“It
is
in
accordance
with
their
dignity
that
all
men,
because
they
are
persons,
that
is,
beings
endowed
with
reason
and
free
will
and
therefore
personal
responsibility,
are
both
impelled
by
their
nature
and
bound
by
a
moral
obligation
to
seek
the
truth,
especially
religious
truth.
They
are
also
bound
to
adhere
to
the
truth
once
they
come
to
know
it
and
direct
their
whole
lives
in
accordance
with
the
demands
of
truth.
But
men
cannot
satisfy
this
obligation
in
a
way
that
is
in
keeping
with
their
own
nature
unless
they
enjoy
both
psychological
freedom
and
immunity
from
external
coercion.
Therefore
the
right
to
religious
freedom
has
its
foundation
not
in
the
subjective
attitude
of
the
individual
but
in
his
very
nature.”
(Dignitatis
Humanae,
Second
Vatican
II
Declaration
on
Religious
Liberty, 2).
The
Knights
of
Columbus
promotes
a
robust
vision
of
religious
liberty
that
embraces
religion’s
proper
role
in
both
its
private
and
public
dimensions.
As
both
Catholics
and
Americans,
we
celebrate
the
essential
relationship
shared
between
religion
and
liberty,
a
relationship
which
has
uniquely
defined
our
country’s
identity
and
has
fostered
our
country’s development.
Every
major
achievement
that
has
taken
place
within
the
American
enterprise—the
American
Revolution;
the
abolition
of
slavery;
the
civil
rights
movement;
reforms in education, labor and woman’s rights—has been at the urging of religious people seeking a more just and humane society.
In this light, the Knights of Columbus recognizes religious liberty as an indispensable condition for authentic human development.
Consistent
with
the
Catechism
of
the
Catholic
Church,
we
believe
that
man,
created
in
the
image
and
likeness
of
God,
possesses
the
natural
right
to
be
recognized
as
a
free
and
responsible
being,
especially
in
moral
and
religious
matters.
Our
Order
remains
steadfast
in
its
conviction
that
religious
liberty
“is
an
inalienable
requirement of the dignity of the human person.” (Catechism, 1738).
We
are
therefore
called
to
defend
religious
liberty
against
cultural
trends
that
are
increasingly
hostile
to
Christianity,
and
impede
men
and
women
from
freely
exercising
their
religion
by
living
in
accordance
with
it.
As
the
Second
Vatican
Council
noted,
although
we
must
respect
the
just
autonomy
of
the
secular
sphere,
we must take into consideration the truth that there is no realm of worldly affairs that can be separated from God.
St.
John
Paul
II
witnessed
that
when
a
society
attempts
to
close
the
door
to
religion,
it
inevitably
falls
prey
to
a
totalitarian
reading
of
the
human
person
that
recognizes
only
the
state
as
the
ultimate
arbiter
of
right
and
wrong.
It
is
our
duty
as
men
of
both
Catholic
faith
and
patriotism
to
resist
militant
secularism
and
to
defend
religious
liberty
at
the
international,
national,
state,
and
local
levels.
Without
this
necessary
check
on
the
power
of
the
state,
no
principled
limit
can
be
recognized to prevent the expansion of government’s power at the expense of personal liberty.
Religious Liberty | Knights of Columbus