Cardinal Cupich decries ‘fear of the other,’ calls for unity at Democratic convention

 

Archbishop of Chicago Cardinal Blase Cupich speaks onstage during the first day of the Democratic National Convention at the United Center in Chicago on Aug. 19, 2024. / Credit: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

CNA Staff, Aug 20, 2024 / 11:21 am (CNA).

In his prayer of invocation at the opening night of the Democratic National Convention on Monday, Chicago archbishop Cardinal Blase Cupich lamented the “ongoing injustices in our national life” while calling for national unity.

Speaking before a packed house at the United Center in Chicago on Monday night, Cupich said Americans are regularly called to “reweave the fabric of America,” arguing that the country is “a nation composed of every people and culture, united not by ties of blood but by profound aspirations of life, freedom, justice, and unbound hope.”

“In every generation, we are called to renew these aspirations,” the prelate said. “We do so when we live out the virtues that dwell in our hearts, but also when we confront our failures to root out ongoing injustices in our national life, especially those created by moral blindness and fear of the other.”

The archbishop asked God to “quicken in us a resolve to protect your handiwork.”

“May our nation become more fully a builder of peace in our wounded world with the courage to imagine and pursue a loving future together,” the archbishop prayed. “And may we as individual Americans become more fully the instruments of God’s peace.”

Cupich also called for world peace, especially “for the people suffering the senselessness of war,” and evoked Pope Francis by encouraging the audience to “dream dreams and see visions of what by [God’s] grace the world can become.”

Cupich’s remarks come after Milwaukee Archbishop Jerome Listecki gave the invocation at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee last month.

“We pray that you assist our elected officials and candidates always to protect our freedoms, to preserve our democracy, and to govern fairly,” Listecki said last month.

“Grant them the wisdom every day to place the good of our nation above personal interest and to cherish our union. Teach us all to respect justice and our equality before the law,” the archbishop said.

Here is the full text of Cupich’s invocation:

We praise you, O God of all creation. Quicken in us a resolve to protect your handiwork. You are the source of every blessing that graces our lives and our nation.

We pray that you help us to truly understand and answer the sacred call of citizenship. We are a nation composed of every people and culture, united not by ties of blood but by the profound aspirations of life, freedom, justice, and unbound hope. These aspirations are why our forebears saw America as a beacon of hope. And, with your steady guidance, Lord, may we remain so today.

In every generation, we are called to renew these aspirations, to reweave the fabric of America. We do so when we live out the virtues that dwell in our hearts but also when we confront our failures to root out ongoing injustices in our national life, especially those created by moral blindness and fear of the other.

We pray for peace, especially for people suffering the senselessness of war. But as we pray, we must also act, for building up the common good takes work. It takes love.

And so we pray: May our nation become more fully a builder of peace in our wounded world with the courage to imagine and pursue a loving future together. And may we as individual Americans become more fully the instruments of God’s peace.

Guide us, Lord, in taking up our responsibility to forge this new chapter of our nation’s history. Let it be rooted in the recognition that for us, as for every generation, unity triumphing over division is what advances human dignity and liberty.

Let it be propelled by the women and men elected to serve in public life, who know that service is the mark of true leadership.

And let this new chapter of our nation’s history be filled with overwhelming hope, a hope that refuses to narrow our national vision, but rather, as Pope Francis has said, “to dream dreams and see visions” of what by your grace our world can become.

We ask all of this, trusting in your ever-provident care for us. Amen.


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3 Comments

  1. Appalling.

    A cardinal addressing the death cult that is the Democratic Party.

    And *failing to mention* the most compelling, most critical, most horrific issue ever to face humanity: abortion.

    The lefties are all about “existential” problems such as — LOL! — driving SUV’s and eating meat.

    But they don’t even question the slaughter of more than a billion children worldwide over the past 50 years.

    Think about that for a second. What kind of monsters are these people? And what kind of monsters vote for them?

    Cupich, we see who you are and what you stand for.

    We see which spirit you serve, and quite clearly it’s not the holy one.

  2. Who is the other that is feared? Who are those fretting? As if God is calling for peace between heterosexuals and their war with Sodom and Gomorrah. Keywords dignity, liberty the standards of the advocates for creating oneself in one’s own image rather than the one created by God.
    The takeaway from the Cardinal’s parabolic muse of the party line is don’t expect there to be any discordance between the Party and the bishops. Our Catholic Church in America will continue to dissolve, except for the likes of the Eucharistic Congress the numbers keep falling. Bishops cannot continue to stall expecting new management and return to better days. Germany warns us the Church in given conditions may not have the will to recover. We need fearless moral leadership.

  3. Did the Cardinal take the time to exorcise the Planned Parenthood mobile killing unit parked out the convention?
    The Nazis had something like that too called Hell Wagons. They backed them up to the Ghetto. I wonder how many of the German hierarchy paid attention to that?

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