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The following letter was sent to President George W. Bush
December 19, 2003
VIA
FACSIMILE
The Honorable George W. Bush
President of the United States
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington D.C. 20500
Dear Mr. President:
On behalf of the American TFP I would like to thank you
for all that you and your administration have done to defend
the family and the sanctity of marriage.
In the wake of the Supreme Court’s June 26 decision
in Lawrence v. Texas and the November 18 decision
by Massachusetts’ Supreme Judicial Court in Goodridge
v. Department of Public Health, numerous pro-family
organizations have launched an all-out effort to block the
homosexual agenda and uphold traditional marriage. The American
TFP is proud to be part of this combined effort.
In your ABC News interview with Diane Sawyer
on Tuesday, I was pleased to hear you state that, “if
necessary, I will support a constitutional amendment which
would honor marriage between a man and a woman, codify that…”
This was heartily encouraging for the overwhelming majority
of Americans, since they cherish the ageless norm of traditional
marriage.
With due respect, I would like to point out, however,
that you seem to have left a door open for “civil
unions,” when you continued, saying, “whatever
legal arrangements people want to make, they’re allowed
to make, as long as it’s embraced by the state or
start at the state level.”
Your indication that this is the administration’s
position leaves me deeply concerned, since “civil
unions,” “domestic partnerships,” or any
other euphemistic label used in lieu of same-sex “marriage,”
may leave the word marriage temporarily untouched,
but guts the institution, and with it the family, the bedrock
of society.
As a practicing Catholic and heading a Catholic-inspired
organization, I respectfully bring to your consideration
the enclosed copy of a July 31, 2003 document issued by
the Holy See titled Considerations
Regarding Proposals to Give Legal Recognition to Unions
Between Homosexual Persons.
This Vatican document was not addressed only to Catholics,
but to “all persons committed to promoting and defending
the common good of society” (Considerations,
no. 1). Its reasoning is based on natural law, which binds
all men, everywhere, and throughout history, since this
law is inscribed in human nature itself.
The Vatican document points out that the homosexual movement
takes advantage of legal tolerance to promote its ideology
and place people at risk, particularly youth. It warns “that
the approval or legalization of evil is something far different
from the toleration of evil” (Considerations,
no. 5).
Even where homosexual unions have been legalized, “clear
and emphatic opposition is a duty.” The document insists
that “any kind of formal cooperation in the enactment
or application of such gravely unjust laws” and even
any “material cooperation on the level of their application”
must be avoided. “In this area, everyone can exercise
the right to conscientious objection” (Considerations,
no. 5).
I respectfully submit that you dispel any confusion by
affirming your vigorous opposition to civil unions and domestic
partnerships, thus presenting to the nation an authentically
integral defense of the sacred institutions of marriage
and the family.
I appreciate the heavy burden that has befallen you after
the barbarous September 11, 2001 attack on America and value
your leadership in this difficult period of our history.
The trials we are crossing as a nation, however, will only
be compounded if, instead of giving our hand to God, we
turn away from Him, abandoning that natural law He inscribed
in the hearts of all men (Romans 2:14-15).
We should not fear the political fallout from disaffected
homosexual activists. Rather, we should fear the loss of
God’s blessings on America.
May God bless and help you in carrying out your difficult
responsibilities.
| Respectfully yours, |
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Raymond E. Drake
President
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