Celebration of the Teachings of the Catholic Church
Keynote Address: National Catholic Prayer Breakfast
Archbishop Raymond Burke
Archbishop Emeritus of St. Louis
Prefect of the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura
MAY 8, 2009
Introduction
1. I am deeply honored to give the Keynote Address at this annual gathering of
Catholics to pray for our nation. I express my heartfelt esteem and gratitude to
those who, each year, organize and support the National Catholic Prayer
Breakfast.
2. The theme of this year’s Breakfast is most fitting to the difficult time
through which our nation is now passing. Before the fundamental and great
challenges which we as a nation are facing, how better to express our patriotism
than by celebrating the teachings of our Catholic faith. The most treasured gift
which we as citizens of the United States of America can offer to our country is
a faithful Catholic life. It is the gift which, even though it has often been
misunderstood, has brought great strength to our nation, from the time of its
founding. Today more than ever, our nation is in need of Catholics who know
their faith deeply and express their faith, with integrity, by their daily
living.
3. Although I no longer have my residence in our beloved nation, I am no less
bound to practice the virtue of patriotism, taught and exemplified by Our Lord
during His public ministry. It is Our Lord Who gives us, in the Church, the
grace to practice patriotism as a fundamental expression of the bond of charity
which we have, in Him, with our fellow citizens. From my earliest formation in
the life of the faith, received at home from my parents and in the Catholic
schools, it was clear to me that duty to one’s nation, to one’s fellow citizens,
is integral to our life in Christ in the Church. In the Baltimore Catechism, the
virtue of patriotism is joined with filial piety. These essentially connected
virtues, in the words of the Catechism, dispose us to honor, love and respect
our parents and our country (Revised Baltimore Catechism and Mass, No. 3, New
York: Benziger Brothers, Inc., 1949, 1952, no. 135). Surely, the most
fundamental expression of patriotism is daily prayer for our homeland, the
United States of America, her citizens and her leaders. Our participation in the
National Catholic Prayer Breakfast is, I trust, an extraordinary expression of
the daily prayer which we all offer for our country, as good Catholics and,
therefore, good citizens.
4. It pleases me that today’s celebration included a presentation by Mother
Shaun Vergauwen, Superior General of the Franciscan Sisters of the Eucharist. I
have known Mother Shaun’s religious congregation for all the years of my
priestly life. The consecrated life of the Franciscan Sisters of the Eucharist
is an inspired witness to the truths of our Catholic faith, especially what
pertains to the Gospel of Life, and, therefore, also makes a strong contribution
to the good of all citizens in our nation.
Growing Crisis in Our Nation
5. I come to you, this morning, with the deepest concern for our nation. I come
to you, not as someone who stands outside of our nation but as a citizen who,
with you as fellow citizens, takes responsibility for the state of our nation
and, therefore, cannot remain indifferent and inactive about what most concerns
the good of us all, especially those among us who are small, weak and
defenseless.
6. Over the past several months, our nation has chosen a path which more
completely denies any legal guarantee of the most fundamental human right, the
right to life, to the innocent and defenseless unborn. Our nation, which had its
beginning in the commitment to safeguard and promote the inalienable right to
“Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness” for all, without boundary, is more
and more setting arbitrary limits to her commitment (cf. The Declaration of
Independence: Action of Second Continental Congress, 4 July 1776, in The
Constitution of the United States with the Declaration of Independence and the
Articles of Confederation, New York: Barnes and Noble Books, 2002, p. 81). Those
in power now determine who will or will not be accorded the legal protection of
the most fundamental right to life. First the legal protection of the right to
life is denied to the unborn and, then, to those whose lives have become
burdened by advanced years, special needs or serious illness, or whose lives are
somehow judged to be unprofitable or unworthy.
7. What is more, those in power propose to force physicians and other healthcare
professionals, in other words, those with a particular responsibility to protect
and foster human life, to participate, contrary to what their conscience
requires, in the destruction of unborn human lives, from the first or embryonic
stage of development to the moment of birth. Our laws may soon force those who
have dedicated themselves to the care of the sick and the promotion of good
health to give up their noble life work, in order to be true to the most sacred
dictate of their consciences. What is more, if our nation continues down the
path it has taken, healthcare institutions operating in accord with the natural
moral law, which teaches us that innocent human life is to be protected and
fostered at all times and that it is always and everywhere evil to destroy an
innocent human life, will be forced to close their doors.
8. At the same time, the fundamental society, that is, the family, upon which
the life of our nation is founded and depends, is under attack by legislation
which redefines marriage to include a relationship between two persons of the
same sex and permits them to adopt children. In the same line, it is proposed to
repeal the Defense of Marriage Act. At the root of the confusion and error about
marriage is the contraceptive mentality – which would have us believe that the
inherently procreative nature of the conjugal union can, in practice, be
mechanically or chemically eliminated, while the marital act remains unitive. It
cannot be so. With unparalleled arrogance, our nation is choosing to renounce
its foundation upon the faithful, indissoluble, and inherently procreative love
of a man and a woman in marriage, and, in violation of what nature itself
teaches us, to replace it with a so-called marital relationship, according to
the definition of those who exercise the greatest power in our society.
9. The path of violation of the most fundamental human rights and of the
integrity of marriage and the family, which our nation is traveling, is not
accidental. It is part of the program set forth by those whom we have freely
chosen to lead our nation. The part of the program in question was not unknown
to us; it was announced to us beforehand and a majority of our fellow citizens,
including a majority of our fellow Catholics, chose the leadership which is now
implementing it with determination. For example, I refer to our President’s
declared support of the Freedom of Choice Act, which would make illegal any
legislation restricting procured abortion; his repeal of the Mexico City Policy,
permitting U.S. funding of procured abortion in other nations, together with the
grant of fifty million dollars to the United Nations Fund for Population
Activities which, for example, supported the Republic of China’s policy of one
child per family by means of government-dictated sterilization and abortion; his
proposal to rescind the regulations appended to the federal Conscience Clause,
which assure that, not only physicians, but also all health-care workers may
refuse to provide services, information or counsel to patients regarding
medications and procedures which are contrary to their conscience; his removal
of limitations on federal funding of embryonic-stem-cell research, involving the
wholesale destruction of human life at the embryonic stage of development; and
his choice of the members of his administration, who are remarkable for the
number of major officials, including several Catholics, who favor the denial of
the right to life to the unborn and the violation of the integrity of marriage
and the family. These are only some examples of a consistent pattern of
decisions by the leadership of our nation which is taking our nation down a path
which denies the fundamental right to life to the innocent and defenseless
unborn and violates the fundamental integrity of the marital union and the
family.
10. As Catholics, we cannot fail to note, with the greatest sadness, the number
of our fellow Catholics, elected or appointed by our President to public office,
who cooperate fully in the advancement of a national agenda was is anti-life and
anti-family. Most recently, the appointment of a Catholic as Secretary of Health
and Human Services, who has openly and persistently cooperated with the industry
of procured abortion in our nation, is necessarily a source of the deepest
embarrassment to Catholics and a painful reminder of the most serious
responsibility of Catholics to uphold the natural moral law, which is the
irreplaceable foundation of just relationships among the citizens of our nation.
It grieves me to say that the support of anti-life legislation by Catholics in
public office is so common that those who are not Catholic have justifiably
questioned whether the Church’s teaching regarding the inviolable dignity of
innocent human life is firm and unchanging. It gives the impression that the
Church herself can change the law which God has written on every human heart
from the beginning of time and has declared in the Fifth Commandment of the
Decalogue: Thou shalt not kill.
11. As is clear, the anti-life and anti-family path down which our nation is
being led has repercussions for many other peoples who rely upon the United
States for aid or who are influenced by the international policies upon which
our nation insists. The interest of so many nations in our recent presidential
election is a clear sign of the world leadership which our national leadership
exercises. What those who were so enthused about the strong message of change
and hope in the United States, delivered during the last election campaign, are
now discovering is a consistent implementation of policies and programs which
confirm and advance the culture of death, which can only finally leave our world
without the great hope, described by our Holy Father Pope Benedict XVI in these
words:
Let us say once again: we need the greater and lesser hopes that keep us going
day by day. But these are not enough without the great hope, which must surpass
everything else. This great hope can only be God, who encompasses the whole of
reality and who can bestow upon us what we, by ourselves, cannot attain. The
fact that it comes to us as a gift is actually part of hope. God is the
foundation of hope: not any god, but the God who has a human face and who has
loved us to the end, each one of us and humanity in its entirety. His Kingdom is
not an imaginary hereafter, situated in a future that will never arrive; his
Kingdom is present wherever he is loved and wherever his love reaches us.
His love alone gives us the possibility of soberly persevering day by day,
without ceasing to be spurred on by hope, in a world which by its very nature is
imperfect. His love is at the same time our guarantee of the existence of what
we only vaguely sense and which nevertheless, in our deepest self, we await: a
life that is truly life (Pope Benedict XVI, Encyclical Letter Spe salvi, On
Christian Hope, 30 November 2007, Acta Apostolicae Sedis no. 31).
The change which brings hope can only be the renewal of our nation in the divine
love which respects the inviolable dignity of every human life, from the moment
of its inception to the moment of natural death, and which creates and gives
growth to new human life through the love of man and woman in marriage. Any hope
which is incoherent with the great hope is truly illusory and can never bring
forth justice and its fruit, peace, for our nation and world.
Addressing the Crisis
12. How can we as Catholics address effectively the critical situation of our
nation in what pertains to the fundamental right to life and the integrity of
the family? What does the virtue of patriotism, together with all of the virtues
inspired by the Holy Spirit dwelling within us, require of us for the common
good, for the good of the whole nation? First and foremost, it demands what we
are doing this morning, that is, prayer, and the serious reflection which arises
from our communion with God in prayer.
13. When Our Lord descended from the Mount of the Transfiguration, he found that
his disciples had tried, without success, to help a boy afflicted by an unclean
spirit. Our Lord then cast out the unclean spirit, prompting his disciples, when
they were alone with Him, to ask why they had been unable to free the boy from
his affliction. Our Lord responded with these words: This kind cannot be driven
out by anything but prayer and fasting (Mk 9:29). Our Lord reminded them that
the good which they wished to accomplish in the face of great evil could only be
attained through prayer and fasting. In other words, evil cannot be overcome by
our own forces alone, but by the grace of God which inspires and strengthens our
thoughts and actions. It is Christ alone who has accomplished the victory over
sin and its most evil fruit, eternal death, and it is Christ alone, in the
Church, who continues to bring forth the fruits of His victory in our lives and
in our world.
14. In the battle for the protection of the right to life and for the
safeguarding of the integrity of marriage and the family in our nation, we are
easily tempted to give way to discouragement. And it would be right to do so, if
the outcome of the battle depended upon us alone. But it does not. Christ is
with us always in the Church and, in a particular way, in the struggle to
restore the respect for the right to life of all of our brothers and sisters,
especially those who are helpless and who have the first title to our care, and
to safeguard the integrity of marriage and the family. Christ Who is the Gospel
of Life, encountered in prayer and through the Sacraments, will give us the
strength to announce His word of life and to act upon His word of life, on
behalf of all in our nation, especially those who depend upon us to care for
them and protect their God-given rights.
15. If we are serious about our patriotic duty, then we must pray everyday for
our leaders, especially our President, and our nation. We should also practice
more fervently our fasting and abstinence for the conversion of our lives and
the transformation of our society. If we want to act for the common good, the
good of all, in our nation, then we will seek to convert our lives each day to
Christ, especially through the Sacraments of Penance and the Holy Eucharist.
Christ desires to announce the Gospel of Life and bring about its saving effects
in our nation by the complete conversion of our lives to Him for the sake of all
our brothers and sisters, without boundary, and for the sake of the preservation
of the sanctuary of human life, marriage and the family.
16. At various times of great crisis in our nation and in the world, the Holy
Father and our Bishops have called upon all Catholics to offer special prayers
for the nation and for the world. I recall so well, from my youth, the Leonine
Prayers offered at the conclusion of every Mass to address the growing threat of
atheistic materialism in our world. Remember, too, how Pope Saint Pius V, in
1571, called upon the whole Church to pray, especially through the intercession
of the Blessed Virgin Mary, when the Christian world was under attack by the
Turks. After the victory of the Battle of Lepanto, on October 7, 1571, he
established October 7th as an annual feast in honor of Our Lady of the Rosary
and introduced the title of Mary Help of Christians into the Litany of Loreto.
In the present crisis, praying daily the Rosary for our nation and invoking
daily the intercession of Mary Help of Christians will be powerful forces for
the victory of life and love.
17. At every Mass, we should offer special prayers for our nation and her
leaders, in order that the culture of death may be overcome and a civilization
of love may be steadfastly advanced. All Catholics throughout the nation should
take part in Eucharistic adoration and in the praying of the Rosary for the
restoration of the respect for human life and for the safeguarding of the
integrity of the family. In our prayers, we should seek, above all, the
intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary, under her title of the Immaculate
Conception. Mary Immaculate is the patroness of our nation. In a most wonderful
way, she appeared, on our continent, in what is present-day Mexico City, in
1531, as the Immaculate Mother of God, in order to manifest the all-merciful
love of God toward His children of America. Through her example and
intercession, the Native Americans and Europeans, who were on the brink of a
most deadly conflict, were brought together to form one people under her
maternal care, and the widespread practice of human sacrifice among the native
people was brought to an end. In our time, in many parishes and dioceses there
are campaigns of prayer for our nation and her leaders. May these powerful
spiritual works continue and prosper, so that, through prayer and fasting, the
grave evils of contraception, procured abortion, euthanasia, the experimentation
on embryonic human life, and so-called same-sex marriage may be overcome in our
nation.
18. Connected with our prayer must be the thoughtful and faithful reflection
upon the Church’s teaching on the respect for all human life and the integrity
of the family. In our homes, in our Catholic schools and universities, in parish
study groups, and in everyday conversations and discussions with our neighbors,
we are called to give an uncompromising witness to the Gospel of Life. Parents,
parish priests and institutions of Catholic education must be aware of the
constant anti-life and anti-family messages which constantly bombard us and our
young people. One has only to think, for example, of the corruption of the
goodness of our youth by the multi-million dollar industry of pornography,
especially on the Internet. Our reflection as individuals and groups must open
our eyes to the gravity of the situation in our nation, lest we fail to take
responsibility for the widespread attacks on human life and the family. Our
reflection must help us all and, in a particular way, our young people to see
the godless secularism and relativism which underly and justify our nation’s
anti-life and anti-family programs, policies and laws.
19. Our encounter with the world must be clear and uncompromising. Parents must
reflect in their daily living the lifelong and rich fruit of the Gospel of Life,
which they are called to teach to their children. Catholic educational
institutions must devote themselves ever more strenuously to the study of the
truths of the faith, addressing them to the moral challenges of our time. In a
culture marked by widespread and grave confusion and error about the most
fundamental teachings of the moral law, our Catholic schools and universities
must be beacons of truth and right conduct. Clearly, the same is true of our
Catholic charitable, missionary and healthcare institutions. There can be no
place in them for teaching or activities which offend the moral law. Dialogue
and respect for differences are not promoted by the compromise and even
violation of the natural moral law. The profound granting of an honorary
doctorate at Notre Dame University to our President who is as aggressively
advancing an anti-life and anti-family agenda is a source of the gravest
scandal. Catholic institutions cannot offer any platform to, let alone honor,
those who teach and act publicly against the moral law. In a culture which
embraces an agenda of death, Catholics and Catholic institutions are necessarily
counter-cultural. If we as individuals or our Catholic institutions are not
willing to accept the burdens and the suffering necessarily involved in calling
our culture to reform, then we are not worthy of the name Catholic.
Catholics and Public Life
20. Our prayer and conversion of life, and the serious reflection upon and study
of the truths of the moral life, both as individuals and in our Catholic
institutions, require that we accept our responsibility as citizens to work
tirelessly to change unjust programs, policies and laws. In a nation set so
firmly on a path of violation of the most fundamental moral norms, Catholics and
others who adhere to the natural moral law are pressured to think that their
religious commitment to the moral law as the way of seeking the good of all is a
merely confessional matter which cannot have any application in public life.
Apparently, a number of Catholics in public life have been so convinced. How
often do we hear Catholic legislators who vote in favor of anti-life and
anti-family legislation claim that they are personally opposed to what the
legislation protects and fosters, but that they as public officials may not
allow religious beliefs to affect their support of such legislation? How often
do we hear fellow Catholics supporting candidates for office, who are anti-life
and anti-family, because of political-party loyalties or for reasons of other
policies and programs supported by the candidate, which they deem to be good?
How often is such thinking justified by the claim that religious faith is a
purely private matter and has no place in the public forum? On the contrary, the
common good depends upon the active engagement of religious faith in the public
forum.
21. Addressing the role of the Church in the political order, Pope Benedict XVI
reminds us:
It must not be forgotten that, when Churches or ecclesial communities intervene
in public debate, expressing reservations or recalling various principles, this
does not constitute a form of intolerance or interference, since such
interventions are aimed solely at enlightening consciences, enabling them to act
freely and responsibly, according to the true demands of justice, even when this
should conflict with situations of power and personal interest (Pope Benedict
XVI, Ad Congressum a Populari Europae Faction provectum, Acta Apostolicae Sedis
98 [2006], 344)."
In his Encyclical Letter Deus caritas est, our Holy Father reminded us of the
great gift of our faith which enables reason to do its work more effectively and
to see its proper object more clearly (Pope Benedict XVI, Encylical Letter Deus
caritas est , On Christian Love, 25 December 2005, Acta Apostolicae Sedis 98
[2006], 239, no. 28). When the Church addresses her social teaching to issues of
the common good, she has no intention of giving the Church power over the State
or to impose on those who do not share the faith ways of thinking and modes of
conduct proper to faith (Deus caritas est, no. 28). Her aim, which is our aim as
patriotic Catholics, is simply to help purify reason and to contribute, here and
now, to the acknowledgment and attainment of what is just (Deus caritas est, no.
28). In addressing the critical issues of our nation, the Church and we, as her
faithful sons and daughters, intervene on the basis of reason and natural law,
namely, on the basis of what is in accord with the nature of every human being
(Deus caritas est, no. 28).
22. Our uncompromising commitment to protect the inviolable dignity of innocent
human life and to safeguard the integrity of marriage and the family are not
based on peculiar confessional beliefs or practices but on the natural moral
law, written on every heart and, therefore, a fundamental part of the Church’s
moral teaching. At the same time, what is always and everywhere evil cannot be
called good for the sake of accomplishing some other good end. All of us must be
concerned about a wide range of goods which are important to the life of our
nation, but the concern for those goods can never justify the betrayal of the
fundamental goods of life itself and the family. We must take care to uproot
from our moral thinking any form of relativism, consequentialism and
proportionalism, which would lead us into the error of thinking that it is
sometimes right to do what is always and everywhere evil.
23. An important part of our moral reflection must include a clear understanding
of the principles regarding cooperation in evil, especially by the act of
voting. Too often, in our time, our inability to accomplish all that we should
for the sake of the defense of the right to life and of the protection of the
integrity of the family is used to justify the direct choice of a political
leader who espouses a position or positions in violation of the natural moral
law. The Servant of God Pope John Paul II, in his Encyclical Letter Evangelium
vitae, addresses at length the question of cooperation in evil which violates
the dignity of innocent human life. He offers as an example the case of a
legislator who has the possibility of voting for a law which would restrict the
evil of procured abortion, even though it would not eradicate it completely. He
concludes that the legislator could vote for the legislation, while his own
opposition to procured abortion remains clear, for his vote does not in fact
represent an illicit cooperation with an unjust law, but rather a legitimate and
proper attempt to limit its evil aspects (Pope John Paul II, Encylical Letter
Evangelium vitae , On the Good and Inviolability of Human Life, 25 March 1995,
Acta Apostolicae Sedis 87 [1995], 487, no. 73). In an analogous manner, as
voters, we are often faced with a choice among candidates who do not fully
oppose unjust laws. In such a case, we must choose the candidate who will most
limit the evil effects of unjust laws. But, there is no element of the common
good, no morally good practice, which a candidate may promote and to which a
voter may be dedicated, which could justify voting for a candidate who also
endorses and supports the deliberate killing of the unborn, euthanasia or the
recognition of a same-sex relationship as a legal marriage. The respect for the
inviolable dignity of innocent human life and for the integrity of marriage and
the family are so fundamental to the common good that they cannot be
subordinated to any other cause, no matter how good it may be.
24. In the present situation of our nation, a serious question has arisen about
the moral obligation of Catholics to work for the overturning of the Supreme
Court decisions in Roe v. Wade and Doe v. Bolton. There are those who would tell
us that such work is futile and, therefore, is to be abandoned, so that we can
devote ourselves to help prevent individuals from choosing abortion. As
Catholics, we can never cease to work for the correction of gravely unjust laws.
Law is a fundamental expression of our culture and implicitly teaches citizens
what is morally acceptable. Our efforts to assist those who are tempted to do
what is always and everywhere wrong or are suffering from the effects of having
committed a gravely immoral act, which are essential expressions of the charity
which unites us as citizens of the nation, ultimately make little sense, if we
remain idle regarding unjust laws and decisions of the courts regarding the same
intrinsic evils. We are never justified in abandoning the work of changing
legislation and of reversing decisions of the courts which are anti-life and
anti-family.
Conclusion
25. As we gather this morning to pray for our nation, let us draw courage and
strength from the glorious pierced Heart of Our Lord Jesus. Let us not give way
to discouragement in our exercise of patriotism but rather be confident of the
essential contribution which our Catholic faith makes to the life of our nation.
26. May the courage and strength which comes to us from the Sacred Heart of
Jesus enlighten our minds to see more clearly the gravity of the situation of
our nation and inflame our hearts to do our part to transform the life of our
nation, in accord with the natural moral law, that is, with what is just and
serves the good of all. Let us draw courage and strength from the Sacred Heart
of Jesus through prayer and the Sacraments, especially the Sacraments of Penance
and the Holy Eucharist. May the courage and strength of Christ guide our
reflection on the state of our nation and lead us to that just action, taught to
us by our faith, which serves the good of all.
27. Invoking the intercession of Mary Immaculate, Our Lady of Guadalupe, Mother
of America, let us pray today and everyday that we as Catholics, true to our
faith and, therefore, patriotically devoted to our nation, may promote respect
for all human life, safeguard the sanctity of marriage and the family, and,
thereby, foster the good of all in the nation and in the world.
Thank you. God bless you.
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