Home
Catholic News
Seasonal Features
Video
Audio
Entertainment
Saints
Shopping
Donate
Catholic News
Top Catholic News
Haiti Earthquake 2010
Year for Priests
Pope Benedict XVI
Economic Justice
War and Peace
Politics
Saints in the News
Bioethics
Evolution/Creationism
Respect Life
Vocations
Ecology
Secularism
Immigration
Interfaith Relations
Sexual Abuse
Death Penalty
Homosexuality
Seasonal Features
Advent
Christmas to Epiphany
Thanksgiving
Christian Unity Week
Valentine's Day
St. Patrick's Day
Lent
Easter/Pentecost
Earth Day
Mother's Day
Father's Day
Back to School
St. Francis
All Saints Day
Halloween
Entertainment
New Movies
Eye on Entertainment
Movies by title
Saints
Saint of the Day
Mary
St. Francis
St. Anthony
St. Patrick
Mother Teresa
Patron Saints
Saints by Date
Saints by Name
Saints in the News
FAQs
RSS Feeds
Daily Features
St. Anthony Messenger
Books
Catholic e-Greetings
Parish Newsletters/Services
E-Newsletters
Shopping
Franciscan Radio
Living Your Faith
Update Your Faith
Español
Contact Us
About Us
Donate
Advertise
Site Map
Daily Features
Saint of the Day
Minute Meditations
Daily Catholic Question
Top Catholic News
Catholic Community Speaks
St. Anthony Messenger
Current Issue
Archive
Subscribe
Books
Catalog
SAMP Books
Servant Books
Called to Holiness
Parish Newsletters/Services
Catholic Update
Every Day Catholic
Bringing Home the Word
Homily Helps
Faith Formation Update
Web Catholic
Webmaster resources
E-Newsletters
Saint of the Day
Minute Meditations
Catholic Greetings
Franciscan Radio
Friar Jack's E-spirations
Catholic SAMPler
Faith Formation Update
Web Catholic
Franciscan Radio
American Catholic Radio
Sunday Soundbites
Lenten Radio Retreats
Advent Radio Retreats
Living Your Faith
Post Prayer Requests
Once Catholic
Pledge Peace
Update Your Faith
Sunday Supplements
Catholic Church FAQs
Rosary
Sacraments
Sacramentals
Stations of the Cross
Saints FAQs
Pet Blessings
Free E-Newsletters
Saint of the Day
Friar Jack's E-spirations
Catholic SAMPler
Catholic Greetings
More e-newsletters
Sign-up for a FREE E-Newsletters From St. Anthony Messenger Press
Free e-mail newsletters for Catholics about spirituality, Catholic e-cards, Catholic saints, free Catholic product samples, Catholic catechetics and Catholics on the Internet.
Enter your email address:
Enter your full name:
Saint of the Day
Catholic Greetings Premiere
Minute Meditations
Friar Jack's E-spirations
Faith Formation Update
Franciscan Radio
Catholic Sampler
Saint of the Day
Our most popular Web feature since 1997 is now available free by e-mail! Learn about the lives of the saints one at at time, and be linked always to other saints resources, including a calendar and a list of patron saints. Even better, listen to a 90-second version of Saint of the Day from our own Franciscan Radio. It's all in your inbox every day.
Sign up!
Friar Jack's E-spirations
Each bimonthly free issue contains information and inspiration, and the latest happenings at AmericanCatholic.org "Friar Jack's Musings," on the message of St. Francis for today; and "Friar Jack's Catechism Quiz," a lively refresher course on Catholic basics.
Sign up!
Catholic SAMPler
Find out what's brand-new in the world of Catholic books, videos and audiotapes from St. Anthony Messenger Press (SAMP). Here's a new way to sample books, audios and videos, by simply clicking to view sample chapters and tables of contents, or listen to streaming media. We bring you new products, gift ideas for the season and resources to help you enrich your faith.
Sign up!
Catholic Greetings
Once a month, and on special occasions, Catholic Greetings Premiere comes to your inbox with links to new Catholic e-greetings from www.CatholicGreetings.org to send greetings for Sacraments, birthdays, holidays, celebrations and timely reminders of upcoming Catholic events.
Sign up!
Minute Meditations
Peaceful, spiritual reflection that comes to your inbox at no cost. Drawing upon short, inspired thoughts from the popular books and periodicals of St. Anthony Messenger Press, the online edition of Minute Meditations brings directly to you a chance to take a moment from the daily hurry and worry to focus on the place of God in your life.
Sign up!
Franciscan Radio
A radio ministry of the U.S. Bishops' Catholic Communication Campaign and the Franciscans, designed to help Catholics know their faith and grow in their faith, American Catholic Radio airs weekly throughout the country on Catholic radio stations. It also can be found at www.FranciscanRadio.org. Our bi-weekly e-newsletter highlights content from coming shows, two weeks out. Host Father Greg Friedman discusses his topics in his blog and alerts listeners and radio station staff to future projects. The e-newsletter is free and comes to your inbox every other week.
Sign up!
Faith Formation Update
Help plan your religious-education and RCIA classes with our monthly free e-newsletter aimed at religious educators. Timed to work within the liturgical calendar, this newsletter will bring you ideas gleaned from experienced teachers.
Sign up!
Web Catholic
Improve your Web ministry with this free monthly e-newsletter exploring how Catholics use the Internet. Webmasters and communications professionals can keep up with what's new on the Web for Catholics and learn from their colleagues whose sites are featured. View past "Sites of the Month."
advertisement
advertisement
top catholic news
Pope to Speaker Pelosi: Catholic legislators must protect life
By
Cindy Wooden
Source:
Catholic News Service
Published:
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
Email
|
Print
|
Size:
A
A
|
|
Rate this:
No rating
VATICAN CITY (CNS)—Pope Benedict XVI met privately with U.S. Rep. Nancy Pelosi, speaker of the House of Representatives, and told her that all Catholics, especially those who are lawmakers, must work to protect human life at every stage.
Pelosi, a Catholic Democrat from California, has been criticized by many Catholics for her support for keeping abortion legal.
"His holiness took the opportunity to speak of the requirements of the natural moral law and the Church's consistent teaching on the dignity of human life from conception to natural death," the Vatican said in a statement about the Feb. 18 meeting.
Natural law and the Church's own teaching require "all Catholics, and especially legislators, jurists and those responsible for the common good of society, to work in cooperation with all men and women of good will in creating a just system of laws capable of protecting human life at all stages of its development," the statement said.
Pelosi was making an official visit to Italy to meet members of the U.S. military stationed in the country and to discuss common security concerns with Italian government leaders.
Her 15-minute meeting with Pope Benedict took place in a small room in the Vatican audience hall after the pope's weekly general audience.
In a statement released by her staff, Pelosi said, "In our conversation, I had the opportunity to praise the Church's leadership in fighting poverty, hunger and global warming, as well as the Holy Father's dedication to religious freedom and his upcoming trip and message to Israel." The papal trip is scheduled for the second week of May.
Pelosi also said, "I was proud to show his holiness a photograph" from a papal audience she had with her parents in the 1950s, "as well as a recent picture of our children and grandchildren." Pelosi's husband, Paul, accompanied her to the meeting with the pope.
The speaker has made no secret of her belief that while efforts are needed to reduce the number of abortions in the United States and to help women faced with problem pregnancies, she believes abortion must remain safe and legal.
Coinciding with the 2009 March for Life in Washington, Pelosi issued a statement Jan. 22 saying, "I will work with President Obama, as I have worked throughout my entire career, to ensure a woman's right to choose.
"Decisions about whether to have a child do not and should not rest with the government. We believe a woman -- in consultation with her family, her physician and her faith -- is best qualified to make that decision," Pelosi said.
As a publicly practicing Catholic and a public opponent of efforts to make abortion illegal, Pelosi has come under sharp criticism by some bishops and other Catholics who believe that a politician who supports legalized abortion should not be allowed to receive Communion.
Other bishops, including Pelosi's own Archbishop George H. Niederauer of San Francisco, have recognized the public service of such politicians and have opted to engage them in a dialogue on promoting respect for human life in a wide range of public policies.
But Pelosi angered many bishops and other Catholics in August when she told the television program "Meet the Press" that church leaders for centuries had not been able to agree on when life begins.
She told interviewer Tom Brokaw, "We don't know" when life begins.
"I don't think anybody can tell you when life begins, human life begins. As I say, the Catholic Church for centuries has been discussing this," she said.
The chairmen of the U.S. bishops' pro-life and doctrine committees criticized Pelosi, saying she "misrepresented the history and nature of the authentic teaching of the Catholic Church on abortion" in the interview.
Cardinal Justin Rigali of Philadelphia and Bishop William E. Lori of Bridgeport, Conn., said the church since the first century "has affirmed the moral evil of every abortion."
"The teaching has not changed and remains unchangeable," their statement said. "Direct abortion, that is to say, abortion willed either as an end or a means, is gravely contrary to the moral law."
In an April teleconference with Catholic News Service and other media representatives, Pelosi said, "I have a sort of serenity" about receiving Communion even though her position on abortion differs from the Church's.
"The Church sees it another way, and I respect that," she said, adding, however, that she hoped the U.S. bishops would not use the refusal of holy Communion as a way of punishing Catholic politicians who don't heed church teachings on abortion.
"Think of that word Communion, that which brings us all together as Christians, as Catholics," Pelosi said. Denying a Catholic the Eucharist "would be something that would shatter that union," she said.
More on Politics and The Church >>
More Top Catholic News >>
MORE NEWS SECTIONS
Top Catholic News
Bioethics and the Catholic Church
Death Penalty
Ecology and Faith
Economic Justice
Franciscans' 800th
Haiti Earthquake 2010
Homosexuality, Gay Marriage and the Catholic Church
Lent/Easter 2010
Marriage
Politics and The Church
Pope Benedict XVI
Religious Intolerance
Respect Life
Saints in the News
The Church and Immigration
The Church and Interfaith Relations
The Church and Sexual Abuse
The Church, Evolution and Creation
Vocations
War and Peace
Year for Priests