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- Date: Wed, 23 Dec 1992 03:55:06 PST
- Sender: Free Catholic Mailing List <CATHOLIC@AUVM.BITNET>
- From: "John R. Covert 23-Dec-1992 0618" <covert@COVERT.ENET.DEC.COM>
- Subject: Re: OR
- Lines: 32
-
- >Randall Terry and Operation Rescue are pursuing a criminal path to stop
- >what they feel to be a crime. This is a case where two wrongs do not make
- >a right. End of excerpt from "Edward J. Branley"
- >
- >Out of curiosity, would you say the same about MLK? After all,
- >he did things that were illegal, did he not? He spent time in jail.
- >Yet he did what he did out of a conviction that the laws were
- >unjust. * Gordon Zaft
-
- In fact, MLK and the Catechism agree.
-
- MLK said that just as we have an obligation to obey just laws, we also
- have an obligation to disobey unjust laws.
-
- (2242) [My unauthorized translation; French has been posted before]
- The citizen is obligated in conscience to not follow the orders of civil
- authorities when these precepts are contrary to the exigencies of moral
- order, to the fundamental rights of persons, or the the messages of the
- Gospel. ... [Citizens] are permitted to defend their rights and those
- of their fellow citizens against the abuse of power, respecting the limits
- of natural law and the law of the Gospel.
-
- The Church states and MLK clearly stated the obligation to disobey unjust
- laws. This would include laws which do not respect the inalienable right
- to life of every human individual, from the moment of conception. (See
- paragraph 2273 of the Catechism.)
-
- In such cases, Christians are called in conscience to disobey the state.
- Christians may not put the state before God. The Catechism is most clear
- in this regard.
-
- /john
-