Steve Waldman has White House confirmation. But an administration official later elbaorated:
"Judge Sotomayor was raised as a Catholic and attends church for family celebrations and other important events."
Sotomayor also served with Jesuit Father Joseph O'Hare, the retired president of Fordham University, on a New York City campaign finance review council, and O'Hare told CNS that when he knew her beginning in the late 1980s "she was indeed a practicing Catholic. He said he has no reason to think that has changed. They have stayed in touch intermittently, and he said she gave his name as a reference for her FBI background check."
Whatever the case, that makes Catholics six for nine of the high court. The five current Catholic justices are already an all-time high. Anyone want to go for a sweep?
First question: Does it matter?
Second, the (awful) question will now be, what KIND of Catholic is she? She is divorced, without kids. Heck, she may want to downplay her practice of the faith as that will be a huge target--and it's easy to guess who'll be lobbing most of the heavy ordinance.
Sotomayor was born in the Bronx (cheers!) to parents from Puerto Rico, and she attended Catholic schools. From a May 14 New York Times profile:
Judge Sotomayor, 54, grew up in a Bronx housing project, a child of Puerto Rican parents. She would be the court's first Hispanic justice.
Her father died when she was 9, leaving her mother to raise her and a brother. In speeches to Latino groups over the years, Judge Sotomayor has recalled how her mother worked six days a week as a nurse to send her and her brother to Catholic school, purchased the only set of encyclopedias in the neighborhood and kept a warm pot of rice and beans on the stove every day for their friends.
She loved Nancy Drew mysteries, she once said, and yearned to be a police detective. But a doctor who diagnosed her childhood diabetes suggested that would be difficult. She traded her adoration of Nancy for an allegiance to Perry -- she became a fan of Perry Mason on television, she said, and decided to become a lawyer.
She went to Princeton, which she has described as a life-changing experience. When she arrived on campus from the Bronx, she said it was like "a visitor landing in an alien country." She never raised her hand in her first year there. "I was too embarrassed and too intimidated to ask questions," Judge Sotomayor said.
But as a federal appeals court judge, she has issued few rulings on issues like abortion. Steve also has several posts on her scant abortion-related rulings.
A Washington Post profile today says that because she never had children of her own she feels like her clerks are her kids.
But back to the original question: Does it matter if she is Catholic, practicing or lapsed? There are Catholics and there are Catholics. Look at the US electorate, look at the Supreme Court itself.
Antonin Scalia, who is seen as a favorite of a certain segment of conservative Catholicism, has been forthright in stating that he would never make decisions on the basis of his faith. As he said in an address at Villanova Law School in October 2007, parsed by Robert Miller et al at First Things:
"There is no such thing as a 'Catholic judge.' The bottom line is that the Catholic faith seems to me to have little effect on my work as a judge...Just as there is no 'Catholic' way to cook a hamburger, I am hard pressed to tell you of a single opinion of mine that would have come out differently if I were not Catholic."
So...?

Add to Newsvine
Add to StumbleUpon

Folks, I hope that the readers of this blog are smart enough to realize that we can't reconize anyone as a member of any group if they don't abide by the rules of that given organization.
The Catholic church does not allow divorce, requires that its members attend Mass every Sunday and forbids abortion along with a list of other requirements.
If any or all of the "Catholic" Supreme Court judges do not practice their faith then they should drop this label rather than be identified as a "dysfunctional" Catholic that are destined to go to Hell.
/DaveB
Divorce is OK in the Catholic Church. Remarriage after divorce is prohibited!
If our decisions are not guided by our faith, what are they guided by? The common good? If so, how do you define that? How were the laws of this land determined in the first place if they were not guided by the faith beliefs of the founding Fathers. Judge Scalia surely must realize that his Catholic faith does inform him in his day to day decisions just as the rest of us are guided by our faith. Through these beliefs, we understand what is right and what is wrong.
Someone needs some fresh lessons in human interaction and decision-making. We are all influenced by our experiences, and our decisions are heavily inflenced by our filters. Those filters are created by what we are and experienced unique to that, i.e., Jewish, rich, urban, white, male, female, married, etc. To say that being Catholic has no effect on decisions is like saying being a male or being white has no effect on those decisions.
That is a ludicrous position, and wholy untenable. How we read things, including the law, is influenced by who we are, which in turn is influenced as I have indicated previously. Understanding we have those filters and trying to account for them is the best we can do, but to say that I, as a Catholic white male can see things objectively the same way as a Jewish white female is a highly suspect position.
The Catholic Church is pushing for a national Sunday law in America. If such a law is passed, will Sotomayor and the other Catholics on the Supreme Court vote in favor of such a law? If they do, this country will be plunged into religious persecution of any who oppose a religious law that takes away their freedom of conscience.
Post a Comment
By submitting these comments, I agree to the beliefnet.com terms of service, rules of conduct and privacy policy (the "agreements"). I understand and agree that any content I post is licensed to beliefnet.com and may be used by beliefnet.com in accordance with the agreements.