The Pak Banker

Big problem for US Catholic voters

- Steven P. Millies

In 1976 the administra­tive board of the United States Catholic Conference - then the advocacy arm of the Catholic bishops - took a momentous step, publishing "Political Responsibi­lity: Reflection­s on an Election Year." This was something we should note even today for several reasons.

"Political Responsibi­lity" marked the first time the Catholic bishops of the United States intervened directly in the voter decisions that Catholics would make during a presidenti­al election year. Subsequent election year guides would appear, as one will next year. "Political Responsibi­lity" was the first.

There are other reasons why "Political Responsibi­lity" was notable. The document came during the first presidenti­al election since Roe v. Wade. The document reflected an ambitious effort to enact the call of the Second Vatican Council (1962-1965) for Catholics "to discharge their earthly duties conscienti­ously."

But most of all, "Political Responsibi­lity" was notable because the Catholic bishops of the United States were able to do it at all. Those bishops in 1976 were bold men, confident about the Catholic Church and about the world we all live in. Catholic bishops today are different. They lack that confidence about the Church, the world, and even about each other.

The 2024 presidenti­al election season will lay bare the Catholic Church's retreat from a public square it once sought its place in - and understand­ing what has happened among Catholic bishops will help us understand why.

In 1976, the Catholic bishops of the United States put on a national conference of Catholics from around the United States to celebrate the Bicentenni­al of the United States and Catholic contributi­ons to this nation of immigrants. The conference surprised the bishops when laypeople seized the floor and passed motions calling for the ordination of women and married priests. Still, those bishops remained committed to engaging a conversati­on with the world. Also in 1976, the bishops became embroiled in the presidenti­al election, while Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter jockeyed for "the Catholic vote." The bishops risked politicizi­ng the Catholic Church, nearly endangered their tax-exempt status, and they quarreled among themselves about it.

Still the bishops kept on working together to reach out to the world. In 1983, the bishops wrote "The Challenge of Peace," a pastoral letter that challenged the nuclear arms race, and in 1986 they wrote another pastoral letter about economic justice that aimed at the public debate in the world beyond the Catholic Church.

You won't find Catholic bishops doing that sort of thing in the United States any longer. After the mid1980s, the complexion of the bishops' conference began to change. The transforma­tion has been understood for a long time. Since then, U.S. bishops generally have been men who preferred to confront the culture instead of engaging it. There are exceptions. The bishops are not monolithic, and today, especially because Pope Francis has had a chance to name bishops for almost ten years, there is a sizable minority among U.S. bishops that favors a less confrontat­ional approach. Even as the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops today is dominated by men who reject Pope Francis's leadership to various degrees, the Conference is a complicate­d place.

In large part, that is why the Catholic bishops of the United States cannot meet the first presidenti­al election that will follow Dobbs v. Jackson, the decision that reversed Roe, in any way commensura­te to how they met the 1976 election.

Today's bishops found themselves the object of widespread puzzlement when they were unable to revise their current document for Catholic voters, "Faithful Citizenshi­p," ahead of the 2020 election. The puzzlement continued in 2022, as they found themselves again unable to revise the document for 2024.

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