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Local Catholic bishop criticized for letter encouraging pro-life voting

Bishop James V. Johnston Jr. of the Kansas City-St. Joseph Diocese

Bishop James V. Johnston Jr. of the Kansas City-St. Joseph Diocese is under fire for a letter he wrote encouraging Catholics to vote for pro-life candidates.

The letter does not explicitly tell parishioners who to vote for or endorse a particular party. After stating that government has a duty to protect “what God has already bestowed upon us as inalienable rights,” it says that Catholic voters “would do well to weigh a candidate’s position on each of these essential God-given rights that government has a duty to protect, beginning with the right to life.” Some Catholics, with little understanding of IRS rules, have a problem with that.

The letter has sparked outrage among some liberal Catholics who posted heated comments on social media. Some questioned whether the letter, by engaging in a form of political campaigning, violates IRS rules governing tax-exempt religious organizations. Cynthia Spaeth, a church-going member of the Visitation Parish in midtown Kansas City, told local radio station KCUR she was offended by the letter and read it as endorsing President Donald Trump.

“I think people should follow the spirit and the letter of the law, and he’s not allowed to make endorsements and maintain his tax exemption,” she said. “So just on that basis, it was offensive.”

In a phone interview with KCUR, Bishop Johnston said he was not instructing Catholics on how to vote but rather was urging them to vote their conscience.

“One of the places you start is just going back to a basic understanding of conscience, and our conscience is what guides us in all of our big moral decisions,” he said. “And so I mainly wanted to begin there, to review some of the basic, fundamental understanding of what a conscience is and how do you properly form it. And if you get that right, people then can follow that and make a good decision.”

Johnston’s letter reflects the stance of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, which in a letter last November said the threat of abortion is of “preeminent priority” – although it also spoke of “other serious threats to human life and dignity, such as racism, the environmental crisis, poverty and the death penalty.”

The bishop’s actions fall well within the legal parameters set forth by the Supreme Court of what clergy can do within their churches.

According to LibertyFirst.com, pastors can do the following:

–Alan Goforth | Metro Voice

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