BALTIMORE — Acknowledging wide divisions in the country over
issues such as health care, immigration reform, taxes and abortion, the
president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops called for civility to
return to the public debate.
Contemporary challenges are great, but that they can be addressed
without anger and with love Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo of Galveston-Houston
said in his first address as USCCB president during the bishops' fall general
assembly.
"We are facing a time that seems more divided than
ever," Cardinal DiNardo said. "Divisions over health care, conscience
protections, immigration and refugees, abortion, physician-assisted suicide,
gender ideologies, the meaning of marriage and all the other headlines continue
to be hotly debated. But our role continues to be witnessing the Gospel."
He explained that the National Catholic War Council, created by
the U.S. bishops in 1917 in the response to the world refugee crisis that
emerged from World War I and the forerunner to the USCCB, was formed to address
great national and international needs at a time not unlike today.
He said the history of the American Catholic Church is full of
examples of the work of "holy men and women" responding to social
challenges. He particularly mentioned Capuchin Franciscan Father Solanus Casey,
who ministered alongside homeless and poor people in Detroit and who will be
beatified Nov. 18.
"The history of Christianity is also the story of
reconciliation. In 2017, we mark the 500th anniversary of the Reformation.
Begun as a moment of painful division, it stands as a journey toward healing,
from conflict to communion," Cardinal DiNardo said.
He continued, "Civility begins in the womb. If we cannot
come to love and protect innocent life from the moment God creates it, how can
we properly care for each other as we come of age? Or when we come to old
age?"
The cardinal lamented that abortion continues despite the
existence of alternatives to save the life of unborn children. He also outlined
several policy stances for the country to pursue.
He said hospitals and health care workers "deserve
conscience protections so they never have to participate in the taking of a
human life."
The cardinal called for "good and affordable health
care" for poor people and action to address the country's opioid abuse
epidemic.
To applause, Cardinal DiNardo urged lawmakers to enact
comprehensive immigration reform and protections for the country's 800,000
young adults who have been protected from deportation under the Deferred Action
for Childhood Arrivals program.
President Donald Trump in September called for an end to the
program, handing off the solution to the immigration status of young adults
brought to this country illegally as children to Congress and giving the
lawmakers a six-month window to act.
Acknowledging that a country has the right to defend its borders,
Cardinal DiNardo reminded the country's leaders that it should be done in a
humane way.
"We join our Holy Father in declaring that a pro-life
immigration policy is one that does not tear families apart, it protects
families," he said.
Racism, too, has risen to become a major challenge for the
country, the USCCB president said.
"In our towns and in our cities, as civility ebbs, we have
seen bolder expressions of racism, with some taking pride in this grave sin.
Sometimes it is shocking and violent, such as in Charlottesville (Virginia, in
August). More often it is subtle and systematic. But racism always destroys
lives and it has no place in the Christian heart," he said.
The cardinal called for a "bold national dialogue ... a
frank and honest commitment to address the root causes of racism."
"Americans don't like to talk about it. Nonetheless, it is
time to act. Our common humanity demands it of us. Jesus demands it of
us," Cardinal DiNardo said.
He discussed the work of Bishop George V. Murry of Youngstown,
Ohio, chairman of the bishops' new Ad Hoc Committee Against Racism. The
committee will meet with people throughout the country to learn how the best
can best respond "in ending this evil," he added.
Beyond such challenges, Cardinal DiNardo said, society has had to
respond to a series of natural disasters including hurricanes in Texas,
Florida, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, wildfires in California and
earthquakes in Mexico.
Such tragedies have brought the church in America together, he
said, "and has reminded me of how wonderful the gifts of faith, hope and
love truly are."
"We need to constantly put forward these virtues, especially
in light of violence from what is a long and growing list of mass shootings in
our schools, offices, churches and place of recreation," he explained.
"The time is long past due to end the madness of outrageous
weapons, be they stockpiled on a continent or in a hotel room," the
cardinal said.
Cardinal DiNardo said the love of Jesus is "stronger than
all the challenges ahead."
"My brothers, let us follow our Holy Father ever more
closely, going forth to be with our people in every circumstance of pastoral
life. Drawing strength and wisdom from these past hundred years, let us sound
our hands and voices joyfully. And let us always remind our people, and
ourselves, that with God, all things are possible."