April 29, 2024

The Queens County Citizen

Complete Canadian News World

Abortion: According to the Archbishop, Nancy Pelosi has no communion

Abortion: According to the Archbishop, Nancy Pelosi has no communion

Nancy Pelosi, leader of the Democrats in the United States House of Representatives, defended the right to abortion because Catholic Communion should be rejected, the Archbishop of San Francisco ruled publicly in a letter on Friday.

Also read: Rejection of abortion in Croatia: “If he is born, he will be like a vegetable”

Also read: Oklahoma passed legislation banning abortion

Also read: “You can be a Catholic and a positive choice”: A liberal separates himself from his religious organization

“You don’t have to look [recevoir] Holy Communion and if this happens, you will not enter into Holy Communion until you openly deny the legality of abortion and accept this deadly sin and be set free, “US Archbishop Salvatore Cardilion wrote in a letter to a senior Democratic official on Thursday.

Exercising the Church’s Attitude on the Question of Abortion, Mrs.G In his letter, Cardillion stated that he would take action in April 2022 if he did not publicly deny “abortion rights” to Nancy Pelosi, a California-elected official.

The archbishop’s statement came after the Supreme Court threatened the right to abortion in the United States, according to the document. PoliticsIt seems ready to go back 50 years after its historic decision to save abortion.

Shortly after the document was leaked in early May, Nancy Pelosi and Democratic senators leader Chuck Schumer described the Supreme Court’s possible decision as “unpleasant.”

They both warned: “If this information is correct, the Supreme Court is ready to impose a strong restriction on rights in fifty years – not just for women, but for all Americans.”

READ  Japan, Australian leaders share concern above East, South China Sea

To a question asked by the AFP, Nancy Pelosi Services was unable to respond immediately.

Despite the support of the majority of the population, recent polls suggest that the historic “Roy v. January 1973 Wade” defended the right of American women to terminate their pregnancies.

The Archbishop also urges all faithful of the San Francisco Archdiocese to pray for all of our elected officials who promote abortion rights, especially Catholic elected officials, so that they may change their minds about “this matter of gravity.”

About The Author