The Pope and Illinois

State Rep. Peter Breen sent out an email this week.

Part of it was about his campaign, but there was the following concerning the Pope’s visit to America:

The Papal Visit & the State of Illinois

This past week, Pope Francis captured the attention of our nation.

His visit brought tears to the eyes of otherwise-cynical TV commentators.

The Speaker of the U.S. House, John Boehner, even decided to step down in the wake of the first-ever address by the Roman Pontiff to Congress.

We haven’t seen a papal reception like this since Pope John Paul II visited in 1979.

In the wall-to-wall TV coverage of Pope Francis, the reporters discussed his speeches in detail, which covered a range of subjects, from the environment to religious liberty, from immigration to the protection of life.

But the Pope didn’t lay out a political program – what he shared with our nation is a set of guiding principles.

While we are deluged every day by various

  • “programs”
  • “solutions”
  • “four-point plans”

we don’t hear a lot of talk about principles in our political discussions.

Not so with the Pope.

If you look past the political commentators, you see that the real focus of the Pope’s message was on the virtues of faith, hope and love.

In his final homily at Sunday Mass in Philadelphia, Pope Francis summed it up in his words on the family.

What touched me was when he talked about the little ways we show love in our family.

Pope Francis.  Image from Wikepedia

Pope Francis. Image from Wikepedia

He spoke of how these gestures of love begin in the family and radiate out into the world and those we encounter:

“How are we trying to live this way in our homes, in our societies?  

What kind of world do we want to leave to our children?  

We cannot answer these questions alone, by ourselves.  

It is the Spirit who challenges us to respond as part of the great human family.  

Our common house can no longer tolerate sterile divisions.”

These words can be applied to many different scenarios and issues – to what happens in your home and mine.

How do we treat each other?

Are we truly doing unto others as we would have them do unto us?

The Golden Rule is simple, but certainly not easy to follow!

Despite the media reports, Pope Francis is not preaching a different Gospel than that preached by Pope Benedict or Pope John Paul II.

For instance, Pope John Paul II regularly spoke of “solidarity” and the common bonds of fraternity and responsibility between all peoples.

Looking specifically at Pope Francis’ words, I ask myself how the Illinois General Assembly is doing.

What kind of state are we leaving for our children?

Peter Breen

Peter Breen

On the one hand, are we truly caring for the most vulnerable when our funding for the developmentally disabled is the worst in the country?

Yet we rack up debt because we refuse measures like pension reform – and refuse to even discuss how to pay for government pensions.

Is it right to put off paying for these obligations and instead force our children and grandchildren to pay for them?

The principles that Pope Francis has shared are timeless, and if we can agree on the principles, they can guide our consideration of specific policies to improve our common life together.

We can look critically at how our government should spend the taxpayer dollars entrusted to it.

We can carefully review our laws and legal structures to cut waste and abuse.

We can ask whether government policies promote or hurt the family.

Then together, we can truly make our state a bit more faithful, a bit more hopeful, and a bit more loving.


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