NM Catholic Bishops Hold Lawmakers Accountable

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Yesterday we had a report from Elisa Martinez on this story. Today the Albuquerque Journal has a report on the New Mexico Catholic Bishops telling Legislators not to speak for the Church: ABQ Journal Report

From Elisa Martinez, Executive Director NM Alliance for Life: “I’m glad the Bishops of NM have addressed this: “It is not morally permissible for a Catholic to support abortion or doctor assisted suicide.” Period. Three years ago Sen. Jerry Ortiz y Pino lectured us how he, as a “Catholic” could not support our bill, the late-term abortion ban, since “nowhere in the Bible does it say abortion is wrong”!There was a collective gasp in the room at this outrage. Just this Sunday, Rep. Patricia Roybal Caballero stated she was taught by the Loretto nuns and her conscience does not allow her to vote for a late-term abortion ban. Thank God this is being exposed and I pray for the conversion of these wayward souls.”

Thank you Elisa for bringing this information to light. Go to New Mexico Alliance for Life to donate to help keep Elisa and her team going in working for life and to see all that is going on when it comes to abortion and the climate of death in New Mexico.

Archdiocese of Santa Fe Official

 

NMCCB Statement on the Dignity of Human Life
March 6, 2017

We the bishops of the State of New Mexico speak for the Catholic Church. We work to uphold the dignity of the human person from conception to natural death through our pastoral ministries and through our legislative advocacy via the New Mexico Conference of Catholic Bishops. We encourage individuals to live and proclaim their faith; however, they must be steadfast in stating they speak for themselves and do not speak for the Catholic Church.

Recently, statements have been made by some Catholic legislators regarding abortion, doctor-assisted suicide and the Catholic Church. These statements may be confusing to the Catholic faithful and do not represent the teachings of the Church. It is not appropriate for elected officials to publicly invoke their Catholic faith and to present their personal opinions as official Church teaching. This misrepresents Church teaching and creates a public scandal for the faithful. Furthermore, this action publicly separates a person from communion with the Catholic faith.

We acknowledge that there are Catholic legislators who advocate and vote for some issues that are of moral importance to Catholics, including concern for poor people and immigrants. We applaud their work giving voice to the voiceless. However, we are concerned by public statements by some legislators that seem to say that a faithful Catholic can support abortion or doctor-assisted suicide. Support for abortion or doctor-assisted suicide is not in accord with the teachings of the Church. These represent the direct taking of human life, and are always wrong. Furthermore, we are convinced that proclaiming and living the Gospel of Jesus Christ is the most effective way to change hearts and minds so that one day the scourge of abortion will be eliminated. Our message is consistent: All human life is sacred, from the moment of conception to natural death, and must be protected. As Pope Francis reminds us, “Even the weakest and most vulnerable, the sick, the old, the unborn and the poor, are masterpieces of God’s creation, made in His own image, destined to live forever, and deserving of the utmost reverence and respect (7/17/13).” It is not morally permissible for a Catholic to support abortion or doctor-assisted suicide.

We also acknowledge that God’s forgiveness is always available to us if we seek it, so that we may heal our soul and be reconciled with God, the Church and others. This is the case with abortion. Those who have had an abortion, participated in an abortion, or otherwise supported an abortion need to seek reconciliation with God and the Church through the sacrament of reconciliation. The Project Rachel ministry of the Catholic Church offers this hope for healing and reconciliation to men and women who have had or participated in an abortion.

We want to be clear. Individuals and groups do not speak for the Catholic Church. As bishops, we do. The Archdiocese of Santa Fe, the Diocese of Las Cruces and the Diocese of Gallup continuously preach Jesus’ Gospel of Life in public and in private meetings with legislators. We visit the New Mexico Legislature when it gathers and host a time when together the priorities of the Church are made known to the legislators. We take the Gospel to the public square in public meetings and hearings as well as in private meetings and conversations with elected officials. We pray for all legislators and through the New Mexico Conference of Catholic Bishops are here to aid in the formation of consciences. We will continue to collaborate with many others to uphold the dignity of the human person through a consistent ethic of life from conception to natural death.

Meet a ‘genderless’ extraterrestrial
Dr. Jim Denison | March 9, 2017
Meet Vinny Ohh. This twenty-two-year-old California make-up artist believes that he is neither male nor female. He has had over 110 medical procedures to transition into a “genderless” extraterrestrial. Among them: twelve cheek fillers, two brow fillers, fifteen lip fillers, five Botox sessions, five nose procedures, and twenty cryo facial freezings.He is set to appear on The Plastics of Hollywood, a television show that will house real-life plastic surgery addicts together. The show’s producer says, “In 15 years, hundreds of people will want to look like him. We’re in an era where there’s people who want to look like lizards, those who implant horns into their skulls and people with full-face tattoos . . . We want to be the first agency who will treat these human dolls, alien dolls and cartoons as a normal part of the society that we’re living in now.”

When there’s no such thing as “normal,” the term applies to everyone.

In his dissent after the Supreme Court legalized gay marriage, Chief Justice John Roberts noted: “It is striking how much of the majority’s reasoning would apply with equal force to the claim of a fundamental right to plural marriage.” In other words, the decision to redefine marriage need not end with same-sex marriage. Polygamists are already hard at work using the ruling to advance their agenda. Once the moral train leaves the station, it’s difficult to say where it will stop.

In We Cannot Be Silent, Albert Mohler asserts that “we are facing nothing less than a comprehensive redefinition of life, love, liberty, and the very meaning of right and wrong.” He cites British theologian Theo Hobson, who argues that the moral revolution of our day is unprecedented in Christian history. Hobson notes two factors behind the challenges we face.

First, the “new morality” is either-or. Either churches will affirm the legitimacy of same-sex marriage and other unbiblical behavior or they will not. There is no middle ground.

Second, the new morality has replaced traditional morality on the moral high ground of our culture. There was a time, for instance, when homosexual behavior was thought immoral. Now opposition to it is considered immoral, homophobic, repressive, and dangerous. The church was once seen as the guardian of what was right and righteous in society. Now those who declare and defend biblical morality are on the wrong side of morality in the eyes of their culture.

For example, I believe that Vinny Ohh is misusing the body God gave him. That sentence is enough for defenders of the new morality to consider me dangerously prejudiced. The fact that I base my opinion on the Bible—”God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them” (Genesis 1:27)—makes me a Bible-bashing, fundamentalist hater in their eyes.

What are defenders of biblical morality to do?

We can try to catch the “train of tolerance” before it’s too late. We can stay at home and deride those who have boarded that train. Or we can go to the station and seek to persuade everyone we meet to refuse what God forbids and choose what he blesses.

What would you want someone to do for you?

NOTE: I invite you to join me for a seminar I am teaching on how to engage the culture for Christ. You can register here for the four-week course. The class meets from March 30 to April 20, 6:30 to 8:30 PM on Thursday nights at Dallas Baptist University. We will develop a Christian worldview, understand trends in the culture, and learn how to speak the truth in love on topics from medical ethics to the LGBTQ movement. Please join us.

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