by
Steven Ertelt
LifeNews.com Editor
October 4, 2005
Levada
also wanted input from other bishops dealing with similar issues in
other nations.
Rev. John Bartunek, who discussed the meeting with reporters, said "This issue has caused some divisions among the people in the church," according to an AP report.
During the 2004 presidential elections, some bishops said they would refrain from giving communion to pro-abortion elected officials or candidates and others said such people should voluntarily refrain from taking part in the Christian sacrament because of their conflicts with Catholic teachings.
St. Louis Archbishop Raymond Burke went so far as to say he would deny communion to Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry.
A working document bishops are discussing at their meetings acknowledges the problems.
"Some
receive Communion while denying the teachings of the church or publicly
supporting immoral choices in life, such as abortion, without thinking
that they are committing an act of grave personal dishonesty and causing
scandal," the document said.
"Some Catholics do not understand why it might be a sin to support
a political candidate who is openly in favor of abortion or other
serious acts against life, justice and peace."
American bishops adopted a statement last summer by a vote of 183-6 that calls on pro-abortion Catholics to refrain on their own from taking communion.
In July, the Vatican produced a new document for bishops across the world to examine that says Catholics who support legalized abortion should refrain from taking communion because they are out of step with church teachings.
Related
web sites:
Catholic Bishop's statement on abortion and communion - http://www.usccb.org/bishops/catholicsinpoliticallife.htm


