I received this email from an Aunt today and I felt it was appropriate to post. Ironically, it came through right as I finished posting the previous. However, I felt it too important to wait another day and, thus, I'm posting it tonight.
Urgent Letter from Bishop Thomas Paprocki on Gay Marriage
1/6/2013 4:11:00 PM
By Bishop Thomas John Paprocki -Press Release - Diocese of Springfield, IL
By Bishop Thomas John Paprocki -Press Release - Diocese of Springfield, IL
SPRINGFIELD - Bishop Thomas John Paprocki of the Catholic Diocese of Springfield in Illinois released a letter concerning the proposed Religious Freedom and Marriage Fairness Act. This letter has been sent to priests, deacons and pastoral facilitators in the 131 parishes of the diocese.
In
his cover message, Bishop Paprocki said: "In light of the urgency and
importance of the matter, I ask that my attached letter be read from the
pulpit at all Masses this weekend (January 5-6), either incorporated
appropriately with the homily or at the announcement time after
Communion. Copies may also be reproduced for distribution with the
parish bulletin. Your cooperation and prayers will be appreciated."
# # # # #
Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
Our
state's elected lawmakers will soon consider a bill called "The
Religious Freedom and Marriage Fairness Act." A more fraudulent title
for this dangerous measure could not be imagined. The proposed law is,
in truth, a grave assault upon both religious liberty and marriage. All
people of goodwill, and especially Christ's faithful committed to my
pastoral care in the Diocese of Springfield in Illinois, should
resolutely oppose this bill and make their opinions known to their
representatives.
The
pending bill would, for the first time in our state's history, redefine
marriage to legally recognize same-sex "marriages." But neither two men
nor two women - nor, for that matter, three or more people - can
possibly form a marriage. Our law would be lying if it said they could.
The
basic structure of marriage as the exclusive and lasting relationship
of a man and a woman, committed to a life which is fulfilled by having
children, is given to us in human nature, and thus by nature's God.
Notwithstanding the vanity of human wishes, every society in human
history - including every society untouched by Jewish or Christian
revelation - has managed to grasp this profound truth about human
relationships and happiness: marriage is the union of man and woman.
The
bill's sponsors maintain it would simply extend marriage to some people
who have long been arbitrarily excluded from it. They are wrong. The
pending bill would not expand the eligibility-roster for marriage. It
would radically redefine what marriage is- for everybody.
It would enshrine in our law - and thus in public opinion and practice - three harmful ideas:
What essentially makes a marriage is romantic-emotional union.
Children don't need both a mother and father.
The main purpose of marriage is adult satisfactions.
These
ideas would deepen the sexual revolution's harms on all society. After
all, if marriage is an emotional union meant for adult satisfactions,
why should it be sexually exclusive? Or limited to two? Or pledged to
permanence? If children don't need both their mother and father, why
should fathers stick around when romance fades? As marriage is
redefined, it becomes harder for people to see the point of these
profoundly important marital norms, to live by them, and to encourage
others to do the same. The resulting instability hurts spouses, but also
- and especially - children, who do best when reared by their committed
mother and father.
Indeed,
children's need - and right - to be reared by the mother and father
whose union brought them into being explains why our law has recognized
marriage as a conjugal partnership - the union of husband and wife - at
all. Our lawmakers have understood that marriage is naturally oriented
to procreation, to family. Of course, marriage also includesa committed,
intimate relationship of a sort which some same-sex coulples (or
multiple lovers in groups of three or more) could imitate. But our law
never recognized and supported marriage in order to regulate intimacy
for its own sake. The reason marriage is recognized in civil law at all
(as ordinary friendships, or other sacraments, are not) is specific to
the committed, intimate relationships of people of opposite-sex couples:
they are by nature oriented to having children. Their love-making acts
are life-giving acts.
Same-sex relationships lack this
unique predicate of state recognition and support. Even the most
ideologically blinded legislator cannot change this natural fact: the
sexual acts of a same-sex couple (regardless of how one views them
morally) are simply not of the type that yield the gift of new life. So
they cannot extend a union of hearts by a true bodily union. They cannot
turn a friendship into the one-flesh union of marriage. They are not
marital. This is not just a Christian idea, but one common to every
major religious tradition and our civilization's great philosophical
traditions, beginning with ancient Greece and Rome.
The
pending bill is not only a dangerous social experiment about marriage.
It is also a lethal attack upon religious liberty. This so-called
"religious freedom" would not stop the state from obligating the Knights
of Columbus to make their halls available for same-sex "weddings." It
would not stop the state from requiring Catholic grade schools to hire
teachers who are legally "married" to someone of the same sex. This bill
would not protect Catholic hospitals, charities, or colleges, which
exclude those so "married" from senior leadership positions. Nor would
it protect me, the Bishop of Springfield, if I refused to employ someone
in a same-sex "marriage" who applied to the Diocese for a position
meant to serve my ministry as your bishop. This "religious freedom" law
does nothing at all to protect the consciences of people in business, or
who work for the government. We saw the harmful consequences of
deceptive titles all too painfully last year when the so-called
"Religious Freedom Protection and Civil Union Act" forced Catholic
Charities out of foster care and adoption services in Illinois.
These
threats do not raise a question about drafting a better law, one with
more extensive conscience protections. There is no possible way - none
whatsoever- for those who believe that marriage is exclusively the union
of husband and wife to avoid legal penalties and harsh discriminatory
treatment if the bill becomes law. Why should we expect it be otherwise?
After all, we would be people who, according to the thinking behind the
bill, hold onto an "unfair" view of marriage. The state would have
equated our view with bigotry - which it uses the law to marginalize in
every way short of criminal punishment.
The
only way to protect religious liberty, and to preserve marriage, is to
defeat this perilous proposal. Please make sure our elected
representatives understand that and know that they will be held to
account.
Sincerely yours in Christ,
Most Reverend Thomas John Paprocki
Bishop of Springfield in Illinois
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