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American Catholics can put faith in the United States aims
in Viet Nam but they must make sure the government pursues vigorously,
wholeheartedly and repeatedly, every opening which has even the slightest hope
of peaceful settlement, Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan and Bishop Joseph L.
Bernardin said in a pastoral letter, War and Peace.
The archbishop and bishop also discussed the urgent need to end
all war, the problems of disarmament, patriotism and the limits on conducting
war in the letter which will be distributed Sunday in all churches in the
Archdiocese of Atlanta.
The letter follows Pope Paul VIs encyclical letter, Christi
Matri Rosaril, (Rosaries to the Mother of Christ) which urges an end to all war
and calls for prayer in the Vietnam crisis.
Archbishop Hallinan and Bishop Bernardin said that there is
evidence that the government is trying to solve the war. In light of
events rather than slogans, then, it can be argued that to the present course
of action in Vietnam there may be no visible alternative.
But we cannot stop here. It is the Christian duty to keep
looking for other alternatives...we must keep insisting that our leaders fully
inform us of the facts and issues involved in the Vietnam war.
The two priests said true peace will not be brought about solely
by military victory or by maintaining a balance of power between enemies, but
from the harmony built into human society by its Divine Founder, and
actualized by men as they thirst after greater justice.
They said all must help enlarge the new climate of thought, that
is unreasonable to hold that war is still a suitable way to restore violated
rights. We must protest whenever there is danger that conduct of the war
will exceed moral limits because a Christian simply cannot approve
indiscriminate bombing, methodical extermination of people, nuclear arms
designed for overkill or disregard for noncombatants. The
archbishop and bishop said leaders must be given a mandate to pursue
disarmament. While no Catholic teaching demands that a nation disarm by
itself, the whole Catholic momentum today is toward a disarmament that is
complete, thorough and internal, resting on mutual agreement and workable
safeguards. We cannot stand aside because such a solution is hard to visualize
or difficult to achieve. They also said, We must never cease to do
everything in our power to help make it possible for the poorer nations of the
world to give their people what they need -- educationally,
culturally, materially, socially -- to live in a way that squares
with their God-given human dignity. True patriotism the archbishop and
bishop said, is based on living for God and Christ by following the honorable
custom of ones own nation, but that the American who is truly patriotic,
while devoting himself to the legitimate needs and concerns of his country,
also seeks the welfare of the whole human family...a universal love for
mankind. Quoting the Vatican Council, they pointed out that the Council
restated the traditional teaching regarding self-defense, but that all means
short of force must first be employed. Moreover, the Council Fathers
commend those in the military force who serves as agents of security and
freedom on behalf of their people as long as they fulfill this role
properly. Discussing the right of a conscientious objector, Archbishop
Hallinan and Bishop Bernardin quoted the Council which said, It seems
right that laws make humane provisions for the case of those who (for reasons
of conscience) refuse to bear arms, provided however, that they accept some
other form of service to the human community.
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