Less than a month before elections in Catalonia, a Spanish cardinal has said that Catholics everywhere are violating Church teaching if they support pro-independence movements.
“In democratically constituted nations, there can be no moral legitimacy for unilateral secession,” Cardinal Antonio Cañizares Llovera of Valencia wrote in an article for the Madrid-based daily La Razon.
“When certain nations are linked by historical, cultural and political ties to other nations within the same state, it cannot be said that these nations necessarily enjoy a right to political sovereignty. Nations, considered in isolation, do not enjoy an absolute right to decide.”
The elections in the Catalonia region on December 21 will replace the Catalan parliament. In late October, the parliament voted to unilaterally declare independence from Spain. The Spanish prime minister then invoked an article of Spain’s constitution and dissolved Catalonia’s government.
Cardinal Cañizares said the Catholic Church recognised the right of people to change the political order “without violence, by democratic methods”. But he argued that it was “morally unacceptable” for nations to “claim independence unilaterally by their own will”. He said nationalist demands could only be justified “with reference to the common good of the entire affected population”.
“When the will to independence becomes an absolute principle of political action and is imposed at all costs and by any means, it is comparable to an idolatry that gravely undermines the moral order,” he said.
In a separate interview with La Razon, Cardinal Cañizares said he was “hurt” that many Catalan clergy had backed independence, allowing referendum boxes to be hidden in their churches. He said he believed that Bishop Xavier Novell Goma of Solsona, who also supported secession, had been confused and untruthful.
He added that he hoped the Church would clarify the “non-legitimacy of secessionism in democratic countries” to discourage nationalism in other European regions such as Scotland, Corsica and Bavaria.
Scientists date Christ’s burial site
Scientific testing at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem has dated material there to the 4th century, supporting traditional accounts of the site’s age.
Tradition holds that the church was built on the site of Jesus’s tomb 300 years after his death. National Geographic reported that tests on the limestone bed revealed that it was constructed around AD 345, shortly after the reign of Emperor Constantine.
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