Die kerk kan selfs in ons tyd invloed uitoefen in die mees onverwagte, maar ook magtigste plekke. Onderstaande berig verskyn in vandag se New York Times. Dit gaan oor die pous se invloed in die Amerikaanse senaat oor 'n belangrike nuwe beleidsaak wat sal soek om die inkomstegaping tussen ryk en arm aan te spreek..
Dit is 'n besondere kwessie, want die ongelykheid in inkomste tussen ryk en arm is in ons eie land nie net groot nie, maar dit vra ook nie veel om te besef dit het ook ernstige konsekwensies vir die toekoms van ons land.
As die pous invloedryk in die Amerikaanse senaat is, behoort dit des te meer die geval in ons land te wees. Des te meer rede vir kerke om hieroor te bly praat.
As die pous invloedryk in die Amerikaanse senaat is, behoort dit des te meer die geval in ons land te wees. Des te meer rede vir kerke om hieroor te bly praat.
Hier is die berig:
Shortly
before leaving the Capitol for the holiday recess, Senate Democrats gathered
behind closed doors to lay out an agenda for 2014. When the majority leader,
Harry Reid, exhorted colleagues to “deal with the issue of income inequality,”
the talk took a spiritual turn.
“You know,” declared Senator Bernard Sanders,
the Vermont independent, who caucuses with Democrats, “we have a strong ally on
our side in this issue — and that is the pope.”
That
Mr. Sanders, who is Jewish, would invoke the pope to Mr. Reid, a Mormon,
delighted Roman Catholics in the room. (“Bernie! You’re quoting my pope; this
is good!” Senator Richard J. Durbin of Illinois recalled thinking.) Beyond
interfaith banter, the comment underscored a larger truth: From 4,500 miles
away at the Vatican, Pope Francis, who has captivated the world with a message
of economic justice and tolerance, has become a presence in Washington’s policy
debate.
As
lawmakers return to the capital this week and mark the 50th anniversary of
President Lyndon B. Johnson’s declaration of a “war on poverty,” Democrats — including those
Catholics whose politics have put them at odds with a conservative church
hierarchy — are seizing on Francis’ words as a rare opportunity to use the
pope’s moral force to advance issues like extending unemployment benefits and
raising the minimum wage.
“He
has given a number of us in the political ranks encouragement, and really a
challenge, to step up and remember many of the values that brought us to public
life,” Mr. Durbin said.
Francis’
denunciation of an “economy of exclusion” goes to the heart of the debate
between the two parties over the role of government. Democrats like Mr. Durbin
and President Obama — whose administration is facing off against Catholic nuns in the
Supreme Court over birth control provisions in his health law — quote the pope
in speeches, using his words to reinforce their positions. Republicans find
themselves forced to justify votes to cut food stamps and unemployment benefits
even as they try to counter the perception that they are indifferent to the
poor.
But
though the pope has caused unease among Republicans as they reconcile his critique of capitalism and “trickle-down
theories” with their free-market views, some Catholic Republicans see
opportunity in his words.
Representative
Paul D. Ryan of Wisconsin, a potential 2016 presidential candidate who speaks
of poverty in the context of his faith, has praised Francis for “breathing new
life into the fight against poverty,” and is working on a Republican plan to
address the issue. Newt Gingrich, the former House speaker and now a co-host of
CNN’s “Crossfire,” said he would talk more about poverty on the program.
“I
think every Republican should embrace the pope’s core critique that you do not
want to live on a planet with billionaires and people who do not have any
food,” Mr. Gingrich said. “I think the pope may, in fact, be starting a
conversation at the exact moment the Republican Party itself needs to have that
conversation.”
In
many respects, Francis’ economic views are consistent with church doctrine and
the views of previous popes, though John Paul II spoke more about the benefits
of capitalism in the context of his anti-Communist views. But with his humble
style and off-the-cuff remarks, Francis is seen as shifting the church’s
emphasis and tone.
By
playing down issues like abortion and same-sex
marriage, the pope has also upended an order in Washington, where conservatives
have long viewed the church as an ally.
Mr.
Durbin, who attended Catholic schools but, as a senator, switched parishes to
avoid being denied communion because of his support for abortion rights, no
longer feels “beleaguered by the conservative leadership.” Senator Patrick J.
Leahy of Vermont, a Democrat who served as an altar boy from grade school
through college, described himself as feeling “liberated” after a recent speech
to a university center on Catholic intellectual life brought nary a question
about his support for abortion rights. He credited Francis for changing the
tone.
“I
felt such a relief,” Mr. Leahy said.
Pope
Francis is, of course, a religious figure — not a political one — and faith has
long mixed uneasily with politics in American public life. John F. Kennedy, the
only Roman Catholic president, felt compelled as a candidate to pledge not to
take cues from the pope. Today, with evangelical Christians a potent political
force, especially among Republicans, talk of God during political campaigns is
routine.
Catholics
account for about 24 percent of voters; for national candidates, courting them
is essential. Since 1972, just one presidential candidate, George W. Bush in
2000, has won the White House without winning the Catholic vote.
Francis
has proved his own admonition that “a good Catholic meddles in politics.” His
much-publicized comments on homosexuality — “Who am I to judge?” he said when asked about
gay priests — provoked Sarah Palin, the 2008 Republican vice-presidential
nominee, to say Francis sounded “kind of liberal.” Representative Nancy Pelosi
of California, the Democratic leader, who attended an all-girls Catholic high
school in Baltimore, said on CNN that with his message of
tolerance, “the pope is starting to sound like the nuns.”
Catholic
lawmakers in both parties know Francis is not changing church doctrine,
including opposition to abortion and same-sex marriage. “I haven’t yet seen
anything that departs from Catholic teaching,” said Senator Patrick J. Toomey,
Republican of Pennsylvania, an economic conservative.
In
November, Francis issued a 51,000-word apostolic exhortation entitled “Evangelii Gaudium” (“The Joy of the Gospel”),
which decried “trickle-down theories” and the “dictatorship” of a free market
that perpetuates inequality — views that some scholars attribute to his
perspective as the first Latin American pope.
Mr.
Obama approvingly quoted the exhortation in a speech on inequality, but Rush Limbaugh, the
radio host, promptly accused Francis of spouting “pure Marxism,” setting Washington conservative
policy circles abuzz.
“What
Francis is saying goes to the soul of the party,” said John Feehery, a
Republican strategist, who is Catholic. “What does the party actually believe
in? What is its purpose? Is it just to have unbridled capitalism without any
moral core?”
Mr.
Ryan, the chairman of the House Budget Committee whose 2012 proposal for cuts
in social programs drew criticism from Catholic bishops, has tried to answer
that question. In a speech titled “Free Enterprise, Faith and
the Common Good,” he argued that free enterprise and the Catholic principle of
“subsidiarity” — handling matters through the least centralized authority — can
address poverty better than big government.
As
to Francis’ “trickle down” comment, Mr. Ryan told The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel last
month: “The guy is from Argentina, they haven’t had real capitalism in
Argentina.”
For
Democrats, the pope’s apparent progressive leanings provide a fresh point of
entry to reach Catholic voters, who often serve as a proxy for how
middle-income Americans will cast their ballots. The Catholic vote is clearly
contestable; in 2012, Mr. Obama won Catholics by a slim margin, 50 percent to
48 percent, over Mitt Romney.
Still,
some Catholic lawmakers sound uneasy, wary of appropriating a religious leader
as their own.
“I
don’t talk about the pope that much,” said Senator Joe Donnelly, a freshman
Democrat from Indiana and a graduate of Notre Dame. “He’s not there to promote
the Republicans or promote the Democratic Party. He’s there simply to preach
the Gospel of Jesus Christ, and so the chips fall where they may when he does.”