before the Counsel
ended 8 July 1870, Pope Pius IX established the
dogma of "papal infallibility,” which states that
when speaking in terms of Church doctrine, the Pope
speaks the truth with certainty.
Pope Pius IX challenged the
canonical tradition about the beginning of ensouled
life set by Pope Gregory XIV in 1591. He believed
that while it may not be known when ensoulment
occurs, there was the possibility that it happens at
conception. Believing it was morally safer to follow
this conclusion, he thought all life should be
protected from the start of conception. In 1869 he
removed the labels of “animated” fetus and
“unanimated” fetus and concluded that abortions at
any point of gestation were punishable by
excommunication. While
excommunication was used to punish those who
procured abortions, it was not extended to those who
used contraception.
Pope Pius IX, commonly known as Pio Nono, died on 7
February 1878. His was the longest papacy in the
history of the Catholic Church, and Pope Pius IX is
often considered one of the greatest popes to have
ever lived. His dogma of Immaculate Conception,
Vatican I, and papal infallibility were some of his
most notable accomplishments. His efforts in
punishing those that procured abortions at any time
of gestation prevailed within the Catholic Church;
excommunication for abortion became Canon Law in
1917, and later revised in 1983. (Underscored
emphasis added.)
Although the saying of Sir Walter Scott, "O, what a
tangled web we weave when first we practise to
deceive!" doesn't perfectly fit the history of the
"infallible" papal dogma of the Immaculate
Conception (as well as the three other Marian
dogmas,) it is a history of the papacy working
itself into an indefensible corner with propositions
to which it must rigidly adhere against all reason,
and above all against the Bible. Because of the
Roman Catholic Church's political power and
influence, the general populace of the United States
is being forced to submit to the central deadly
error of the Immortality of the Soul as well as
related irrational and blasphemous teachings. The
following article gets to the heart of Rome's
obstinacy in its anti-abortion crusade. The author
suggests that the Roman Catholic Church is
destroying itself; but this could not be further
from the reality, based on Bible prophecy and
current events:
Catholic Doctrine and Reproductive Health WHY THE
CHURCH CAN’T CHANGE
The anti-abortion movement in the United States was
created in response to the U.S. Supreme Court ruling
on Roe v. Wade in 1973, which legalized abortion.
However, it really owes its origin to a group of men
in Rome 103 years earlier. This was 1870, the year
of Vatican Council I, a conclave of great importance
in recent church history. Why is this so?
Hans Küng, the renowned Swiss Catholic theologian,
best summed up the problem accounting for its
creation when he said, “It is not possible to solve
the problem of contraception until we solve the
problem of infallibility.” In his book, How the
Pope Became Infallible, Catholic historian Bernhard
Hasler describes in great detail what Küng meant:
For more than a millennium, the Vatican had
possessed temporal power that ensured its survival.
With the loss of the Papal States in 1870, it
appeared all but certain that a strong papacy would
simply disappear. The Vatican urgently needed a new
source of power.
A group of conservative and influential leaders,
including Pope Pius IX, came up with a brilliant
idea for a new source: an infallible pope. What is
infallibility? According to Catholic dogma, when the
pope formulates a doctrine, he is simply
transmitting this dogma on God’s behalf. Therefore,
the teaching cannot possibly be in error.
Roman Catholics could be certain that the teachings
of the pope and of God were one and the same, and,
if strictly followed, one’s entrance into heaven was
guaranteed. Communicants found this concept very
attractive and were eager to behave in any manner
required of them. Such an arrangement placed
enormous control over individuals into the hands of
the Vatican, extending across national borders and
even to the other side of the world. It could no
longer control the laity by means of its governance,
as it had in the Papal States which would later
become Italy. But the Holy See could exercise
control directly by adopting a policy of
psychological coercion founded on a new
doctrine—that of papal infallibility.
Protection at all Costs
Papal infallibility was a brilliant concept—and it
worked for a century. But at its introduction in
1870, the Catholic intelligentsia recognized that,
at some point in the future, this principle would
lead to the self-destruction of the institution.
Times were certain to change and in unpredictable
ways, but the Church would be locked on an
inexorable course—teachings that could not be
changed without destroying the principle of
infallibility itself. These distinguished scholars
foresaw that one day, encumbered by its unchangeable
teachings, the Church would find itself down a blind
alley from which there would be no escape and faced
with inevitable self-destruction as a result of a
grave loss of credibility. The blind alley turned
out to be the issue of birth control— contraception
and abortion.
Since the 1968 adoption of the papal encyclical, Humanae Vitae, there has been a hemorrhage in the
Church’s credibility. Humanae Vitae ruled
out any change of the Church’s position on birth
control for all time. . .
The Threats of Legalized Birth Control and Abortion
In 1964, Pope Paul VI created the Papal Commission
on Population and Birth Control. It was a two-part
commission and met from 1964 to 1966. One part
consisted of 64 lay persons, the other, of 15
clerics, including the future Pope John Paul II,
then a Polish cardinal. Pope Paul gave the
Commission only one mission—to determine how the
Church could change its position on birth control
without undermining papal authority. After two years
of study, the Commission concluded that it was not
possible to make this change without undermining
papal authority, but that the Church should make the
change anyway because it was the right thing to do!
The lay members voted 60 to 4 for change, and the
clerics, 9 to 6 for change. Pope Paul did not act
immediately. A minority report was prepared,
co-authored by the man who is now [was] Pope John
Paul II. In this report he stated:
If it should be declared that
contraception is not evil in itself, then we should
have to concede frankly that the Holy Spirit had
been on the side of the Protestant churches in 1930
(when the encyclical Casti Connubii was
promulgated), in 1951 (Pius XlI’s address to the
midwives), and in 1958 (the address delivered before
the Society of Hematologists in the year the pope
died). It should likewise have to be admitted that
for a half century the Spirit failed to protect Pius
XI, Pius XII, and a large part of the Catholic
hierarchy from a very serious error.
This would mean that the
leaders of the Church, acting with extreme
imprudence, had condemned thousands of innocent
human acts, forbidding, under pain of eternal
damnation, a practice which would now be sanctioned.
The fact can neither be denied nor ignored that
these same acts would now be declared licit on the
grounds of principles cited by the Protestants,
which popes and bishops have either condemned or at
least not approved. (Underscored emphasis
added.)
In this and other texts, the pope took the position
that a change on the birth control issue would
destroy the principle of papal infallibility, and
that infallibility was the fundamental principle of
the Church upon which all else rests. A change on
birth control would immediately raise questions
about other possible errors popes have made in
matters of divorce, homosexuality, confession,
parochial schooling, etc. that are fundamental to
Roman Catholicism. The security and survival of the
papacy itself is on the line. The Church insists on
being the sole arbiter of what is moral. Civil law
legalizes contraception and abortion. Governments
are thereby challenging the prerogative of the pope
to be the ultimate authority on matters of morality.
Most Americans look to democratic process to
determine morality. In the simplest analysis, the
Church cannot coexist with such an arrangement,
which in its view, threatens its very survival as a
world political power. For this reason, the Vatican
was forced to interfere in the democratic process in
the United States by lobbying for the passage of
numerous antiabortion laws designed to protect its
interests. There is a plethora of documentation to
support these findings, relating mainly to Vatican
and U.S. National Conference of Catholic Bishops’
sources, some of which I will discuss later. Only
legal abortion and legal family planning threaten
the Church. It has shown very little interest in
illegal abortion. For example, in Latin America,
where abortion is illegal, abortion rates are two or
three times as high as those seen in the United
States. However, abortion is essentially ignored by
the bishops there.
Political Action
. . . Even before the work of the Papal Commission
on Population and Birth Control was completed in
1966, it was widely recognized in the Vatican that
the Church faced a grave problem regarding birth
control, including abortion. Vatican Council II,
which ended in 1966, set the stage for the bishops
to address this problem. One of the outcomes of this
Council was the Pastoral Constitution on the Church
in the Modern World. Part two of the Constitution
was titled, “Some Problems of Special Urgency.” In
his book, Catholic Bishops in American Politics,
published by the Princeton University Press in 1991,
T.A. Byrnes observes, “This list of problems to
which the Church was to turn its attention reads
like a blueprint of the American hierarchy’s
political agenda in the 1970s and 1980s.” The first
was abortion:
God, the Lord of life, has conferred on men the
surpassing ministry of safeguarding life—a ministry
which must be fulfilled in a manner which is worthy
of man. Therefore, from the moment of conception
life must be guarded with the greatest of care,
while abortion and infanticide are unspeakable
crimes.
The Decree on the Bishops’ Pastoral Office in the
Church, another Vatican Council II document, created
the National Conference of Catholic Bishops (NCCB),
which was organized according to universal church
law. It was created to serve as a political
instrument of the Vatican. During a meeting of the
American hierarchy in November 1966, the bishops
formally established the NCCB as their official
collective body and established the United States
Catholic Conference (USCC) as their administrative
arm and secretariat.
From the very beginning, there has been a common and
correct perception that the Catholic hierarchy was
primarily an anti-abortion political lobby. Byrnes
summarizes his study of the history of Catholic
bishops in American politics by saying:
Before I end, I want to address one final matter,
namely the unique position that abortion occupies on
the Catholic hierarchy’s public policy agenda.
Abortion is not simply one issue among many for the
bishops. It is rather the bedrock, non- negotiable
starting point from which the rest of their agenda
has developed. The bishops’ positions on other
issues have led to political action and political
controversy but abortion, throughout the period I
have examined, has been a consistently central
feature of the Catholic hierarchy’s participation in
American politics. (Underscored emphasis added.) (Cf.
How the Vatican Almost Embraced Birth Control.)
The conclusion of the matter is that the
anti-abortion movement is not concerned with
morality, or with biblical prohibition, or with the
preservation of human life, but with the power and
authority of the Roman Catholic Church. Most
ominously, it is a satanic ruse to seduce the
unsuspecting into acceptance of the doctrine of the
Immortality of the Soul.