
Portsmouth, England, May 15, 2017 / 03:30 am (CNA/EWTN News).- An English bishop has asked the people of his diocese to remember the sanctity of human life at all stages as they prepare to vote in the upcoming general election.
In a pastoral letter read in all the churches across the Diocese of Portsmouth May 14, Bishop Philip Egan posed ten questions that Catholics might consider in the election, including questions related to care for the environment, the family, the poor, the sick, the disabled, and persecuted Christians.
These questions could be used to “evaluate a manifesto, or you could put them to a prospective parliamentary candidate,” he said.
Remember the protection of human life at the next General Election,@BishopEgan urges @PortsmouthRC Diocese. https://t.co/uKBIauY19f
— Portsmouth Diocese (@PortsmouthRC) May 12, 2017
Catholics must consider the sanctity of life first and foremost, he noted.
“How far will this or that candidate protect the sacred dignity of each human life from conception to natural death, opposing moves to liberalise the abortion laws, to extend embryo experimentation and to legalize assisted suicide and euthanasia?”
The country is holding general elections three years early, on June 8 of this year, in a move by UK Prime Minister Theresa May to strengthen her Conservative Party government for upcoming Brexit negotiations.
In a British general election, all registered voters may vote for one candidate to represent their local area, or constituency, in Parliament. The leader of the party with the most members of parliament after the election becomes prime minister and forms a government.
Preliminary opinion polls show the Conservative Party in a comfortable lead, at around 46 percent, according to the BBC, followed by Labour at 29 percent. The Liberal Democrats are polling at 9 percent, UKIP at 6 percent, and both the Greens and the SNP at 4 percent.
According to The Independent, a leaked draft of the Labour Party’s manifesto says the party “will legislate to extend” abortion rights to women in Northern Ireland.
Bishop Egan reminded his flock in his pastoral letter that as baptized Christians “you and I are different – or at least we are meant to be. Jesus has chosen us to be His disciples within His Body the Church.”
This discipleship should carry over into the way a Christian votes, the bishop said.
“…as Catholics we have a crucial contribution to make to this democratic process,” he said.
In his questions, the bishop echoed Pope Francis and Benedict XVI’s concern for the environment when he posed the question: “How will they care better for the environment, promoting an ‘integral ecology’ with a simpler lifestyle?”
He also asked voters to consider whether candidates support family values, efforts to help the homeless, and the care of the mentally ill.
“And tenthly, how will they foster peace, justice and development abroad, whilst encouraging our Government to stand up for Christians who are being persecuted in such places as Syria and Egypt?”
He also encouraged his people to think about their role as missionary disciples, and in particular to pray for vocations to the priesthood, which “do not come out of thin air”, but from prayer and fasting, he said.
“Please pray for more priests. Why not say the Rosary for this intention? Or offer up your Friday abstinence? Or if you watch a football match, ask God to call one of the players or one of the fans?”
He concluded by asking his people to trust in the Lord and offered prayers for the country ahead of the elections.
“In (Sunday’s) Gospel, Jesus said: ‘Do not let your hearts be troubled. Trust in God still and trust in me.’ We believe that Jesus Christ is the Way, the Truth and the Life. He calls each of of us to discern our vocation and to play our part. As we approach the General Election, let us pray for our country.”
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The Cathedral was a monument to Our Lady by a civilization that believed in, trusted her, and paid her homage. This fire is surely a sign to the civilization which does her little honor and indeed pays her little homage and even less belief. In this Holy Week, let us faithful ones beg her protection.
It’s incredibly painful to watch the cathedral burning. But however beautiful it was, it was only rock, wood, glass and metal, and whatever those before us made we can make again if we try.
But maybe a good time to remember the rain falls on us all, good and wicked and in between. Let’s not suggest we can escape hardship through thoughts and deeds.
I am grateful that nobody, it seems, has been killed, but I am heartbroken by the destruction. Would it be wrong to pray that God would miraculously restore it?
When I was 6 years old, I prayed that God would miraculously restore my dog to life. We need to learn that this is not how God normally works. And frankly (an apt word), our prayers are better spent asking for a restoration of the Faith that built the building rather than for the building itself.
We don’t know how God works.
A restoration of the Cathedral may be instrumental in bringing a few lost souls back to Faith.
I am aware that that is not how God normally works. Miracles, especially of that sort, are not common. But as Ramjet says below, a miraculous restoration might aid in the restoration of lost faith. So many people were praying publicly last night – perhaps some of whom normallly don’t.
Please, does anyone know if they saved the Eucharist?
Yes, they did. “Etienne Loraillère, an editor at France’s KTO Catholic Television, reported that “Fr. Fournier, chaplain of the Paris Firefighters, went with the firefighters into Notre-Dame cathedral to save the crown of thorns and the Blessed Sacrament.”