+ JMJ +
From Franciscan University Catechetics Professor, Bob Rice:
Well, about 48% of the country is unhappy right now. Consider me one of them.
Like many, I’ve been invested in this election. Read numerous stories
 and blogs on the Internet. Followed the debates. Talked about it a lot.
 Prayed. Voted. And yet the same guy who was elected President four 
years ago is the same guy who got voted in today. Once again he’s 
talking about “hope” in front of a cheering Chicago audience. After the 
speech they played Bruce Springsteen’s “We Take Care Of Our Own.”
I would have rather had an election result that ended with Taylor Swift’s “We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together.”
I’m not the only one who prayed and fasted for this day. At Church 
every Sunday (and daily), we’ve been praying or our country and for the 
election. Though the prayers never specifically said, “We pray Mitt 
Romney wins,” that seemed like an easy connection to make. We prayed for
 a president that respects the dignity of the unborn.  We prayed for a 
president that respects religious freedom.
And yet we now have a president who seems to not care about either of
 those two important issues. He is more concerned with the rights of 
same sex couples to be married than the rights of unborn children to 
live. He is more concerned with the “rights” to free contraceptives than
 the rights of religious freedom.
So… were our prayers unanswered?  Our novenas wasted?  On the surface, it seems to be that way.
But God isn’t done yet. He just rarely answers prayers the way we think He will.
God isn’t into democracy. Jesus said, “Follow me,” not, “vote for 
me.” Though we might feel that our prayers for the election weren’t 
heard, God is bigger than an election. He’s about saving souls and 
changing hearts.
 
 
[Source]
Abortions in this country are down. Why? Because abortion centers are
 closing due to movements such as “40 Days for Life.” This is the most 
pro-life generation the country has ever seen. Hearts are changing. 
That’s the work of God, not man. Man can create a law to make something 
“legal” or “illegal.” But only God makes things “right” or “wrong.” The 
law is external, the Spirit is internal. God is more concerned about the
 heart.
Same-sex marriage? Yes, it’s disappointing that same sex marriage won
 a popular vote in Maine and Maryland. Proponents say this is the 
beginning of a national trend (as if the 30 previous states who voted 
against same sex marriage don’t matter.) That may be true. But I think 
we need to do better in talking about what marriage really is. We’ve 
been hoping for a vote to “protect marriage,” but perhaps we’ve been too
 focused in “out-voting” the issue than explaining it. Now we have to be
 more articulate. I can’t see that as a bad thing.
Religious freedom? That battle is far from over. More lawsuits have 
been leveled toward the Federal Government on this matter than any other
 in American history, and most of lower court results have been 
respecting religious rights. Obama’s re-election doesn’t make the HHS 
mandate a slam dunk, though that would have been nice—just as it would 
have been a non-issue if Obamacare was flipped by the Supreme Court. But
 it seems we’re just not going to get any short cuts on this: the issue 
of religious freedom will need to be directly addressed by the Supreme 
Court. And that could be a great thing.
One “positive” thing you can say about Obama is that he’s done more 
to unite the Catholic Church in America than anyone in the past 50 
years. He got every Catholic bishop to stand against him. He 
also did a lot to unite the Christian Church — remember Mike Huckabee 
saying, “Today, I’m Catholic!” Heck, he even got evangelical Christians 
to back a Mormon for president.
If we had woken up this morning with the headline, “Romney is the 
President,” we might have gone back to sleep feeling secure in one 
nation under God. We could be thankful that this HHS nonsense is over 
and we can go back to our lives. We could be hopeful that abortions 
would be reduced thanks to government intervention. That’s how I hoped 
to start the day.
But God does not want us asleep. He wants us awake. He wants us to do
 the same thing we’ve been doing: pray, work, and fast for our country.
If we thought we could wake up and feel safe about these issues 
because Romney got elected then we’d be as foolish as those on the other
 side of these issues who think Obama is the “savior.” We can’t depend 
on the government for our spiritual “welfare.” We’ve got to go out and 
proclaim God’s truth with our lips and share His love from our hearts.
I’m bummed that Obama won. I know a lot of people who worked really 
hard during this election and I can’t imagine how devastated they feel: 
any time you spend work on a “failed” effort it’s always heart-breaking.
But I still have hope, and not the “hope” that Obama talked about to a
 cheering crowd this morning. His “hope” was optimism based on the human
 spirit; our hope is rooted in Jesus Christ and in His saving power. The
 hope Obama offered four years ago hasn’t materialized, but our hope in 
Christ is “an anchor for the soul, firm and secure” (Heb 6:19.)
The re-election of Barack Obama means that Christians in the United 
States have to stay united and actively proclaim the truth of the Gospel
 if we are to protect the values we believe were given to us from God. 
It means we have to pray more, work harder, and be more active in 
sharing our faith. If we do that, it would be a more important “result” 
than any political office we could ever vote for.
I’ll end with what we prayed in Mass this morning: ”The Lord is my 
light and my salvation, whom shall I fear? The Lord is my life’s refuge;
 of whom should I be afraid?” (Psalm 27:1)









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