Sunday, January 20, 2013

Pro-life Homily


"For Zion’s sake I will not be silent, for Jerusalem’s sake I will not be quiet…"

This coming Friday, I plan to travel to Washington DC with students from Fenwick and Badin high schools.  About half a million people will visit Washington to witness and speak out that the killing of the unborn is an outrageous and heinous crime.  It is unacceptable that it happens in the first place, and it is unacceptable that we are forced to pay for the killing of the unborn with our tax dollars and insurance premiums.  This will be the 40th anniversary of the Supreme Court cases that legalized abortion for all 50 states during all 9 months of pregnancy.  40 years, 55 million deaths.  It’s time to end this thing.

Here’s an example of how intellectually dishonest our government is in regard to the unborn:  I was probably conceived sometime in late 1972.  And it would have been illegal to kill me.  The Roe v. Wade decision came in January of 1973, now making it legal to kill me.  But then after I took the 8-inch ride through the birth canal, it became illegal to kill me once again.  After birth, I was once again protected by law.  Same person, same crime.

A few years ago, my brother-in-law went to the March for Life.  He is adopted, and lucky to be alive.  He could just as easily have been another statistic among the millions who have been killed in legalized abortion since 1973.  When he was putting in for the time off work, a guy at work said to him:  “I didn’t know you were an activist.”  Perhaps this is why there is so much more to be done if we are going to save the lives of the unborn.  Many of us are afraid of being labeled “activists.”  At the judgment on the last day, when Jesus asks me why I didn’t stand up for the most innocent, will it be enough to say:  "Well, I was afraid of being labeled an activist”?  If a nation kills its own children, how long before it be called forsaken or desolate like in the first reading?  It is the government’s job in this country to serve the public, not to kill the public.  How can the Lord make our land his spouse, and rejoice in our land, when we allow the killing of the most innocent?

In our second reading, St. Paul tells us that there are different kinds of spiritual gifts.  We have all been given different gifts.  But all are called to put those gifts to good use complementing each other.  In the same way, we all have gifts we can use in the struggle to establish the right to life for all people, born and unborn.  We could assist the Church's excellent healing ministries for post abortive parents.  We must always promote these when we discuss abortion.  There are millions of women out there who are hurting and in need of healing.  They need to know that the Church offers many confidential healing ministries to help them.  Some of us can be activists. Some can be counselors.  Some can write letters.  Some can make phone calls.  Some can lobby congress.  Some can donate resources.  Some can make sacrifices.  And all of us can pray.

In the Gospel we hear the Blessed Mother tell the servers at the wedding feast in Cana:  “Do whatever he tells you.”  That’s good advice.  What is Jesus telling us?  How do we hear him tell us what to do?  Jesus speaks to us through the Sacred Scriptures, sometimes through prayer when we have a well-formed conscience, and he speaks to us through his Church.  The bishops of this country are united in saving the unborn.  Christ is speaking with their voice.  He is calling us to action through them. 

1 comment:

  1. Thank you Father Bedel.
    I pray that you always keep up the good fight.
    You are in my prayers!
    "Nothing emboldens the wicked so greatly as the lack of courage on the part of the good."
    ~ Pope Leo XIII (Sapientae Christianae, No. 14, encyclical, 1890)
    Catholics were born for combat.
    ~Pope Leo XIII (Rerum Novarum)
    Si vis pacem para bellum!

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