Don’t’ be afraid to
junk RH bill
By Fr. ROY CIMAGALA
December
8, 2009
DEMOCRACY is freedom
in search of inspiration. It waits to be given substance, meaning,
orientation and direction. By itself, it simply is a mold, a system
that requires a lifeblood to warm up and start functioning. It needs
to be given life.
So it depends on the
vital elements of the citizens that have it – how they are as a
people, their culture, their history, their beliefs and aspirations,
their sense of life and purpose, etc. These get factored in and
eventually get integrated into one workable whole through the
democratic processes.
It can only be perfect
to the extent that the people involved in it are. It reflects and
mirrors them. But it can also project and mold them. It collects the
sentiments of the people, but it can also cause other sentiments too,
generating a kind of spiral that is open-ended.
That is why we have to
take care of it. Democracy needs to be guided, and we the people
involved, especially our leaders, should keenly feel the
responsibility for it.
Relevant to all this,
let me quote some lines from John Paul II’s Centesimus Annus, kind of
dense but I must say all worth it. Let’s bear with it. Here it goes:
“Authentic democracy
is possible only in a State ruled by law, and on the basis of a
correct conception of the human person.
“It requires that the
necessary conditions be present for the advancement both of the
individual through education and formation in true ideals, and of the
‘subjectivity’ of society through the creation of structures of
participation and shared responsibility.”
Then it warns us of a
clever attitude that actually undermines authentic democracy.
“Nowadays there is a
tendency to claim that agnosticism and skeptical relativism are the
philosophy and the basic attitude which correspond to democratic forms
of political life.
“Those who are
convinced that they know the truth and firmly adhere to it are
considered unreliable from a democratic point of view, since they do
not accept that truth is a determined by the majority, or that it is
subject to variation according to different political trends.
“It must be observed
in this regard that if there is no ultimate truth to guide and direct
political activity, then ideas and convictions can easily be
manipulated for reasons of power.
“As history
demonstrates, a democracy without values easily turns into open or
thinly disguised totalitarianism.” (46)
In the current debate
for the RH bill that now exposes a few Catholic leaders not quite in
step with Church teaching and discipline, this subtle anomaly of
democracy distorted by agnosticism, relativism and the mere majority
rule emerges.
It is argued that one
just cannot be completely for or against it, since there are many good
things about it and a few questionable elements, and that the Catholic
Church just cannot have its “Humanae vitae” legislated because of the
separation of Church and state.
There are a lot of
misrepresentations in these claims, gratuitous short-cuts to favor
precisely the questionable elements in the bill. This bill has already
been scrutinized by many bishops and leaders in the Church and the
consensus has been that it is a dangerous bill.
Of course, the bill is
crafted to appeal to democratic sentiments – nothing wrong about that
– but given the context in which it was created and developed, it will
require complete naivete and an almost invincible ideological bias not
to see the danger it poses on people’s morals as understood from
Church doctrine.
At the very least,
that bill is highly divisive. And so if only for that reason alone, it
should be dumped. It’s actually not needed.
The good things it
contains can continue to be done without the law. And the bad things
it contains can also be done. No one can stop anybody from doing it.
Just don’t make it a law.
Let’s conclude with
some words of St. Paul addressed to those who tend to make exceptions
from Church teachings. From his letter to Titus, we have some relevant
points:
“Speak the things that
become sound doctrine….In all things show good fidelity, that they may
adorn the doctrine of God our Savior in all things.” (2,1ff.)
After all, democracy,
while respecting pluralism, should also carry the bedrock foundations
of a people’s beliefs. Dialogue and consensus-making are no excuse to
sideline the faith. One’s faith is nothing to be ashamed about in
public fora.
This is not a call for
fanaticism. Rather, it’s for democracy to be properly inspired.