"And What I Have Failed To
Do..."
Fr. Frank Pavone
National Director, Priests for Life
Spanish Version
Listen to this
column in MP3 format
Fr. Frank's Columns are Podcast
What’s this I hear from some people
that they might “sit out” the Presidential election because they aren’t
comfortable with the likely choice of candidates?
Since when are elections supposed to
make us “comfortable?” Since when do we exercise that right to vote, for which
people fought and died, only when it’s easy and clear-cut, and our choices are
just the way we want them to be?
At Mass we pray, “I confess to
Almighty God…that I have sinned…in my thoughts and in my words, in what I have
done, and in what I have failed to do…”
What we fail to do can make
us just as guilty as what we do. A sin is a wrong choice, and to decide not
to do something is just as much of a choice as to decide to do something.
A sin of omission is still a sin –
and we are still responsible for the results.
What, then, makes us think that we
are more responsible for the results of voting than for the results of not
voting?
A vote is not a philosophical
statement. It is a transfer of power. It is a pragmatic act to preserve, as much
as possible under the circumstances, the common good, and to limit the evils
that threaten it.
And in the pragmatic matter of
elections, what matters is not how closely a candidate measures up to my
preferences and convictions. Instead, it’s a question of who can and will
actually get elected. It does little good if the person I felt most
comfortable supporting doesn’t get to actually govern and implement those
positions I like so much.
The vote can be used just as much to
keep someone out of office as to put someone in.
If we fail to use that tool,
however, and as a result the person who gets elected is far worse and does far
more damage than the other person we did not like, then we still share
responsibility for the damage that will be done.
Elections have seasons. In the
earliest phases, the field is wide open. We can recruit candidates, or decide to
run ourselves. We build up the name recognition and base of support for the
person or people who would make the best candidate. This takes years of work.
Then the season of primaries
arrives, during which voters choose between the candidates who have been
recruited and who have been building up their strength.
Then the general election season
arrives, and we may find that we don’t like any of the names on the ballot. At
that point, we have to shift our thinking and focus on “better” rather than
“best.” The reality usually is that one of several unsatisfactory candidates
will in fact be elected. So we use our vote to create the better outcome and to
limit the damage. That’s the shift that some fail to make.
And we are still responsible for
what we fail to do.
More Columns for 2008