You Are Invited
to come to
Hartford on
April 5
for Catholic
Concerns Day
For
more information,
click
here
|
By
THE MOST REVEREND WILLIAM E. LORI, S.T.D., BISHOP OF BRIDGEPORT
Fairfield
County Catholic, March 25, 2006
Last week, corned
beef and cabbage seemed to be on everyone's mind. People stopped to
thank me for dispensing them from the Lenten practice of abstaining
from meat on Fridays, so that they could enjoy corned beef and similar
delicacies on Saint Patrick's Day - with the understanding, of course,
that another day would be chosen for a serious penitential practice.
Someone did ask me if I got in trouble for giving this dispensation.
Actually, I would have gotten into more trouble had I refused it!
But Saint Patrick's
Day means a lot more than corned beef and cabbage. It's a day when we
pray to a saintly bishop who preached the Gospel so effectively that
he converted a nation and transformed a culture. It is a day when we
recall the tremendous sacrifices which the Irish people have made through
the centuries to practice their Roman Catholic faith. Saint Patrick's
Day also reminds us of the obstacles which Irish immigrants faced when
they came to the United States in the 19th century in the hope of escaping
starvation, chronic poverty, and unremitting religious persecution.
Those Irish immigrants,
once they left Erin's shores, continued to face poverty, discrimination,
and religious persecution. Although they were in the ranks of those
who built the infrastructure of our great nation, they suffered not
only for their Irish heritage but also for their Roman Catholic faith.
As you may recall from history, Irish Roman Catholics faced politically-organized
opposition. It was called the "Know Nothing Party" and it reached the
peak of its power in the 1850's.
Whether or not we
marched in a Saint Patrick's Day parade, we all need to know something
about the "Know Nothings." They may be making a subtle comeback.
The Know Nothings
believed that all were created equal - except for Catholics, foreigners,
and African-Americans. When questioned about their political philosophy,
members of this secretive party replied, "I don't know." In fact, everyone
knew that their main target was Irish Catholics. They did their best
to deprive Irish Catholics of their rights. They organized mob violence
against them. Above all, they sought to ensure that no Irish Catholic
and no one who married an Irish Catholic would ever be elected to public
office or serve in any responsible government position.
For a while, the
Know Nothings had political traction. In 1855 they won elections in
nine states and some 75 members of Congress were Know Nothings. After
that, their power as an organized political party waned - but their
bigoted views continued to have currency in mainstream American culture.
After all, it wasn't too long ago that business establishments posted
signs that read, "Irish Need Not Apply" and pursued "Catholics Need
Not Apply" policies. It took generations of courageous and hard-working
Irish-Americans, aided greatly by our Catholic parishes, schools, and
universities, to overcome such bigotry and to achieve that better life
which their ancestors long ago had sought.
A lot has changed
since the 19th century. It is unlikely that a political party organized
specifically against Roman Catholics would have even the brief respectability
that the Know Nothings achieved. But we would be wrong to imagine that
their philosophy has gone away. Alas, it is alive and well and enjoys
considerable political respectability not only in Connecticut, but also
in other parts of the country. Not unlike our ancestors, we are paying
a high price for defending life, for upholding traditional marriage,
and for seeking to influence the wider society with values that flow
not only from faith but also from reason.
Today's Know Nothing-ism
often takes the form of legislation that pretends to be for the common
good but in fact targets the Catholic Church's social and educational
institutions. A number of public officials have strongly suggested that
Catholic hospitals should be forced to implement medical protocols that
violate Catholic teaching - or else be penalized. Those who seek to
impose their will on our Catholic institutions seem not to know that
they are endangering religious liberty. They also seem not to know about
the immense amount of charitable work which Catholic healthcare institutions
provide.
In the recent past,
bills were introduced that would have imposed serious financial burdens
on Catholic Charities and our Catholic schools - institutions that serve
not merely the Church but the wider community. Last year, our Catholic
schools in the state saved taxpayers over $400 million and provided
an excellent education not only for those who can afford it but also
for many who have no other decent educational options. Catholic Charities
continues to be the largest non-governmental source of social services,
not only in Fairfield County but indeed in most parts of the country.
Why would legislators ever consider bills with such damaging consequences?
They claim not to know the harm they would do!
It's time we begin
to know!It's
time for us to know the immense good accomplished by our Church's educational,
health care, and social service institutions. It is also time for us
to know the positions of our legislators on bills such as these and
to demand better from those who represent and serve us in public life.
Saint Patrick's
Day is not just about corned beef and cabbage. With the courage of Saint
Patrick and with the help of his prayers, we need to find our voice
as a Catholic community and send our representatives the unmistakable
message that they must know that religious liberty is not a grant from
the State to the Church but rather a God-given human right.
I hope you will
join me in Hartford for Catholic Concerns Day on Wednesday, April
5, and send that message loud and clear (for details, click
here).
I also hope, if
you haven't done so already, that you sign on to the Connecticut
Catholic Advocacy Network to receive, by e-mail or regular mail,
important updates on happenings and legislation at the Capitol. For
more information, click
here.
Only by staying
informed can we support the Church we know and love so well.
Back