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To: NYer

Is the (Catholic) Church Prepared to Confront the Secular Culture? >>

no, most priests, nuns and bishops are democrats, the secularists are the politicians they vote for so the politicians can represent them in government, we’re a republic, right? When democrat priests vote for the anti-God secularist crowd, they are voting for people who represent their ideals and beliefs.


28 posted on 08/31/2015 8:02:50 PM PDT by Coleus (For the sake of his sorrowful passion, have mercy on us and on the whole world.)
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To: Coleus; metmom; boatbums; presently no screen name; redleghunter; Springfield Reformer; ...
no, most priests, nuns and bishops are democrats,

Only stats I found as God enables in grace:

Table 18.5 records the actual level of political engagement reported by Catholic priests in the election of 2000; such activity seems to have been somewhat limited in nature. Only a bare majority of respondents (54 percent) publicly took the unexceptionable position of urging the members of their congregations to register and vote, and just less than half of the priests in the sample (48 percent) prayed publicly about a political issue. A minority of these priests engaged in other political activities: less than two of five (38 percent) Catholic clergy had con-tacted a public official about some issue; only one-third (33 percent) took a stand on some political issue while preaching; and less than one-quarter (23 percent) prayed publicly for political candidates.

Despite the expectations of some analysts (see especially Prendergast 1999), Catholic priests remain largely Democratic in their personal political identifications. Just under half (48 percent) report identifying with the Democratic Parry, while only 31 percent consider themselves Republicans.. However, the pattern of party preference is distinctive in another sense. Given that the distribution of partisan identification among clergy in many other denominations examined in this volume are skewed in the direction of one particular political party, the relatively equal distribution of Catholic priests within each category of partisan identification tends to be unique. In addition, given the older age of many of the priests surveyed, it is noteworthy that there is a higher pro-portion of Republican Party identifiers among younger, rather than older, priests...

Roman Catholic clergy exhibit a combination of anticipated and unex-pected patterns in their theology, political attitudes, and political behav-ior. Theologically, the prints express views that are both conservative and liberal in their theological interpretation. On some doctrinal mat-ters, Catholics pastors are highly orthodox in their theological under-standings and stand in agreement with many conservative Protestant clergy; on other theological matters, they adopt positions that stand in stark contrast to such conservative pastors and appear to be more liberal in their theological beliefs than many mainline Protestant ministers. - Pulpit and Politics: Clergy in American Politics at the Advent of the Millennium edited by Corwin E. Smidt, pp. 244-246 , Baylor University Press (October 6, 2004)


30 posted on 08/31/2015 9:43:43 PM PDT by daniel1212 (Turn to the Lord Jesus as a damned and destitute sinner+ trust Him to save you, then follow Him!)
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