Pope Benedict XVI has been making the news lately. On the
occasion of Barack Obama's election victory, he sent a personal congratulatory
message and emphasized working with the new president on issues of "peace,
solidarity and justice."When the Vatican spokesman was asked by a reporter for more
specifics discussed in the letter, the spokesperson reiterated, "peace,
solidarity and justice."
The Pope also reminded Catholics in a recent statement that
all human life,born and unborn, is sacred and must
be protected. The Pope noted that every year about four million newborn
children die around the world less than 26 days after birth because of poverty,
lack of health care, and armed conflict. The Holy Father described this as a
matter of "urgent" concern.
This consistent ethic
of life principle has a long history in Catholic social thought, but
it's often eclipsed when it comes to contemporary debates over faith in
politics. Abortion, for example, is sometimes
viewed in isolation from the social, cultural and economic context in which
women and families live. As Auxiliary
Bishop Gabino Zavala of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles told Washington Post writer E.J. Dionne, Jr. in
this column.
"We are not a one-issue Church," Zavala insisted.
Catholic voters agree. A new post-election poll
conducted by Public Religion Research and sponsored by Faith in Public Life,
Catholics in Alliance
for the Common Good and Sojourners found that 72 percent of Catholics say
people of faith should "focus on all issues that are central to their faith
even if it makes them less effective in politics."Strong
majorities of Catholics (71%) and evangelicals (62%) also believe people of
faith should advocate for policies that "protect the interests of all and
promote the common good."
On the urgent moral issue of abortion, poll findings offer
hope that we can move beyond culture-war divisions to support public policies
that prevent abortions. Eighty-one percent of Catholics and 86 percent of white
evangelicals, according to the survey, believe elected leaders should work
together to find ways to reduce abortions by preventing unwanted pregnancies,
expanding adoption opportunities, and increasing economic support for women who
want to carry their pregnancies to term.
The role of religion in public life today has dramatically changed. Just
four years ago, the far right had a monopoly on the faith and values' debate. A
Christian engagement with public life too often ignored the long tradition of
the social gospel: Jesus' central
message of justice and liberation for the poor and oppressed, and the
Magnificat's reversal of worldly power.War,
health care and the economy were not widely viewed as moral issues that have a
profound impact on human dignity. Today,
organizations like Catholics in Alliance,
Pax Christi, NETWORK, Faith in Public Life and Sojourners have helped put the
common good back at the center of political discourse.
This resurgent common-good faith movement has deepened the
moral agenda by reclaiming a prophetic voice on issues such as poverty,compassionate and root-cause solutions to
abortion, genocide and climate change. The movement looks forward to realizing
solutions to these issues, and advocating for and holding the new
Administration and Congress accountable to these solutions and ideals, as a
prophetic faith community must.
Diana Butler Bass and Paul Raushenbush both stand firmly within the Mainline Protestant tradition and, along with guest bloggers of all religious backgrounds are dedicated to the revival of religious progressivism and its influence in American politics.