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September 25, 2005
The Good News
...Respect
Life Sunday
The American Bishops have designated
October 2nd as Respect Life Sunday. In preparation
for that day, the Committee for Pro-Life Activities of the
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops offers us some
reflections. It is a pleasure to print this document
and I ask you to read it, to meditate on its contents and
to pray and work to "help build a world where human
life is always loved and defended."
In March 2005 a Florida judge ordered
the removal of food and water that had sustained Terri Schiavo's
life. The 41-year-old brain-damaged woman died 13 days later
of dehydration. Her death was approved because her husband
claimed she once said she would not want to live as "a
burden to anybody."
While Mrs. Schiavo lay dying, another
Florida judge jailed a rancher for the crime of starving
his cattle. The rancher faces up to 5 years in prison for
each felony count of animal cruelty.
How is it that our legal system treats
failing to feed animals as a crime, but sees nothing wrong
in ordering that a human being with severe disabilities
be denied nutrition and even a drop of water?
How have we come to be a society in which
incapacitated and terminally ill persons are helped not
to live to the fullest, but only to die sooner, often with
the consent of the family?
How is it that so many citizens believe
it's okay to kill living human embryos to harvest their
stem cells for speculative research? And that it's okay
to force taxpayers to pay for it?
Standing as a background for all these
developments is the U.S. Supreme Court's Roe v. Wade decision
of 1973 which legalized abortion throughout all nine months
of pregnancy for any reason. Since then over 40 million
children in the United States have died from abortion. Today,
the Court insists abortion must be legal even when a child
is in the process of being born.
How did we get here?
In his encyclical The Gospel of Life,
Pope John Paul II called these trends part of a culture
of death. He traced that culture's roots to three attitudes
in particular: extreme personal autonomy, seeing some lives
as not worthy of living, and avoidance of suffering at all
costs. Reflecting on these, we can see that our society
has absorbed many attitudes hostile to life without even
realizing it. Free to be me, or personal autonomy run amok.
Many people think the question of what is morally right
depends on their own preferences and circumstances, that
there is no objective moral yardstick such as the Ten Commandments.
In the name of tolerance, it is said that people have a
right to make up their own personal morality, except in
extreme cases like torturingchildren or flying jets into
occupied buildings. After all, who has the right to "impose"
his values on others?
In 1992 the Supreme Court reaffirmed
Roe v. Wade using precisely this attitude of "anything
goes" as long as it is chosen by the individual. In
Planned Parenthood v. Casey, the Court declared: "At
the heart of liberty is the right to define one's own concept
of existence, of meaning, of the universe, and of the mystery
of human life." Many legal scholars rightly deride
this "mystery of life" passage, and Justice Antonin
Scalia has called it "the passage that ate the rule
of law." For if blind self-assertion can define the
meaning of life, the lives of everyone – especially the
weakest and most vulnerable – become mere instruments for
those who can assert themselves the loudest. But, what is
good for society is upholding the good of every individual.
Respecting the lives of the weak and defenseless – unborn
children, human embryos in laboratories, the disabled, the
dying, victims of violence – contributes to a just society
where all can flourish.
Lives unworthy of living. Another dangerous
attitude prevalent today is that the value of a human life
is not inherent, but depends on the extent to which a person
is conscious, capable of exercising his autonomy and of
performing actions which benefit society. On this theory,
some prominent ethicists have promoted infanticide as a
legal option for parents who do not want to raise a child
with a disability. Ours is a culture which values efficiency
and productivity, so the idea of eliminating the "unproductive"
and "burdensome" sounds reasonable.
This utilitarian ethic explains why many
people want to allow scientists to create human embryos
solely to destroy them, to use their stem cells in research
seeking treatments for diseases. And it explains why a federal
appeals court ruled in favor of a "right" to assisted
suicide, and why some approve causing helpless individuals
to die by withholding food and water from them.
Avoiding suffering at all costs. Our
culture's desire to avoid suffering – including sacrifice,
hardship, and even inconvenience – leads many to view death
as a form of release. Many balk at the personal sacrifice
involved in loving and caring for a family member who needs
special assistance. Unplanned children are aborted to escape
the disruptions and sacrifices entailed in raising a child.
And when we can no longer enjoy life the way we once did
– like the "Million Dollar Baby" boxer who couldn't
endure a life without crowds chanting her name – death is
seen as a way to eliminate psychological suffering.What
our faith says about living and dying In his inaugural Mass,
Pope Benedict XVI reminded us:
"We are not some casual or meaningless
product of evolution. Each of us is the result of a thought
of God. Each of us is willed, each of us is loved, each
of us is necessary."
Ten years ago, Pope John Paul II put
it this way: Human beings have been given "a sublime
dignity, based on the intimate bond which unites [us] to
[our] Creator." We are a sign of God's love, "a
trace of his glory."4 From the moment of conception
through death and into eternity, each of us lives in relation
to God, the Lord of life. The value and dignity of human
life do not change according to health or other circumstances.
A man, even if seriously ill or disabled in the exercise
of his highest functions, is and always will be a man, and
he will never become a "vegetable" or an "animal."
The journey away from a culture of death
and toward following Christ to eternal life goes by way
of the Cross: Loving others to the point that we die to
our personal pride and selfishness, our tendency to view
others as obstacles or things to be used.
A rich young man asked Jesus, "What
good must I do to gain eternal life?" Jesus replied
that one must learn to love God, and "love your neighbor
as yourself."
This is the model God has given us -
a model of love and solidarity with those entrusted to our
care, and those we meet on the way. By witnessing this model
in our own lives – by holding fast to the moral truths preserved
by our faith, and "going out of" ourselves for
others – we can inspire others to do the same, and help
"build a world where human life is always loved and
defended, every form of violence banished."
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