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Catholics for a Free Choice Totally Explained
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Everything about Catholics For A Free Choice totally explainedCatholics for a Free Choice (CFFC) is a pro-choice political organization whose founders hold the belief that "the Catholic tradition supports a woman's moral and legal right to follow her conscience in matters of sexuality and reproductive health." It is currently led by President Jon O'Brien.
History
Catholics for a Free Choice (CFFC) was founded in by Joan Harriman, Patricia Fogarty McQuillan, and Meta Mulcahy, to promote access to abortion in the context of Catholic tradition. Its first president was Joseph O'Rourke, who was expelled from the Jesuits and the priesthood in 1974. The group emerged from Catholics for the Elimination of All Restrictive Abortion & Contraceptive Laws, a New York lobby group that had been formed in 1970. The first public event held by the organization was the mock crowning of Patricia Fogarty McQuillan as "Pope Patricia" on the steps of St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York to celebrate the first anniversary of the Supreme Court decision, Roe v. Wade.
Mr. O’Rourke remained as president of CFFC until 1979,
The organization's stated issues include:
- Keeping abortion legal
- Expanding access to contraception
- Expanding the range of services provided by the Catholic healthcare system
- A frank exploration of human sexuality
- Awareness of HIV & AIDS issues
- Exploring diversity of views within the Catholic tradition
- Challenging public policy initiatives by "conservative religious groups"
In addition, CFFC engages in the following activities:
Expanding the role of women in the Church
supporting the idea of married clergy
Removing the Holy See from its permanent observer status at the U.N
Although Catholics for a Free Choice has several goals, it's most well-known for its pro-choice advocacy.
Condom program
In 2001, CFFC initiated a worldwide public education campaign called Condoms4Life to raise awareness about the Church's teaching prohibiting the use of artificial birth control, including condoms. In 2005, a group called World Youth Day for All attended the Catholic World Youth Day in Cologne, Germany and endorsed the campaign. They passed out postcards and stickers saying "Good Catholics Use Condoms". Posters from the group at this event also portrayed two men in an intimate embrace. Some critics claim this portrayal of homosexuality in the context of expressing sexuality (which the Catholic Church opposes) was offensive to Catholics. According to critics, CFFC also ignores the Catholic Church's teaching on abstinence.
The organization maintains that condom use will prevent the spread of AIDS, since couples will have sex despite Vatican prohibition. Several bishops share the beliefs of Condoms4Life, and have come out in support of condom use, arguing the Roman Catholic church's official position on this issue is unconscionable.
Pope-Watch
After Benedict XVI was elected, Catholics for a Free Choice initiated a project called Pope-Watch.org.
Among the demands made to Pope Benedict XVI by the project are:
a reversal of Church teaching regarding contraception, claiming that their use promotes the Catholic doctrine of the "culture of life"
the allocation of 25% of senior positions in the Vatican to women (see affirmative action)
optional celibacy for priests and religious
integration of already-married priests
meeting with survivors of clergy sex abuse
promotion of "intellectual and theological freedom throughout the church"
clarification of the rights of Catholics to receive the Eucharist
celebration of the Eucharist with those whom the church has "hurt." According to CFFC, this includes members of the clergy who have married, all victims of clergy sexual abuse, dissenting theologians and people living with HIV/AIDS.
The Church also continues to allow some Protestant clergy that have converted to be ordained, though many of them are already married, due to a dispensation granted by the Pope. However, celibacy is maintained for the vast majority of priests, who don't fall under this extraordinary condition. Eastern Catholic priests can also be married and are in full communion with Rome.
Criticism of CFFC
The USCCB has made the statement that "CFFC isn't a Catholic organization, doesn't speak for the Catholic Church, and in fact promotes positions contrary to the teaching of the Church as articulated by the Holy See and the NCCB." It has been described by the Catholic League as an "anti-Catholic front group"
In response, the CFFC maintains that Roman Catholicism is an individual choice and that the CFFC is an advocacy group of pro-choice Roman Catholics, not a sanctioned Catholic organization. This emphasis on the individual and the individual conscience is a basis of CFFC's organizational mission.
CFFC provides arguments they claim are based in theology, such as the Jesuit branch of casuistry known as probabilism, to advance the organization's ideas.
However, some Catholic critics argue that CFFC is directly opposed to Catholic hierarchy teaching. These critics respond to CFFC by stating that the organization's theological arguments directly contradict the Catholic Church's teaching on abortion. This teaching is described in the Catechism of the Catholic Church.
Against its conservative opponents, it should be noted that Catholics for a Free Choice does criticise the US Catholic hierarchy on other issues than its stance against abortion. These include past hierarchy concealment of clergy paedophilia against male and female lay Catholics. It argues that the hierarchy shouldn't necessarily be seen as infallible when it comes to Catholic doctrine and pastoral practice, and has expressed concern for academic freedom within Catholic universities and institutions of higher education. These are seen as alternative sources of theological opinion and authority relative to the hierarchy.
One anti-abortionist, Diane Dew, has pointed out on her website that through the 1970s, the majority of the organization's budget came from a New York foundation related to a Long Island Unitarian Universalist church, and that the organization first operated out of office space donated by Planned Parenthood. Dew claims that CFFC is funded by groups that "oppose" the Catholic Church, such as the Playboy Foundation, and other groups supporting population control. In response, it should be noted that Catholics for a Free Choice has been a long-time member of the interfaith Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice, which includes liberal mainline Protestants and Jews, as well as humanist organisations. It is committed to ecumenical and interfaith co-operation with other religious pro-choice organisations.
Bishop Fabian Bruskewitz of Lincoln, Nebraska issued an interdict in March of 1996 forbidding Catholics within his diocese from membership in twelve organizations, operating locally, where membership is described as "...always perilous to the Catholic Faith and most often is totally incompatible...", in a letter of formal canonical warning published in the diocesan newspaper, the Southern Nebraska Register. Catholics for a Free Choice was the last of the twelve named organizations. Members of the diocese were given one month from the date of the interdict to remove themselves from participation in the named organizations or face automatic excommunication. However, to this date, no other American bishop has made such a similar declaration, clarifying these issues.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Catholics For A Free Choice'.
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