Texas Bishop Rips ‘Cowboy Mentality’ Against Gun Control | Sojourners

Texas Bishop Rips ‘Cowboy Mentality’ Against Gun Control

Dallas Bishop Kevin J. Farrell on Oct. 20, 2014. Photo courtesy of The Texas Catholic, via Catholic New Service

In a blistering critique of what he describes as congressional kowtowing to the “gun lobby,” the Roman Catholic bishop of Dallas is praising President Obama’s new actions on gun control and ripping the “cowboy mentality” that allows “open carry” laws like one that just went into effect in Texas.

“Thank God that someone finally has the courage to close the loopholes in our pitiful gun control laws to reduce the number of mass shootings, suicides and killings that have become a plague in our country,” Bishop Kevin Farrell wrote in a column, posted on his website on Tuesday.

President Barack Obama’s executive actions, though modest, are first steps in correcting gun laws so weak that they are ludicrous,” he wrote. “Congress has unabashedly sold itself to the gun lobby. If there was ever any doubt, its recent action to kill legislation to ban people on the terrorist no-fly list made it obvious.”

Farrell’s remarks are notable not only because they are so pointed and his diocese is in the heart of one a very pro-gun state, but also because the Catholic hierarchy in the U.S. has come under increasing scrutiny for its reticence to speak out on the gun control issue.

When Pope Francis addressed Congress during his first-ever visit last September, he delivered a vivid denunciation of gun violence, telling the representatives the reason weapons are so readily available is because of money — “money that is drenched in blood, often innocent blood.”

 

In October, Chicago Archbishop Blase Cupich – who Francis personally picked for the high-profile post – echoed the pontiff’s exhortation in a column in which he said the original intent of the Second Amendment protecting the right to bear arms had been “perverted” and the nation needed to pass tougher gun control laws like those that have sharply reduced gun violence in other countries.

Cupich and some other bishops were hoping the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops would vote to make gun control a priority in their public policy agenda when they met the following month, in November.

But the bishops were sharply divided over how much they should adapt their agenda – which has focused on fights over gay marriage, abortion, and birth control – to Francis’ priorities, and in the end they largely maintained the status quo.

Since then, gun massacres in places like San Bernardino and Colorado Springs, along with the daily toll in cities like Chicago, have prompted a few bishops to speak out and have prompted some Catholics to push them to do more.

“[W]hen it comes to the epidemic of gun violence afflicting American society, the Catholic Church has been, for some time now, largely quiet,” Michael Bayer wrote in The Washington Post on Wednesday. “This needs to change.”

Read Farrell’s full column here.

Via Religion News Service.

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