Add News Story
Frequent Questions
Advertise with Us
|Mar 15, 2011

Abolishing death penalty in Illinois would help build culture of life

Photo via catholicnewsagency.com

The U.S. bishops are urging Illinois Governor Pat Quinn to sign an anti-death penalty law after weeks of indecision on the state leader's part, saying that the legislation would help build a “culture of life in our country,” reports Catholic News Agency.

“Respect for life applies to all, even the perpetrators of terrible acts,” Bishop Stephen E. Blaire of Stockton, California wrote to Gov. Quinn on March 3. Bishop Stockton serves as chairman of the Committee on Domestic Justice and Human Development for the U.S. Bishops' Conference.

The landmark Senate Bill 3539 abolishing the death penalty passed through the Illinois legislature in January and now awaits Gov. Quinn’s approval.

At an event at the University of Illinois on Jan. 19, Gov. Quinn says he'd like feedback from the citizens of Illinois before he decides whether to sign the legislation. He added that he is currently going through a period of what he called “reflection and review” and has not indicated when he will make a decision. According to local news outlets, the governor has until March 18 to sign the bill into law before it takes effect without his signature.

“On behalf of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, I join the Catholic bishops of Illinois and urge you to sign SB 3539,” Bishop Blaire said in a letter to Gov. Quinn.

The Stockton bishop added that the legislation would not only end the use of the death penalty in Illinois but also provide funds for training law enforcement personnel and providing services to families of murder victims.

Bishop Blaire also noted in his letter to the governor that Pope Benedict XVI and his predecessor, Pope John Paul II, “called for the end to the use of the death penalty as a sign of greater respect for all human life.”

His letter also drew from the U.S. Bishops' Conference 2009 document “In A Culture of Life and the Penalty of Death,” which says that even “when people deny the dignity of others, we must still recognize that their dignity is a gift from God and is not something that is earned or lost through their behavior.”

“The legislation before you would help to begin building a culture of life in our country,” he said.

Karen Clifton, executive director of the Catholic Mobilizing Network – a group that works collaboratively with the U.S bishop's conference – said in a Jan. 18 interview with CNA that “all eyes are on Illinois” as Catholics wait to see if it will repeal the death penalty.

“Presently there are 15 states without the death penalty and 35 still have the death penalty on their books,” Clifton said. “We are waiting for Illinois to make the number 16.”

Clifton spoke against the continued use of the death penalty in comments to EWTN News, saying that Catholics need to be consistent in promoting the Church's stance on the issue. Failure to do so, she added, puts the faith community at risk of not being taken seriously on other pro-life initiatives.

If you have an account

If you are a new user

Terms

Top Stories

Michelle Hollomon: Our view of God affected our lives

Michelle Hollomon, author of a newly released book titled God Unwrapped: God Is Love...but Not the Kind You Are Used to...
0 0/0 Read More

Breaking News

Quotes
Soon after the wife opened her eyes there was a lot of confusion and motion in the room because all of the sudden... “beep, beep, beep”... the heart beat was back
Dr. Sean Geogre, about resurrection from the dead in story ‟Doctors searched for evidence of divine healing in Australia”
Opinion
The decision of the Tribunal to refuse Catholic Care in Leeds the right to amend its adoption policy is yet another example of the problems that ‘equality’ legislation is causing for those who hold orthodox Christian beliefs
Andrea Minichiello Williams of the Christian Legal Centre in story ‟Catholic Care forced to offer adoption services to gay couples”