Yesterday's Vatican document on the obligation of Catholic politicians to oppose legal recognition of homosexual unions can be summarized in one sentence: You can't believe two contradictory things at the same time.
The teaching of the Catholic Church -- along with the unanimous moral tradition taught for millennia by all major religions -- is unquestionably clear. Homosexual acts are immoral, and therefore, as yesterday's document stated, cannot be recognized as the basis for "marriage, which is holy." Anyone who believes this -- and faithful Catholics presumably do -- therefore cannot be part of an effort to promote legal approbation of homosexual unions.
Many Catholic politicians in Canada are doing just that -- including the Prime Minister, his presumptive successor and the Justice Minister. They have explained that their legislative views and their religious faith are two separate things.
Two questions arise: Is this approach in fact possible? And is it morally coherent? The Church -- and basic logic -- answer no to both.
Is it possible to separate one's legislative views from one's religious faith? Take the venerable Tommy Douglas for example. A Christian clergyman and founder of the CCF (forerunner of today's NDP), his religious faith was the principal animating factor of his political campaigns for an expanded welfare state. Was he imposing his religious faith on others by voting for health care or social assistance programs? To have told Tommy Douglas to separate his religious faith from his political program would have struck him as absurd. The same would apply to innumerable campaigns for human rights or social justice that were animated by religious faith -- suffice it to mention the celebrated anti-slavery campaign of William Wilberforce in 19th-century Britain.
More fundamentally, if a politician is a serious person, his religious faith will inform his entire worldview. How exactly does he then separate this from his public policy decisions? Would it be possible for an MP to separate his biblically motivated concern for the stewardship of creation from his vote on an environmental bill? And if he were to somehow ignore his convictions on those things most important to him, what basis would there be for a decision? To remove religiously grounded convictions from policy-making is to move a giant step toward raw political power as the only determinant of public policy. . . .
The Vatican document said that "the scope of the civil law is certainly more limited than the moral law.". . . .
Yet what happens when the civil law is in conflict with the moral law? [In the words of] Martin Luther King, Jr. . . . .A politician cannot profess something as wrong according to his conscience, and then promote it in his legislative acts. To do so is simply to say that he is both in favour and against the same thing at the same time. It is morally incoherent. . . .
The Catholic temptation to adjust one's moral compass to the prevailing political conditions is an ancient one. Often the cost of integrity has been martyrdom. It is the courageous choice always available to the honest believer. And a choice always has to be made -- between what one professes to be true and what the demands of a particular political situation may be. Yesterday's Vatican document clarifies -- as have Canada's Catholic bishops over the past weeks -- that you can't choose contradictory things at the same time. Something has to give.
A Post headline writer summarized the situation yesterday: Martin Puts His Faith Second. Just so.
Nothing more needs to be said. It is clear that all lawmaking involves morality and a background of belief -- whether Christian or otherwise. No-one can hold two opposing views and be consistent.