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Bennet Kelley: Patrick Kennedy Takes On The Bishop And The Church's Moral Myopia

[Bennet Kelley is an award winning columnist, a political commentator and the former Co-Founder and National Co-Chair of the Democratic National Committee's Saxophone Club (its young professional fund raising and outreach arm during the Clinton years).]

It is fitting that the current battle between the Catholic Church and pro-choice lawmakers involves the nephew of the only Catholic president and takes place in Rhode Island, which not only was the first colony founded on the principles of religious liberty and the separation of church and state but was the strongest state for John Kennedy in 1960.

Providence Bishop Tobin’s barring Patrick Kennedy from receiving communion because of his pro-choice views is an assault on both Roger William’s vision of the separation of church and state now enshrined in the First Amendment and the Kennedy legacy itself (which the Church once embraced).

American Catholics have a historical relationship with the Democratic Party, as the Church and the Party were the two principal institutions that protected successive waves of immigrants from Europe in the 20th Century. Nowhere was this more prevalent than in my home state of Rhode Island which was two-thirds Catholic and two-thirds Democratic (and often confused which was the religion).

This changed in 1980 when Boston’s Cardinal Medeiros issued a pastoral letter stating that those who elect pro-choice candidates “cannot separate themselves totally from [a] deadly sin.” Around this time, however, Notre Dame President Father Hesburgh warned that by making abortion their singular priority, the Church was asking Catholics to embrace candidates who disagreed with almost all of the Church’s social justice teachings.

That is exactly what has happened. In 2004, despite the fact that in the U.S. Conference of Bishops’ voter guide Senator Kerry beat President Bush in every issue category, including protecting human life and promoting family life, Kerry was ambushed by a number of U.S. cardinals and bishops over abortion. As a result, Kerry became the third Catholic to win the Democratic nomination but the first to lose the Catholic vote.

Now Bishop Tobin has sanctioned Patrick Kennedy, who has received a 100% voting score from NETWORK ( a Catholic social justice lobby) in four of the last six years, petulantly calling him “ignorant” and “a disappointment” while banning him from receiving communion after Kennedy criticized the Bishop for opposing health care reform unless it rolled back existing abortion rights.

What message does it send when the Church will deny communion to a pro-choice official like Patrick Kennedy whose voting record is otherwise consistent with church teaching, but not pro-life officials guided by the gospel of greed or intolerance or even mobsters such as the legendary crime boss Raymond Patriarca who was given a Catholic funeral? I do not recall the Sermon on the Mount exalting the greedy, bigots or wise guys.

Even worse is Bishop Tobin’s encroachment on the separation of church and state. President Kennedy stressed that he believed “in an America . . . where no public official either requests or accepts instructions on public policy from the Pope, the National Council of Churches or any other ecclesiastical source.” Yet Bishop Tobin wants to claim that right and require Catholic office holders to ignore the interests and views of their non-Catholic constituents and legislate solely based on Church doctrine. Although when pressed by Chris Matthews on this topic, Tobin was unable to articulate what he wants lawmakers to do.

It is ironic that this takes place in Rhode Island which was known in colonial days as “the safest refuge of conscience” and home to the New World’s first Baptist Church and synagogue because of Roger Williams’ vision of separation of church and state. Although it could be Rhode Island Catholic’s sensitivity to this separation that emboldens them to ignore the Church’s political instructions (as a 1986 Church backed referendum to ban abortion lost by a 2-1 margin and recent polling shows no shift in this position); leading Bishop Tobin and others to lash out at their elected officials to mask their powerlessness.

I am not a Catholic scholar like my namesake (the late Rev. Bennet Kelley C.P.), but I know enough to know that the Bible says nothing about abortion but plenty about hypocrisy, pride and arrogance and that the Church has been wrong many times throughout history.

I also know Patrick Kennedy. I know that he has been and will continue to be a great Congressman for Rhode Island because he shares the passion and commitment of his father and uncles to helping those less fortunate that Catholics once overwhelmingly embraced before the Church’s recent moral myopia. That is what led him to state publicly that

I can’t understand for the life of me how the Catholic Church could be against the biggest social justice issue of our time.

Neither can I.

Read entire article at Huffington Post