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Save
the Babies
Sunday, October 5, 2008
27th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Respect Life Sunday
By Father Ray Ryland, Ph.D.,
J.D.
Our nation was horrified—and
still is horrified—that on September 11, 2001, terrorists
killed more than 3,000 people. We call it the worst act of
terrorism in our history and in all of modern history.
Yet on that same day far worse acts of terrorism occurred.
On September 11, 2001, more than 3,000 babies were murdered
in this country. Not a single word of it was reported in the
secular media. And that’s not all.
Go back to January 23, 1973, to the most infamous decision
ever rendered by the U.S. Supreme Court, Roe v. Wade.
On each of 10,000 days before September 11, 2001,
thousands of babies were murdered.
The slaughter didn’t stop on Sept. 11, 2001.
On each of 2,575 days since Sept. 11, 2001, to the present,
4,000 more babies were murdered.
According to the National Right to Life organization, since
January 22, 1973 almost 36 years ago, 48.5 million
babies have been murdered. And that does not count the millions
of babies killed by oral contraceptives that contain an abortifacient—as
all oral contraceptives do.
And the slaughter goes on: Where’s the outrage?
***************
The very debilitating “post-abortion syndrome”
is now well-documented and acknowledged. Apart from the destruction
of innocent life, abortion is totally demeaning to women.
As one woman author sadly expressed it, abortionists treat
a woman like a rental car: Vacuum her out and she’s
ready to be used again!
The slaughter of millions upon millions upon millions of
babies both causes and reflects lack of respect for innocent
human life. That slaughter has made human life cheap in our
culture.
It is no wonder that the incidence of child abuse has skyrocketed
since abortion became widespread. We should not be
surprised when kids take guns to school and shoot their teachers
and kill their classmates. We should not be surprised when
parents destroy their own children. We should have expected
that the pornography industry would become a multi-billion
dollar business.
The way we mistreat our elderly and infirm and handicapped
is another result of the cheapening of life. Now people are
having their handicapped children killed before birth, or
even at birth, by casting the babies aside to die in soiled
utility rooms and then be put in the garbage.
We have our drive-by shootings, our “road-rage”
killings: You know the symptoms as well as I do. Our movies,
TV programs, popular music—they all reflect this cheapening
of life, and at the same time contribute to it.
It’s all a vicious moral circle: The more babies we
kill, the more hardened we become and therefore the more we
kill and the more hardened we become and on and on. Make no
mistake about it: The dreadful conditions we’re talking
about will never be changed, our quality of life can never
improve, so long as we go on killing babies.
A few years ago Pope John Paul gave his annual address to
the diplomatic corps gathered at the Vatican. The Holy Father
challenged the assembled diplomats on several levels. His
very first challenge was: “Respect life itself and individual
lives: everything starts here” (section 3,
emphasis added).
In other words, the issue which underlies all the world’s
most serious problems is the lack of respect for life and
for individual lives.
***************
Three days ago, Cardinal Justin Rigali of Philadelphia issued
a statement for this Respect Life Sunday. Cardinal Rigali
is chairman of the U.S. bishops’ Committee on Pro-Life
Activities. His statement is entitled “We Cannot Tolerate
an Even Greater Loss of Innocent Human Life.” The theme
for Respect Life Sunday this year is “Hope and Trust
In Life.” The statement follows.
On October 5, 2008, Catholics across the United States
will again celebrate Respect Life Sunday. Throughout the
month of October, Catholic parishes and organizations will
sponsor hundreds of educational conferences, prayer services,
and opportunities for public witness, as well as events
to raise funds for programs assisting those in need. Such
initiatives are integral to the Church’s ongoing effort
to help build a culture in which every human life without
exception is respected and defended.
Education and advocacy during Respect Life Month address
a broad range of moral and public policy issues. Among these,
the care of persons with disabilities and those nearing
the end of life is an enduring concern. Some medical ethicists
wrongly promote ending the lives of patients with serious
physical and mental disabilities by withdrawing their food
and water, even though—or in some cases precisely
because—they are not imminently dying. This November,
the citizens of Washington State will vote on a ballot initiative
to legalize doctor-assisted suicide for terminally ill patients.
In neighboring Oregon, where assisted suicide is already
legal, the state has refused to cover the cost of life-sustaining
treatments for some patients facing terminal illness, while
callously informing them that Oregon will pay for suicide
pills. Such policies betray the ideal of America as a compassionate
society honoring the inherent worth of every human
being.
Embryonic stem cell research also presents grave ethical
concerns. The Catholic Church strongly supports promising
and ethically sound stem cell research—and strongly
opposes killing week-old human embryos, or human beings
at any stage, to extract their stem cells. We applaud the
remarkable therapeutic successes that have been achieved
using stem cells from cord blood and adult tissues. We vigorously
oppose initiatives, like the one confronting Michigan voters
in November, that would endorse the deliberate destruction
of developing human beings for embryonic stem cell research.
Turning to abortion, we note that most Americans favor
banning all abortion or permitting it only in very rare
cases (danger to the mother’s life or cases of rape
or incest). Also encouraging is the finding of a recent
Guttmacher Institute study that the U.S. abortion rate declined
26% between 1989 and 2004. The decline was steepest, 58%,
among girls under 18. An important factor in this trend
is that teens increasingly are choosing to remain abstinent
until their late teens or early 20s. Regrettably, when they
do become sexually active prior to marrying, many become
pregnant and choose abortion—the abortion rate increased
among women aged 20 and older between 1974 and 2004, although
the rate is now gradually declining.
[Then follows what is the most important warning contained
in this statement.]
Today, however, we face the threat of a federal bill that,
if enacted, would obliterate virtually all the gains of
the past 35 years and cause the abortion rate to skyrocket.
The “Freedom of Choice Act” (“FOCA”)
has many Congressional sponsors, some of whom have pledged
to act swiftly to help enact this proposed legislation when
Congress reconvenes in January.
[Note: One of the presidential candidates has publicly promised
to sign the bill immediately upon its passage.]
FOCA establishes abortion as a “fundamental right”
throughout the nine months of pregnancy, and forbids any
law or policy that could “interfere” with that
right or “discriminate” against it in public
funding and programs. If FOCA became law, hundreds of reasonable,
widely supported, and constitutionally sound abortion regulations
now in place would be invalidated. Gone would be laws providing
for informed consent, and parental consent or notification
in the case of minors. Laws protecting women from unsafe
abortion clinics and from abortion practitioners who are
not physicians would be overridden.
Restrictions on partial-birth and other late-term abortions
would be eliminated. FOCA would knock down laws protecting
the conscience rights of nurses, doctors, and hospitals
with moral objections to abortion, and force taxpayers to
fund abortions throughout the United States.
We cannot allow this to happen. We cannot tolerate an even
greater loss of innocent human lives. We cannot subject
more women and men to the post-abortion grief and suffering
that our counselors and priests encounter daily in Project
Rachel programs across America.
For twenty-four years, the Catholic Church has provided
free, confidential counseling to individuals seeking emotional
and spiritual healing after an abortion, whether their own
or a loved one’s. We look forward to the day when
these counseling services are no longer needed, when every
child is welcomed in life and protected in law. If FOCA
is enacted, however, that day may recede into the very distant
future.
In this Respect Life Month, let us rededicate ourselves
to defending the basic rights of those who are weakest and
most marginalized: the poor, the homeless, the innocent
unborn, and the frail and elderly who need our respect and
our assistance. In this and in so many ways we will truly
build a culture of life.
***************
To this statement by Cardinal Rigali I must add two paragraphs
from another pastoral letter for this Respect Life Sunday.
This letter was issued by Bishop Joseph Martino of Scranton.
Bishop Martino takes note of a common argument used by those
who vote for pro-choice politicians and measures. The argument
goes like this: “‘As wrong as abortion is, I don’t
think it is the only relevant “life” issue that
should be considered when deciding for whom to vote.’”
In response, the Bishop wrote, “This reasoning is sound
only if other issues carry the same moral weight as abortion
does, such as in the case of euthanasia and destruction of
embryos for research purposes. Health care, education, economic
security immigration, and taxes are very important concerns.
. . . However, the solutions to problems in these areas do
not usually involve a rejection of the sanctity of human life
in the way that abortion does. Being ‘right’ on
taxes, education, health care, immigration, and the economy
fails to make up for the error of disregarding the value of
a human life.”
Bishop Martino quoted from a Respect for Life pastoral of
2000, issued by his predecessor, Bishop James Timlin.
Abortion is the issue this year and every year in every
campaign. Catholics may not turn away from the moral challenge
that abortion poses for those who seek to obey God’s
commands. They are wrong when they assert that abortion
does not concern them, or that it is only of a multitude
of issues of equal importance. No, the taking of innocent
human life is so heinous, so horribly evil, and so absolute
opposite to the law of Almighty God that abortion must take
precedence over every other issue. I repeat. It is the single
most important issue confronting not only Catholics, but
the entire electorate.
***************
What must we do?
We must give financial support to pro-life organizations
and causes.
We must support laws and candidates and platforms which are
strongly pro-life.
Above all, we must pray with all our might. We must pray
God will take this terrible scourge from among us. We must
pray that all persons will be led to respect the sanctity
of all human life. We must pray for more and more acceptance
of the fact that every human life is sacred, from the moment
of conception until the moment of natural death.
Lord Jesus Christ—help us save the babies!
Father Ray Ryland is CUF's spiritual advisor.
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