Sen. Ted Kennedy's Catholicism: First Take

August 26, 2009 RSS Feed Print

By Dan Gilgoff, God & Country

Sen. Ted Kennedy's Roman Catholicism gets passing mention in today's obituaries, but lines like this from USA Today's obit cry out for a closer look at the senator's faith and its role in his life and career:

Though he disagreed with church leaders on the issues of abortion and gay rights, Kennedy was a devout Catholic who clung to his religion's belief in the potential for human redemption.

The Catholic angle is sure to get more attention in coming days, but here are a few things we know so far:

1. Before the Supreme Court's 1973 Roe v. Wade decision, Kennedy—who for decades has been a boogeyman for the antiabortion movement—was apparently an opponent of abortion rights. In his book Onward Christian Soldiers, Republican activist and writer Deal Hudson quotes from a 1971 letter that Kennedy wrote on the subject:

It is my personal feeling that the legalization of abortion on demand is not in accordance with the value which our civilization places on human life. Wanted or unwanted, I believe that human life, even at its earliest stages, has certain rights which must be recognized; the right to be born, the right to life, the right to grow old.

2. After the 2004 "values voter" election, Kennedy was the first Democrat to call progressive evangelical activist Jim Wallis to talk faith and politics, as Wallis recounts today:

In the aftermath of the 2004 Presidential elections, the Democrats were roundly accused of losing the "moral values voters" in America, and of being the party of "secularists" who were hostile to faith and religion. The very first Democrat to call me and ask to talk about that accusation and how to change the moral debate in America was Ted Kennedy. He invited me to his home, where he, and his wife Vicki, engaged me in a long and very thoughtful conversation, into the night, about the relationship between faith, morality, and politics. Their own deep Catholic faith was evident and their articulation of it very impressive. Our discussion was not partisan at all—it was not about how to win religion back for the Democrats. Rather, we focused on the great moral issues facing the nation, and how we as people of faith needed to respond to them.

3. Kennedy's wife, Vicki, was one of a small handful of Catholic surrogates for Barack Obama's presidential campaign last year. She was especially active in Ohio, a heavily Catholic swing state.

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barnetquil of ID 12:43PM November 19, 2009

I lost all respect for Kennedy when he got his marriage annulled to his first wife, the mother of his 5 children. An Anullment means there never was a marriage; it wasn't consumated, etc. Just goes to show you money talks. I read Jackie Kennedy's autobiography explaining that all the Kennedy men were womanizers and none ever faithful to their wives - starting with Joe Kennedy. Yes, they all went to the Catholic church but they never lived their faith. I am really sick of hearing about the Kennedys! It all about the $$$, the glamour of the Kennedy clan - as if we had our own royals. The sooner this clan dies out, the better.

I certainly don't agree that we need to take a look at his faith and its role in his life and career. That is totally hunkus in the bunkus.

Karen Kosmoski of AZ 4:19PM October 14, 2009

Andy says babies are a blessing. Not so. Read Genesis. God commands Adam & Eve to be fruitful & flll the world with God worshippers who give 10% of all they own, to preachers. Scared to disobey, Eve gives birth to Cain. Wow and Zap. God immediately curses motherhood. He says childbearing will be agony. He curses fatherhood, saying men must work to provide for their families. This sets the nasty example for men, after pleasurably impregnating wives, to disappear as "Deadbeat Dads" leaving "Fatherless Children." Later, Christ tells fathers to stop working, be Absentee Fathers & go off begging with him. Obeying Christ was the act that turned the children into accursed nuisances, left behind to burden women with their care. Today, Prolifers tell women they must bear unwanted conceptions & foist them off on adoptive parents or stick taxpayers with them. Preachers think at least some of those un-aborted will grow up and start tithing. Babies are a Curse. God let them multip[y & then drowned all except 8 on the Ark. God killed the First Born and everbody in Sodom. He treated children like trash.

auradawn veirs of CA 10:09PM October 08, 2009

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Dan Gilgoff covers religion for U.S. News & World Report. He is the author of The Jesus Machine: How James Dobson, Focus on the Family, and Evangelical America are Winning the Culture War, and is a former politics editor at beliefnet. E-mail Dan at godandcountry@usnews.com.

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