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	<title>The Gabriel Project of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of San Francisco</title>
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	<description>YOU CAN BE AN ANGEL AND YOUR PARISH CAN BE A HOST OF ANGELS</description>
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		<title>The Gabriel Project of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of San Francisco</title>
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		<title>Parish ‘angels’ embrace struggling pregnant mom</title>
		<link>http://sfgabrielproject.wordpress.com/2011/09/29/blessing-from-god/</link>
		<comments>http://sfgabrielproject.wordpress.com/2011/09/29/blessing-from-god/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 29 Sep 2011 21:25:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Fredi D'Alessio</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sfgabrielproject.wordpress.com/?p=1104</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[By Lidia Wasowicz &#8211; Catholic San Francisco On a cloudless Saturday afternoon, a host of “angels” at St. Hilary Church in Tiburon flutters around the hall, checking every detail on the balloon-festooned tables laden with savory sandwiches, salads and sweets and piled with festively wrapped baby gifts. They want to ensure perfection at their first [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=sfgabrielproject.wordpress.com&amp;blog=9780024&amp;post=1104&amp;subd=sfgabrielproject&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>By Lidia Wasowicz &#8211; <a href="http://www.catholic-sf.org/files/digital_paper_201109274553.pdf">Catholic San Francisco</a></p>
<p>On a cloudless Saturday afternoon, a host of “angels” at St. Hilary Church in Tiburon flutters around the hall, checking every detail on the balloon-festooned tables laden with savory sandwiches, salads and sweets and piled with festively wrapped baby gifts.</p>
<p>They want to ensure perfection at their first shower for their first “client” since last October’s launch of the parish’s Gabriel Project, which serves and supports the physical, emotional and spiritual needs of moms-to-be in distress.</p>
<p>When she finally appears, a half- hour late due to heavy East Bay traffic, they hover over her with hugs and hellos.</p>
<p>Overwhelmed by the attention and affection, the attractive and very pregnant young woman has no doubt her newfound mentors are heaven-sent.</p>
<p>“I don’t like to ask for help, but I didn’t even have to ask to get this blessing from God,” said a tearful and thankful Elizabeth Ver, 22.</p>
<p><strong><a href="http://sfgabrielproject.files.wordpress.com/2011/09/csf-9-30-11.pdf">Click <em>here</em> to continue reading and view photos</a>.</strong></p>
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			<media:title type="html">fjdalessio</media:title>
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		<title>Understanding The Gabriel Project</title>
		<link>http://sfgabrielproject.wordpress.com/2011/01/21/understanding-the-gabriel-project/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 21 Jan 2011 05:29:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Fredi D'Alessio</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sfgabrielproject.wordpress.com/?p=1032</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Those who think of The Gabriel Project only as a means of sparing already conceived children and their parents the horrors of abortion fail to fully understand this ministry. An important attribute of this ministry is its significant potential to build the culture of life.  We must embrace ways of being proactive rather than only reactive and The Gabriel Project offers us a [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=sfgabrielproject.wordpress.com&amp;blog=9780024&amp;post=1032&amp;subd=sfgabrielproject&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span style="color:#003366;">Those who think of <em>The Gabriel Project</em> only as a means  of sparing already conceived children and their parents the horrors of abortion  fail to fully understand this ministry.</span></p>
<p><span style="color:#003366;">An important attribute of this ministry is its  significant potential to build the culture of life.  We must embrace ways of  being proactive rather than only reactive and <em>The Gabriel Project </em>offers us a most marvelous  way. </span><span style="color:#003366;"> The presence of this ministry in a parish  informs <em>potential</em> mothers of  the help that will be available to them should they need it if one day  they conceive a child &#8211; in some cases several years beforehand. The mind of a  child reared in such a parish is formed to recognize the sanctity of the lives  of other children still developing in the protection of their mothers&#8217; wombs.   What a wonderful gift for our  children, especially considering the past 38 years of the culture of death. </span></p>
<p><span style="color:#003366;">This ministry gives us  the opportunity not only to &#8220;be there&#8221; for pregnant mothers who are considering  aborting their child, but also for pregnant mothers who never had the slightest  temptation to consider such a horror &#8211; some of them because of their awareness  of <em>The Gabriel Project</em>. And  the more of the latter as years go by, the less there will be of the former. What  good we can do <em>if we choose to</em>.</span></p>
<p><span style="color:#003366;font-size:small;">So let&#8217;s team up not only  to help pregnant mothers who carry the blessing of new life and also, for  many, the burden of poverty, but also to save our children. They are being  bombarded by the false teachings of those who embrace the culture of death. They  are being taught by their government, teachers and the likes of Planned  Parenthood that the killing of innocent children in their mothers’ wombs is  legal and <em>a</em> <em>right.</em> They have had,  tens of millions (in America  alone) of  their generation, along with their parents, suffer the horrors of  abortion. </span></p>
<p><span style="font-size:small;"><span style="color:#003366;">Isn&#8217;t it time for our community to  adequately educate our children? Isn’t it time  for us to present – as clearly as possible  – another message to our children? Isn’t it time for us to be emphatic and  demonstrative about what we believe?</span></span></p>
<p><em><span style="font-size:small;"><span style="color:#003366;">Fredi D&#8217;Alessio, program coordinator</span></span></em></p>
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		<title>A Person From Conception &#8211; Pope Benedict XVI on the embryo in the womb</title>
		<link>http://sfgabrielproject.wordpress.com/2010/11/29/a-person-from-conception-pope-benedict-xvi-on-the-embryo-in-the-womb/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 29 Nov 2010 19:12:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Fredi D'Alessio</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sfgabrielproject.wordpress.com/?p=1016</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[With regard to the embryo in the womb, science itself highlights its autonomy capable of interaction with the mother, the coordination of biological processes, the continuity of development, the growing complexity of the organism. This is not an accumulation of biological material, but a new living being, dynamic and wonderfully ordered, a new unique human [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=sfgabrielproject.wordpress.com&amp;blog=9780024&amp;post=1016&amp;subd=sfgabrielproject&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>With regard to the embryo in the womb, science itself highlights its autonomy capable of interaction with the mother, the coordination of biological processes, the continuity of development, the growing complexity of the organism. This is not an accumulation of biological material, but a new living being, dynamic and wonderfully ordered, a new unique human being. So was Jesus in Mary&#8217;s womb, so it was for all of us in our mother&#8217;s womb. With the ancient Christian writer Tertullian we can say: &#8221; he who will be a man is already one&#8221; (Apologeticum IX, 8), there is no reason not to consider him a person from conception. </em>[Pope Benedict XVI]</p>
<p><strong>Protect, Love and Serve Life! Pope&#8217;s Homily at Vigil of Prayer for All Nascent Human Life</strong></p>
<p><strong>by Deacon Keith Fournier </strong>(<a href="http://www.catholic.org/clife/advent/story.php?id=39338">Catholic Online</a>)</p>
<p>The Vigil of Advent 2010 began in St. Peter&#8217;s Basilica with Pope Benedict XVI leading what was called a &#8220;Vigil of Prayer for All Nascent Human Life&#8221;. Catholics throughout the world gathered in their local Churches, as well as in homes, monasteries and religious houses all over the world. The global Vigil was requested by Pope Benedict XVI. It underscores the unqualified and unequivocal committment of the Catholic Church to the defense of every human life, from conception, throughout every age and stage, up to and including a natural death.</p>
<p>In his homily, Pope Benedict called the faithful to defend all human life, including embryonic human life. In fact,a human embryo is a human being, in development as we all are. The Pope noted that &#8220;there are cultural tendencies that seek to anesthetize consciences with misleading motivations. With regard to the embryo in the womb, science itself highlights its autonomy capable of interaction with the mother, the coordination of biological processes, the continuity of development, the growing complexity of the organism. This is not an accumulation of biological material, but a new living being, dynamic and wonderfully ordered, a new unique human being&#8221;.</p>
<p>He cautioned against the growing &#8220;darkening of consciences&#8221; and proclaimed with clarity and conviction to the whole world that the child in the first home of the whole human race, his or her mothers womb, &#8220;has the right not to be treated as an object of possession or something to manipulate at will, not to be reduced to a mere instrument for the benefit of others and their interests. The human person is a good in and of himself and his integral development should always be sought&#8221;.</p>
<p>The fathers of the Church referred to the Christian faith, and the sacraments of the church, as &#8220;the mysteries&#8221;. They are beyond words, inexhaustible in their depth of meaning, like a rich feast that never ends and a deep ocean of wonder into which we are invited to wade. We can never touch the bottom. The Incarnation is the very heart of the Mystery of the entire Christian Faith. The God, who made the whole universe and created man out of the dust of the earth, took on our humanity. He lived in the first home of every human person, His mothers womb.</p>
<p>Those first nine months of His life made every human pregnancy even more profoundly a &#8220;mystery&#8221;. There was a Redeemer in the womb of Mary! God was an embryonic human person, a &#8220;fetus&#8221;, and a child in the womb. In the light of this &#8220;mystery&#8221; every human pregnancy, every womb, every child in the womb, was forever elevated beyond the dignity it already possessed. Also, the extreme evil of abortion is made even more obvious and profane.This Redeemer in the womb, Jesus, began His saving work &#8220;in utero&#8221; and He identifies with every child in the womb.</p>
<p>We have a great theologian and man of deep faith in the Chair of Peter, Pope Benedict XVI. We offer his entire homily for our global readers as we begin the first full week of Advent, preparing for the Nativity of the Lord. It is well worth prayerfully reflecting upon so that we can enter more fully into the mission of the Church, the defender of every human life.</p>
<p>*********************************</p>
<p><strong>Homily of Pope Benedict XVI on the Vigil of Prayer for Nascent Human Life, Advent 2010</strong></p>
<p>Dear brothers and sisters,</p>
<p>With this evening&#8217;s celebration, the Lord gives us the grace and joy of opening the new liturgical year beginning with its first stage: Advent, the period that commemorates the coming of God among us. Every beginning brings a special grace, because it is blessed by the Lord. In this Advent period we will once again experience the closeness of the One who created the world, who guides history and cared for us to the point of becoming a man.</p>
<p>This great and fascinating mystery of God with us, moreover of God who becomes one of us, is what we celebrate in the coming weeks journeying towards holy Christmas. During the season of Advent we feel the Church that takes us by the hand and &#8211; in the image of the Blessed Virgin Mary &#8211; expresses her motherhood allowing us to experience the joyful expectation of the coming of the Lord, who embraces us all in his love that saves and consoles.</p>
<p>While our hearts reach out towards the annual celebration of the birth of Christ, the Church&#8217;s liturgy directs our gaze to the final goal: our encounter with the Lord in the splendour of glory. This is why we, in every Eucharist, &#8220;announce his death, proclaim his resurrection until he comes again&#8221; we hold vigil in prayer. The liturgy does not cease to encourage and support us, putting on our lips, in the days of Advent, the cry with which the whole Bible concludes, the last page of the Revelation of Saint John: &#8220;Come, Lord Jesus &#8220;(22:20).</p>
<p>Dear brothers and sisters, our coming together this evening to begin the Advent journey is enriched by another important reason: with the entire Church, we want to solemnly celebrate a prayer vigil for unborn life. I wish to express my thanks to all who have taken up this invitation and those who are specifically dedicated to welcoming and safeguarding human life in different situations of fragility, especially in its early days and in its early stages.</p>
<p>The beginning of the liturgical year helps us to relive the expectation of God made flesh in the womb of the Virgin Mary, God who makes himself small, He becomes a child, it speaks to us of the coming of a God who is near, who wanted to experience the life of man, from the very beginning, to save it completely, fully. And so the mystery of the Incarnation of the Lord and the beginning of human life are intimately connected and in harmony with each other within the one saving plan of God, the Lord of life of each and every one of us. The Incarnation reveals to us, with intense light and in an amazing way, that every human life has an incomparable, a most elevated dignity.</p>
<p>Man has an unmistakable originality compared to all other living beings that inhabit the earth. He presents himself as a unique and singular entity, endowed with intelligence and free will, as well as being composed of a material reality. He lives simultaneously and inseparably in the spiritual dimension and the corporal dimension. This is also suggested in the text of the First letter to the Thessalonians which was just proclaimed: &#8220;May the God of peace himself &#8211; St. Paul writes &#8211; &#8220;make you perfectly holy and may you entirely, spirit, soul, and body, be preserved blameless for the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ &#8220;(5:23).</p>
<p>Therefore, we are spirit, soul and body. We are part of this world, tied to the possibilities and limits of our material condition, at the same time we are open to an infinite horizon, able to converse with God and to welcome Him in us. We operate in earthly realities and through them we can perceive the presence of God and seek Him, truth, goodness and absolute beauty. We savour fragments of life and happiness and we long for total fulfilment.</p>
<p>God loves us so deeply, totally, without distinction, He calls us to friendship with him, He makes us part of a reality beyond all imagination, thought and word; His own divine life. With emotion and gratitude we acknowledge the value of the incomparable dignity of every human person and the great responsibility we have toward all. &#8221; Christ, the final Adam, &#8211; says the Second Vatican Council &#8211; by the revelation of the mystery of the Father and His love, fully reveals man to man himself and makes his supreme calling clear&#8230;. by His incarnation the Son of God has united Himself in some fashion with every man. &#8220;(Gaudium et Spes, 22).</p>
<p>Believing in Jesus Christ also means having a new outlook on man, a look of trust and hope. Moreover, experience itself and reason show that the human being is a subject capable of discernment, self-conscious and free, unique and irreplaceable, the summit of all earthly things, that must be recognized in his innate value and always accepted with respect and love. He has the right not to be treated as an object of possession or something to manipulate at will, not to be reduced to a mere instrument for the benefit of others and their interests.</p>
<p>The human person is a good in and of himself and his integral development should always be sought. Love for all, if it is sincere, naturally tends to become a preferential attention to the weakest and poorest. In this vein we find the Church&#8217;s concern for the unborn, the most fragile, the most threatened by the selfishness of adults and the darkening of consciences. The Church continually reiterates what was declared by the Second Vatican Council against abortion and all violations of unborn life: &#8220;from the moment of its conception life must be guarded with the greatest care &#8221; (ibid., n. 51).</p>
<p>There are cultural tendencies that seek to anesthetize consciences with misleading motivations. With regard to the embryo in the womb, science itself highlights its autonomy capable of interaction with the mother, the coordination of biological processes, the continuity of development, the growing complexity of the organism. This is not an accumulation of biological material, but a new living being, dynamic and wonderfully ordered, a new unique human being. So was Jesus in Mary&#8217;s womb, so it was for all of us in our mother&#8217;s womb. With the ancient Christian writer Tertullian we can say: &#8221; he who will be a man is already one&#8221; (Apologeticum IX, 8), there is no reason not to consider him a person from conception.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, even after birth, the lives of children continue to be exposed to abandonment, hunger, poverty, disease, abuse, violence or exploitation. The many violations of their rights that are committed in the world sorely hurt the conscience of every man of good will. Before the sad landscape of the injustices committed against human life, before and after birth, I make mine Pope John Paul II&#8217;s passionate appeal to the responsibility of each and every individual:</p>
<p>&#8220;respect, protect, love and serve life, every human life! Only in this direction will you find justice, development, true freedom, peace and happiness!&#8221;(Encyclical Evangelium vitae, 5). I urge the protagonists of politics, economic and social communications to do everything in their power to promote a culture which respects human life, to provide favorable conditions and support networks for the reception and development of life.</p>
<p>To the Virgin Mary, who welcomed the Son of God made man with faith, with her maternal womb, with loving care, with nurturing support and vibrant with love, we entrust our commitment and prayer in favour of unborn life . We do in the liturgy &#8211; which is the place where we live the truth and where truth lives with us &#8211; worshiping the divine Eucharist, we contemplate Christ&#8217;s body, that body who took flesh from Mary by the Holy Spirit, and from her was born in Bethlehem for our salvation. Ave, verum Corpus, natum de Maria Virgine!</p>
<p><strong>RELATED: <a href="http://sfgabrielproject.wordpress.com/2010/06/26/a-human-embryo-is-a-human-person/">A human embryo is a human person</a></strong></p>
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		<title>A very special ministry</title>
		<link>http://sfgabrielproject.wordpress.com/2010/10/08/a-very-special-ministry/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 08 Oct 2010 05:58:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Fredi D'Alessio</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[By Fredi D&#8217;Alessio There are a number of reasons why I consider The Gabriel Project to be a very special ministry. Answering the call of our bishops to establish a parish-based ministry to assist pregnant mothers in need and the fact that there is no substitute for this ministry are among them. Others include the [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=sfgabrielproject.wordpress.com&amp;blog=9780024&amp;post=992&amp;subd=sfgabrielproject&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>By Fredi D&#8217;Alessio</p>
<p>There are a number of reasons  why I consider <em>The Gabriel Project</em> to be a very special ministry.  Answering the call of our bishops to establish a parish-based ministry to assist  pregnant mothers in need and the fact that there is no substitute for this  ministry are among them. Others include the special attention given to pregnant  mothers seeking our assistance and how they are affected by our volunteers’ acts  of love and kindness. Then there are those special persons, our volunteers, who  have responded to the call of Christ Jesus to love and serve. I don’t mean to  imply that they are extraordinary persons, because nothing extraordinary is  required of them. What makes them special is their willingness to put Christ’s  call to love into action.</p>
<p>When I introduce the ministry  to interested parishioners, I point out Blessed Mother Mary’s exemplary example  of Christian Discipleship &#8211; even before Christ Jesus was born: When Mary set out  to visit her cousin Elizabeth, who was in her sixth month with child, she had  just learned that she herself would soon give birth to the Son of God. Out of  charity, without concern for the difficulties she might face, Mary put her  self-interest aside and hastened to the aid of her cousin who was elderly and  fragile. Mary remained at Elizabeth’s side for three months.</p>
<p>I then pose the question: How  often do we put our personal interests aside and reprioritize our obligations  and responsibilities so that we can go to the aid of others?</p>
<p>Of course we know that Mary was  an extraordinary person, but we also know that ordinary persons can treat others  as being special to them and in turn reveal how special they are  themselves.</p>
<p>We are called to be Disciples  of Christ and if we are authentic Catholic Christians, <em>we are special  persons</em>. All we need do is to treat others likewise.</p>
<p><em>The Gabriel  Project</em> isn’t a ministry for the extraordinary among us. It is a ministry  for ordinary persons representing the supernatural presence of Christ Jesus  among us.</p>
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		<title>First Anniversary of The Gabriel Project of the Archdiocese of San Francisco</title>
		<link>http://sfgabrielproject.wordpress.com/2010/09/12/first-anniversary-of-the-gabriel-project-of-the-archdiocese-of-san-francisco/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 12 Sep 2010 15:09:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Fredi D'Alessio</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sfgabrielproject.wordpress.com/?p=954</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[September 12, 2010 Dear Gabriel Team and Friends, Knowing you care about pregnant mothers and their children, we welcome you to rejoice with us today as we celebrate our first anniversary and the fruits born of the Gabriel Project Conference conducted one year ago, which continues to produce good fruit within and beyond the Archdiocese. We are very pleased with our implementation of The Gabriel [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=sfgabrielproject.wordpress.com&amp;blog=9780024&amp;post=954&amp;subd=sfgabrielproject&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>September 12, 2010</p>
<p>Dear Gabriel Team and Friends,</p>
<p>Knowing you care about pregnant mothers and their children, we welcome you to rejoice with us today as we celebrate our first anniversary and the fruits born of the Gabriel Project Conference  conducted one year ago, which continues to produce good fruit within and beyond the Archdiocese.</p>
<p>We  are very pleased with our implementation of <em>The Gabriel Project</em> as it is modeled  after <em>The Gabriel Project of the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston</em>, a model highly recommended by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops.</p>
<p>Having chosen this particular ministry to help pregnant mothers, we stand in communion with our bishops by responding to their call to establish a parish-based ministry to assist pregnant mothers in need.</p>
<p>We remain grateful to Archbishop Niederauer for his embracement of <em>The Gabriel Project</em> and for his words of encouragement to pastors to welcome the ministry in their parishes. And we commend and thank all Pastors, Coordinators, Angels and Auxiliary Angels who have responded to the call of Christ Jesus to love and serve.</p>
<p>Our gratitude is extended to everyone who has prayed for the success of <em>The Gabriel Project </em>or has in any way contributed toward that end. Though we have come far, we still have a long way to go and we welcome you to continue along the journey.</p>
<p>It has been a blessing meeting and speaking with pastors and  parishioners to educate them about the ministry. And what an awesome blessing it has been to meet and work with our parish and auxiliary volunteers. Of course, the ultimate blessing is for the Gabriel Team to be in the service of God and his children, our Gabriel families.</p>
<p>It has taken a lot of effort to reach this stage of development in this marvelous ministry, not to mention the efforts preceding the conference. All of which have been labors of love and very rewarding. Bringing this ministry along has been the work of the Holy Spirit and Blessed Mother Mary. We are merely their humble instruments.</p>
<p>Rejoice with us on this special day and please keep <em>The Gabriel Project</em> and all of our Moms and volunteers in your prayers</p>
<p><em>Thanks be to God.</em></p>
<p><em>The  Gabriel Project Staff</em></p>
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		<title>Commercial Markets Created by Abortion</title>
		<link>http://sfgabrielproject.wordpress.com/2010/07/01/commercial-markets-created-by-abortion/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 01 Jul 2010 14:18:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Fredi D'Alessio</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[&#8220;Commercial Markets Created by Abortion: Profiting From the Fetal Distribution Chain&#8221; New Study “Follows the Money” of Abortion By Peter J. Smith SAN FRANCISCO, May 7, 2010 (LifeSiteNews.com) – In the thirty-seven years since the US Supreme Court ruled to legalize abortion up to the ninth month of pregnancy, the battle over the right to [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=sfgabrielproject.wordpress.com&amp;blog=9780024&amp;post=870&amp;subd=sfgabrielproject&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>&#8220;Commercial Markets Created by Abortion: Profiting From the Fetal Distribution Chain&#8221;</h3>
<h3>New Study “Follows the Money” of Abortion</h3>
<p>By Peter J. Smith</p>
<p>SAN FRANCISCO, May 7, 2010 (<a href="http://www.lifesitenews.com/">LifeSiteNews.com</a>) – In the thirty-seven years since the US Supreme Court ruled to legalize abortion up to the ninth month of pregnancy, the battle over the right to life has become a deeply entrenched and polarizing issue in American political life. But a new study suggests that feminist ideology no longer is the driving force to keep abortion legal, but that more sinister motives of commerce and profit are dedicated to keeping the billion dollar abortion industry alive and growing.</p>
<p>Catholic San Francisco, the newspaper for the Archdiocese of San Francisco, <a href="http://www.catholic-sf.org/news_select.php?newsid=&amp;id=57168">reported</a> that Vicki Evans, the Respect Life coordinator for the Archdiocese of San Francisco&#8217;s Office of Public Policy and Social Concerns, authored a study finding that market forces are now deeply intertwined with the abortion industry that supplies them with “fetal parts, tissues and cells.” Pharmaceutical and cosmetic companies often use aborted fetal material in their products.</p>
<p>Evans&#8217; study,<strong> &#8220;Commercial Markets Created by Abortion: Profiting From the Fetal Distribution Chain,&#8221;</strong> was written as the thesis for her licentiate in bioethics from the Regina Apostolorum Pontifical University in Rome.</p>
<p>In her study, Evans looked to discover how certain “special interests” or a “commercial cause” – rather than the graying adherents of feminist ideology that first clamored for legal abortion – was at work to keep abortion legal, and the transactions in aborted fetal material largely unmolested by regulators in a virtually clandestine market.</p>
<p>“It is important to shine a light on these practices that take place behind closed doors,” wrote Evans. “There are powerful forces conspiring to keep this information from the public and the media with the ostensible conviction that they are protecting a woman’s right to choose.</p>
<p>&#8220;However, it is becoming obvious that many ideological groups are being used as pawns by powerful financial interests.”</p>
<p>Evans noted that Planned Parenthood Federation of America (PPFA) recently achieved the status of a billion-dollar industry: between the fiscal years 2003 and 2008, abortion expanded from an 810 million dollar business to 1.038 billion-dollar industry, breaking the billion dollar revenue mark in FY06-07.</p>
<p>Over this time period, the nation’s largest abortion provider saw its stake in the abortion market dramatically increase from 245,092 abortions (raking in $88.2 million in 2003) to 305,310 abortions (yielding $122.1 million in 2007).</p>
<p>One way that PPFA brings in the money, she notes, is through clinical trials conducted with pharmaceutical companies to develop new contraceptives. Evans pointed out that encouraging sexual activity among youth through contraception is simply a gateway mechanism for increasing abortion &#8211; which is where the profit is.</p>
<p>“Attracting teenagers to contraceptive use is a component of the abortion industry’s business plan, as is offering abortion as a remedy for failed birth control,&#8221; she wrote.</p>
<p>Regarding the ever-growing commercialization of fetal parts, organs, and tissue, Evans noted that by reducing human beings to a “commodity,” a profit-centered evaluation of the human person begins to take hold.</p>
<p>“If human beings are not exceptional in the material creation, the vision of man as a profit center may well be acceptable. In some stages of life, he is the supplier; in some stages, the consumer. But always, profit is the motive,” she remarked.</p>
<p>One case in point: the cosmetics industry, Evans noted, first began using “fetal cell technologies” for the ostensible &#8220;hard case&#8221; of treating burn victims. This, in turn, led into developing creams, emulsions, serums, face-lifts, and other cosmetic procedures (such as for skin rejuvenation) for the $30 billion anti-aging market.</p>
<p>Failing to address the commercial profiteering from aborted babies, Evans concluded, would have dire ramifications for society: including alienation from human nature, a crisis in human identity, and the corruption of justice.</p>
<p>“Habitual participation in immoral acts inevitably leads to personal desensitization, self-deception and rationalization about what it means to be human,” Evans stated. “When morality is excluded from a civil society, the weak and vulnerable are easily exploited for the benefit of the strong and powerful.</p>
<p>&#8220;This is the worst brand of injustice. It deserves to be brought to light.”</p>
<p>Evans told the diocesan newspaper that she wanted to use her training as a certified public accountant to expose the financial strings behind the abortion industry  in a way that &#8220;nobody else had thought of before.”</p>
<p>“In following the money and seeing who gets paid for what and how much they get paid, and how unregulated these areas are, I found a lot of facts that a lot of people wouldn’t have noticed or wouldn’t have thought to look for,&#8221; she told Catholic San Francisco.</p>
<p><strong>The complete study can be found </strong><a href="http://docs.google.com/fileview?id=0Bxutvd1Fw1MYYTc0MGNkODQtNDViMy00NTg5LTk5MzQtZGNmODRmZTQyODYx&amp;hl=en"><strong>here</strong></a><strong>.</strong></p>
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		<title>Human Lives, Human Rights</title>
		<link>http://sfgabrielproject.wordpress.com/2010/06/28/human-lives-human-rights/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 28 Jun 2010 21:44:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Fredi D'Alessio</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sfgabrielproject.wordpress.com/?p=867</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[by Archbishop John J. O&#8217;Connor October 15, 1984 &#8220;…we affirm as an incontestable and sacred principle, respect for every form of human life, life that is awakening, life that asks only to develop, life that is drawing to a close; life especially that is weak, unprovided for, defenseless, at the mercy of others.&#8221; Following is [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=sfgabrielproject.wordpress.com&amp;blog=9780024&amp;post=867&amp;subd=sfgabrielproject&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">by Archbishop John J. O&#8217;Connor<br />
October 15, 1984<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">&#8220;…we affirm as an incontestable and sacred principle, respect for every form of human life, life that is awakening, life that asks only to develop, life that is drawing to a close; life especially that is weak, unprovided for, defenseless, at the mercy of others.&#8221;<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="font-family:verdana;"><span style="color:#000066;"><em>Following is the prepared text of Archbishop John J. O&#8217;Connor&#8217;s October 15 address, sponsored by the Institute on Human Values in Medical Ethics of New York Medical College with Flower Hospital, at Cathedral High School in Manhattan.</em><br />
</span></span><a name="bkmrk1"></a><br />
<span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><strong>A Nation&#8217;s Enduring Heartache</strong><br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Let me start by telling you the story of the man who puzzled his daughter when he told her that the day he had his heart attack was the happiest day of his life. Then he explained why.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">&#8220;It is very simple, my child,&#8221; he said. &#8220;I have witnessed so much death and suffering and survived it all. At times I wondered if I had a heart at all. This heart attack reassured me that I indeed have one. For how can a man without a heart have a heart attack?&#8221;<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">The story is my favorite among the <em>Hasidic Tales of the Holocaust</em> told by Professor Yaffa Eliach of the Department of Judaic Studies at Brooklyn College.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">The pain of the heart attack was reassuring to the man because it proved to him that he had not been hardened to human suffering by the experiences he had survived. He still had a heart!<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;font-family:verdana;">There is a great deal of pain in our country today. I am not happy about it, but I am encouraged by it. I am encouraged to believe that there is deep pain throughout the land in respect to a number of crucial problems. I believe, further, that this profound and pervasive anxiety is rooted in the reality that as a people we do have a heart&#8211;an enormous heart, a warm and generous heart, a heart that is experiencing a gnawing pain, an enduring heartache, if not an outright spiritual and emotional heart attack.<br />
</span><a name="bkmrk2"></a><br />
<span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><strong>Our Unease Over Injustices</strong><br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">We know that we are doing so many things right as a nation, but we know, too, or we feel, a vague uneasiness and, at times an acute anxiety, that we are doing some things wrong &#8212; terribly wrong.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">We know there is something wrong as we pass the bag ladies, the bagmen in the streets. We know there is something wrong about gentrification that flushes lonely, elderly people out of homes and apartments with absolutely no place to go. We know there is something wrong when drugs control and destroy our neighborhoods, when we can&#8217;t build prisons fast enough to meet the demand. We know there is something wrong when the most incredible pornography is defended as freedom of speech, when child abuse reaches horrifying proportions, when people are disenfranchised or exploited because of where they were born, or their sex, or the color of their skin. We know there is in the sexual exploitation and violence that Father Bruce Ritter deals with every day right here in Manhattan, and in the hopelessness of the burned-out buildings in cities all over the country. We know there is something wrong in Central America, in the Middle East, in the north of Ireland, in Cambodia and in Poland, in much of the vast continent of Africa, and elsewhere in the world. We know there is something wrong, something terrifyingly wrong, about the arms race, and about the horrifying potential of nuclear weapons.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;font-family:verdana;">And all of this knowledge and more pains us, because we are basically a good people, a good and kind and merciful people. And the pain comes in knowing that we are doing some things terribly wrong and in either not truly wanting to right them, or in not seeming to know how to right them. So, many of us &#8212; a great many of us &#8212; do what is very understandable: we try to forget the problems, to busy ourselves with a thousand legitimate preoccupations, to hope that someone else will solve the problems, or that they will simply go away. Like the bag people. We didn&#8217;t put them on the streets. We don&#8217;t want them on the streets. We can&#8217;t understand why they are on the streets, we disbelieve how many are on the streets, we wish they would go away, or someone would take them away. But in the meanwhile, particularly as we hustle to our own homes on bitter winter nights, we, pass them by, and we know they are there, and the knowing pains us, because we know simultaneously that somehow, there has to be a better way.<br />
</span><a name="bkmrk3"></a><br />
<span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><strong>National Anxiety Over Abortion</strong><br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">I am deeply concerned that it is this kind of uneasiness, this same kind of anxiety, this same kind of pain that we feel as a nation, knowing that we lose 4,000 lives every day through abortion. And that&#8217;s a large part of the answer to the question people ask me all the time: Why is this front-page news all over the country? Why are people talking about it all over the world? No single statement by any one bishop&#8211;no series of statements by all the bishops combined &#8212; could have created the depth and the breadth and the intensity of feeling about this if it hadn&#8217;t been there all along, stirring down inside us, gnawing at our hearts. You can&#8217;t make an issue out of a non-issue. This one was there, long before a single bishop said a single word.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">We know, somehow, whatever our religious persuasion, that there is something wrong when one and a half million unborn human lives are taken every year in our beloved country. We know that, whatever the reason, there must be a better way. We know that this magnificent country, with its incredible resources, its ability to put a man on the moon, the skill to transplant hearts, the heart to give our lives for the oppressed all over the world &#8212; this marvelous country must surely have a better answer to the violence of poverty, than to inflict the violence of death on the innocent; it must surely have a better answer for the lonely, confused, frightened young woman, the teenager, the 10- or 11- or 12-year-old pregnant girl, than to destroy the new life within her. Our nation must surely have more to offer a bewildered family than the money to help pay for a daughter&#8217;s abortion. Our society must, surely must, have more support for the woman torn with conflict over a pregnancy than to point her toward an abortion clinic.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;font-family:verdana;">Is this simply a religious perspective? Is my grief over abortion born merely of what I have been taught as a Catholic? I can&#8217;t believe that. I know that millions of Jews, Protestants, Orthodox, Muslims, people of many other religious persuasions and people who profess no religion at all, grieve as I do over this destruction of life.<br />
</span><a name="bkmrk4"></a><br />
<span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><strong>Abortion: The Destruction of Life</strong><br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Or is abortion not the destruction of life? Are we, in fact, not putting babies to death?<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;font-family:verdana;">If we are not destroying human life, of course, then our concern, our anxiety, our pain over abortion virtually disappears. There is a dramatic difference between removing 4,000 pieces of tissue each day from the bodies of 4,000 women and taking the lives of 4,000 babies.<br />
</span><a name="bkmrk5"></a><br />
<span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><strong>Human Life Before Birth: Medical Evidence</strong><br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">What is abortion, then? Can we face that question honestly? Can we raise it without rancor, without accusation, without judgment or condemnation of anyone? Surely it is a crucial question. Surely it deserves an answer. One of the very reasons I wanted to give this talk to an audience composed largely of medical people, is that I believe that you, in particular, must ask and answer this question honestly. I turn to you and to your medical colleagues for what you and they have to say. I do not ask you or them to speak from religious beliefs. I do not ask you or them to determine at what point the unborn becomes a human person. I ask you and them to speak from your common sense experience of human life and from the scientific evidence you observe.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">I turn, for example, to Dr. Bernard Nathanson, the well-known Jewish obstetrician-gynecologist who identifies himself as an atheist. Doctor Nathanson&#8217;s background is fascinating. By his own admission, he presided over 60,000 abortions in the first and largest abortion clinic in the Western world, the clinic he directed. He now calls those abortions 60,000 deaths. Here are his own words:<br />
</span><br />
</span><em><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Some time ago &#8212; after a tenure of a year and a half I resigned as director of the Center for Reproductive and Sexual Health. The Center had performed 60,000 abortions. . . . I am deeply troubled by my own increasing certainty that I had in fact presided over 60,000 deaths.<br />
</span><br />
</span></em><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><em>There is no longer serious doubt in my mind that human life exists within the womb from the very onset of pregnancy, despite the fact that the nature of the intrauterine life has been the subject of considerable dispute in the past.<br />
</em></span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><em>Electrocardiographic evidence of heart function has been established in embryos as early as six weeks. Electroencephalographic recordings of human brain activity have been noted in embryos at eight weeks. Our capacity to measure signs of life is daily becoming more sophisticated, and as time goes by, we will doubtless be able to isolate life signs at earlier stages in fetal development.</em><br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Doctor Nathanson now spends a large part of his life pleading against abortion, not because of a religious conversion, but because of the evidence yielded by ultrasound scanning, intra-uterine surgery, in vitro fertilization and other advances in science and technology. Dr. Nathanson previously used the impersonal term &#8220;alpha&#8221; to describe what he now calls &#8220;the person in the womb.&#8221; Scientific findings have convinced him beyond a shadow of a doubt that &#8220;prenatality is just another passage in our lives &#8212; lives which commence with fertilization and end with death.&#8221;<br />
</span><br />
</span></p>
<div><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Dr. Nathanson is far from alone. Indeed, the American Medical Association itself urged strict laws against abortion more than a century ago, simply because the scientific evidence said that human life begins at conception. In 1871, the AMA told its members that a fetus becomes animated long before quickening. Quoting from <em>Archbold&#8217;s Criminal Practice and Pleadings</em>, it said this: &#8220;No other doctrine appears to be consonant with reason or physiology but that which admits the embryo to possess vitality from the very moment of conception.&#8221; No statement by the AMA in more recent times has contradicted the position it took then.<br />
In our own day, miracles of modern science confirm what we have known all along &#8212; that life exists in the womb. Reporting on an article by Dr. Mitchell S. Golbus called &#8220;Healing the Unborn,&#8221; the<em> 1983 Medical and Health Annual of the Encyclopedia Britannica</em> says: &#8220;Prenatal medicine is now beginning to he able to intervene, before birth, to alleviate, and even cure conditions that previously would have severely compromised the fetus. This promises survival for thousands of threatened lives&#8230;. The concept that the fetus is a patient, an individual whose disorders are a proper subject for medical therapy, has been established.&#8221; </span></span></div>
<div><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">But sadly, all of our new knowledge seems to have taught us very little. A famous article in the journal called <em>California Medicine</em>, written in 1970, concedes that life is present before birth, but warns physicians that if they want people to think that abortion is morally acceptable, they&#8217;ll have to come up with a brand new language. Semantic gymnastics, they call it.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">This was surely the attitude Sir William Liley had in mind when he lamented the direction that too many in the medical world and society in general have taken. Sir William, of the faculty of the Postgraduate School of Obstetrics and Gynecology of the University of Auckland, listed a series of developments that gave us new insights into the miracle of life before birth, and then continued:<br />
</span><br />
</span></span></div>
<div>
<p><span style="color:#000066;"> </span></p>
</div>
<p><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="color:#000066;"> </span></span></p>
<div><span style="font-family:verdana;"><span style="color:#000066;"><em>For a generation which reputedly prefers scientific fact to barren philosophy, we might have thought this new information would engender a new respect for the welfare and appreciation of the importance of intra-uterine life.</em></span></span></div>
<div>
<p><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><strong>Human Life Before Birth: Everyday Evidence</strong><br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Some evidence, however, does seem to make a profound impression on many medical and lay people as well. That&#8217;s what happened when Congressman Lawrence J. Hogan saw some startling pictures, as he told a congressional subcommittee on constitutional amendments:<br />
</span><br />
</span><em><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Until a few years ago, I did not think much about abortion. It did not mean very much to me. I somehow equated it with birth control.<br />
</span><br />
</span></em><em><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">My brother, Doctor William Hogan, who. . . is with me today, and is an obstetrician, had been trying to discuss abortion with me, but I kept putting him off saying that it was not a popular political issue.<br />
</span><br />
</span></em><em><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Finally, one day he came to my house and showed me some color pictures of what unborn babies look like. I saw what some people call a chemical reaction, sucking a thumb. I saw perfectly formed human babies just a few weeks from conception. I saw the pictures of the 21 week old fetus, a little girl, who survived out of the womb. I saw other little babies who did not survive. Some were scalded red from saline solution which flushed them from the womb. I saw others torn apart from the machine. I could see a little foot and a little hand. I was stunned. I was shocked. And I was bitterly ashamed.<br />
</span><br />
</span></em><em><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">I did not know what I really thought abortion was. I just did not think very much about it. But, certainly I did not think we were killing babies. How could I have been so stupid?<br />
</span><br />
</span></em><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><em>It&#8217; we are not killing babies in abortion, what are we doing?<br />
</em></span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">When discarded fetuses are found in the trash, why are we horrified? Why do we rebel when our highest court tells us that the matter of when life begins is constitutionally irrelevant? In the light of all that, we know, and in the name of sheer common sense, is it not because we are profoundly convinced that the unborn child is human? What can we possibly say except that we are putting to death 4,000 human beings every day &#8211; one and a half million every year.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;font-family:verdana;">Isn&#8217;t there something wrong with this? Where does it all stop?<br />
</span><a name="bkmrk7"></a><br />
<span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><strong>The Agony of Decision</strong><br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">I know there are those who sincerely believe that abortion is an evil, but that not to have an abortion might be even worse. I know it, and my heart goes out to them. I know there are women and parents and young girls who are frantic about a pregnancy. They don&#8217;t know which way to turn or what to do. They&#8217;re under enormous pressure. Who can condemn them? Who can fail to understand all they&#8217;re going through? Their abortions are still tragic; their babies are still put to death. But they think they&#8217;re doing the right thing. Do I condemn them for feeling that way? No, never. I would do anything I could to help them pick up the pieces of their lives after an abortion.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">The same is true of families, of parents who might abhor the idea of abortion, but when their own daughter is pregnant, believe that unless she has an abortion her life will be ruined. There can be no question of the grief they feel, the conflict that rips at their very hearts, the deep suffering they endure in coming to a decision that an abortion is the only way.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">But is it? Is it the only way? Is it the best answer we can come up with after these many centuries of civilization? What does it do to the woman herself, the young girl, the family?<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">I wish there were time to read to you some of the letters I have received from women who have had abortions, or from families that encouraged or urged or even pressured them to do so. I am speaking of women and of families of all religious persuasions and of none. Many suffer for years. My own heart aches for them. I try to respond to the best of my ability, to offer them whatever help I possibly can. But in some cases, I fear, the wound never seems to heal. In my view, the tragedy in every such case is at least doubled: an innocent baby has been deprived of life, a woman has been deprived of peace of mind and heart, sometimes for the rest of her life. Indeed, in every such case there are at least two victims, the baby and the woman herself. In many cases, the fathers of the baby aborted, the families involved, suffer terribly as well.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">It is inevitably the woman, however, who is confronted most immediately and intimately with the terrible conflicts that can accompany a pregnancy and with the anguish of decision. We have no sympathy with the man who judges a woman&#8217;s dilemma glibly, or who detaches himself from the reality of the conflict and the suffering involved. Nor can we respect the man who walks callously away from his own obligations when confronted with a woman&#8217;s unplanned pregnancy. Such, of course, is not always the case. It can happen that the father of an unborn baby who is deliberately aborted can suffer deeply.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">One of the most poignant stories I have ever read was by a former CBS correspondent. Writing in the <em>Los Angeles Times</em> in March of 1976, he describes his joy when his wife told him she was pregnant, and his shock and fury when she told him she had already talked with several friends, had a doctor&#8217;s name and intended to have an abortion. Shouting and pleading followed, with his wife insisting it was her body and should be her decision alone. Finally be drove her to the doctor&#8217;s office and waited in the car.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">He tells the story 20 years later. Why? Because suddenly and unexpectedly he passed the corner of the doctor&#8217;s office, and it all came flooding back, and he found himself wondering over and over what might have been. By the time he arrived at his meeting, the tears were flowing and wouldn&#8217;t stop.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">&#8220;Whatever sort of person the lost one might have been,&#8221; he writes, &#8220;I feel even now that we had no right to take his/her life.&#8221;<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">&#8220;Religion has nothing to do with my feelings. It is a gut response &#8212; still so strong that it overwhelmed me&#8221; some 20 years later.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><em>Even now I find myself wondering about my first child that never was and I wonder, too, about others in my shoes. How many men share my haunted feelings about children who might have been, but were denied. Why are we, the fathers who never were, so reluctant to talk about such feelings? If it all so painful for us, how much worse must it be for the women who nurture and then give up the very fact of life itself?</em><br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;font-family:verdana;">A sad story? Of course it is, and there are countless stories like it. I know that your hearts go out, just as mine does, to all those whose lives have been so tragically touched. I do not repeat the story to reawaken bitter memories or to revive buried guilt. On the contrary, I believe as profoundly as I believe anything in this world, that God wants nothing more than to forgive whatever mistakes we have made, and pleads with us to let Him do so.<br />
</span><a name="bkmrk8"></a><br />
<span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><strong>A Plea to the Medical Profession</strong><br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">But what of the future? Can we do more? Of course we can, all of us. And here I appeal particularly to you in the medical profession. I ask boldly that you help in at least three ways.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">First, very simply, I ask you to think about the Hippocratic Oath. Ask yourself with absolute honesty what abortion really is. Test what is done to the unborn against the Hippocratic Oath many of you once took. You remember how it used to go: &#8220;I will give no deadly medicine to anyone if asked, nor suggest any such counsel; and in like manner I will not give a pessary to a woman to produce an abortion.&#8221; And you know that the words about abortion are now so frequently omitted. Why? Why?<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Secondly, teach us what we must learn about taking care of the whole person&#8211;the entire family, physically and emotionally. Teach us far, far more than we have been willing to learn to date about the critical importance of decent housing, of security in our streets, of the destructiveness of drugs. Teach us that good medicine requires that people need jobs, and meaningful jobs, to be able to hold their heads high, to feed, to clothe, to educate their children. Teach us that poverty is dangerous to our health, that malnutrition in mothers breeds disabilities in children. Plead for daycare centers, increased numbers of facilities for the handicapped. Raise your voices precisely as medical professionals to plead for a just social order indispensable to effective medicine. Teach that abortion is what it is, without pretense, but help bring about circumstances which will help a pregnant woman recognize that there is a better way for her than to have her own child destroyed.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Teach us above all, however, that you of the medical profession recognize the absolutely crucial role you play in regard to the entire issue of abortion. The overwhelming number of the 4,000 abortions carried out every day are carried out by members of the medical profession. What enormous power is yours, what leadership for life you could provide! Do you consider abortion your responsibility, whether or not you personally have ever been involved in or would be involved in an abortion? As the Holy Father reminded us recently when he spoke to a group of anesthesiologists, the responsibility extends to everyone in the medical field. For whatever my personal opinion is worth, I am convinced that the medical profession could change the entire picture of abortion in America and the world. Such is your influence, your prestige. Such is our dependence on you as nurturers and guardians of human life.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">And thirdly, here is a request as direct as I can make it; if it&#8217;s needed to save the life of an unborn child, give your medical services without cost. I do not know how many abortions are performed free of charge, but I would like to believe that you and your colleagues would be willing to deliver live &#8211; and free of charge, where necessary &#8211; every baby that would otherwise be aborted. I am certain that many of you do this already, but I urge you to make it widely known that you want to go out of your way to help, at no cost to the pregnant girl or woman in need.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">And I appeal to you, our hospital administrators, boards and staff to provide free of charge, when necessary, all the medical care required for both mother and child.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;font-family:verdana;">My appeal is extended to those in the legal profession, as well, to assist women and families without charge, when necessary, to learn what federal or state or city funding may be available to them, and to help them in adoption processes, should they choose this route.<br />
</span><a name="bkmrk9"></a><br />
<span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><strong>The Commitment of the Archdiocese</strong><br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">I can assure all of you, as I appeal to you, and can assure every single or married woman facing an unplanned pregnancy, that the Archdiocese of New York will give you free, confidential help of highest quality. Here are just some of the services the Archdiocese will provide, whatever your religious affiliation. It makes no difference whether you are Jewish, Protestant, Catholic, Orthodox, Muslim or any other religion, or of no religion at all, or single or married&#8211;and your confidentiality will be completely respected.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">You will get help with medical care and you do not have to worry about the bills. If you have medical insurance, you may be able to use this. If you choose adoption, the adopting family is responsible for your medical bills. If you wish to keep your baby, your social worker will help you get Medicaid. There is no fee for our services to you.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Our social workers will make arrangements to meet you close to your home. They travel widely throughout New York, New Jersey and Connecticut. If you live in another state, we will help you get service from another agency or arrange for you to come to New York whenever possible.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">If you cannot live at home during your pregnancy, other living arrangements can be made for you. The social worker we will provide you will suggest to you a variety of arrangements. You can choose the one best for you.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">If you decide to keep your baby, your social worker will locate medical services, community resources, financial aid and support services to help you.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;font-family:verdana;">If you choose adoption, you will have a choice about the family with whom your baby is placed. Your social worker will give you profiles of approved couples on the waiting list. She will discuss these with you, but you make the selection. Let me say it simply and straightforwardly. The Archdiocese of New York is prepared to do everything in its power to help you and your unborn baby, to make absolutely certain that you need never feel that you must have an abortion.<br />
</span><a name="bkmrk10"></a><br />
<span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><strong>A Plea to Those in Public Service </strong><br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;font-family:verdana;">I have appealed to you members of the medical professions, to those of you in the legal profession and to those of you who may personally experience an unplanned pregnancy. May I now address all who hold or who seek public office, and ask this: Commit yourself unconditionally to a just social order for all&#8211;to decent housing, to jobs, to the end of all discrimination, to the ultimate ending of the arms race. Do these things not for political gain, but out of respect for all human life. I&#8217;ve heard it said that those who plead for protection for the unborn are obsessed with a single issue. But what is that issue other than life itself? No one in public life would dare admit to being a racist or a warmonger. But suppose someone did? Would we be accused of obsession with a single issue if we challenged that position? And is any value that is threatened anywhere greater than life itself?<br />
</span><a name="bkmrk11"></a><br />
<span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><strong>Advocates for Change</strong><br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Why, then, is it argued that questioning a candidate about abortion is somehow unfair or unethical? Must a candidate or in office holder explicitly support abortion? Of course no! He or she is free to tell the world: &#8220;I am not only personally opposed to abortion, but I intend to do everything I can within the law to bring about a change in the law. I do not believe that the right to privacy overrides the right to life of an unborn child.&#8221; There&#8217;s nothing constitutional about that. You have to uphold the law, the Constitution says. It does not say that you must agree with the law, or that you cannot work to change the law.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;font-family:verdana;">What do we ask of a candidate or someone already in office? Nothing more than this: a statement opposing abortion on demand, and a commitment to work for a modification of the permissive interpretations issued on the subject by the United States Supreme Court. It will simply not do to argue that &#8220;laws&#8221; won&#8217;t work, or that &#8220;we can&#8217;t legislate morality.&#8221; Nor will it do to argue, &#8220;I won&#8217;t impose my morality on others.&#8221; There is nothing personal or private in the morality that teaches that the taking of unborn life is wrong.<br />
</span><a name="bkmrk12"></a><br />
<span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><strong>Abortion: Beyond Politics</strong><br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">And so I plead with you above all for the most innocent, those who have no voice of their own to cry out for your protection. Your personal belief is not an issue with me, nor are your politics. Whether you hold political office or aspire to such, whatever your party, my appeal is precisely the same. I speak to elect no candidate, to reject no candidate. There are critical needs in our society. All must be addressed on a continuing basis. None will go away overnight regardless of who holds public office, at whatever level. Some needs are so crucial that they require absolutely the best leadership this country can provide. It is neither my prerogative nor my desire to determine who those leaders are to be. But I am passionately convinced that no need is more crucial than to protect the rights of the unborn. I can but pray that those who are chosen to lead us will do everything possible to protect those rights, for such, in my judgment, is the indispensable step in protecting the rights of all who cannot protect themselves&#8211;and one day that can be any one of us.<br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;font-family:verdana;">In a speech last April at Mount Saint Mary&#8217;s College in Emmitsburg, Maryland, Speaker of the House Thomas P. O&#8217;Neill quoted the truly noble words of Senator Hubert Humphrey that could be read as an ominous warning as well: &#8220;The moral test of government is how it treats those who are in the dawn of life, the children; those who are in the twilight of life, the aged; and those who are in the shadows of life, the sick, the needy and handicapped.&#8221;<br />
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<span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><strong>Abortion and the Law</strong><br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;font-family:verdana;">Since 1973 some of the finest scholars in the United States have argued that the Supreme Court decisions were not solidly based on the Constitution, and one Supreme Court Justice who dissented, from the majority called the abortion decision an act of &#8220;raw, judicial power.&#8221; In other words, the will of seven justices was imposed on an entire nation.<br />
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<span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><strong>A Decree Against the Consensus</strong><br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Given this reality, when charges are so loosely made that those who plead for a recovery of legal protection for the unborn are trying to impose their will on the majority, it is apparently forgotten that virtually every state in the union had some kind of protective law which was swept away by the Supreme Court. If we are going to argue that law must reflect a consensus, we must admit that there was a strong, national consensus against abortion on demand before the Supreme Court issued its decree that the unborn is &#8220;not a person whose life state law could legally protect.&#8221;<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">There are those who argue that we cannot legislate morality, and that the answer to abortion does not lie in the law. The reality is that we do legislate behavior every day. Our entire society is structured by law. We legislate against going through red lights, selling heroin, committing murder, burning down other peoples&#8217; houses, stealing, child abuse, slavery and a thousand other acts that would deprive other people of their rights. And this is precisely the key: law is intended to protect us from one another of private and personal moral or religious beliefs. The law does not ask me if I personally believe stealing to be moral or immoral. The law does not ask me if my religion encourages me to burn down houses. As far as the law is concerned, the distinction between private and public morality is quite clear. Basically, when I violate other peoples&#8217; rights, I am involved in a matter of public morality, subject to penalty under law.<br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;font-family:verdana;">Is it outlandish to think that laws against abortions might have some protective effect? It is obvious that law is not the entire answer to abortion. Nor is it the entire answer to theft, arson, child abuse, or shooting police officers. Everybody knows that. But who would suggest that we repeal the laws against such crimes because the laws are so often broken?<br />
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<span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><strong>Teaching Function of Law</strong><br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Of course we need far more education, and speaking in this high school auditorium I call upon our school administrators and teachers to carry out this responsibility. Of course we need far more love and respect and reverence for human life. Of course those churches that believe abortion to be sinful have the obligation to teach their adherents. The National Conference of Catholic Bishops testified before the Senate in 1981: &#8220;. . . we have no intention of asking the government to take over our own task of teaching moral principles and forming consciences.&#8221; The testimony went on to argue, however, that the law has a critical teaching function. On this basis, too, we would appeal to those in public life who could do so much to help achieve modifications in the current laws.<br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;font-family:verdana;">Every American is brought up, ideally, to respect the law. We know that some individual laws are good, some bad, some just, some unjust, but it&#8217;s the concept of law that we respect. We know laws are necessary because we are all weak human beings, and while we may chafe under laws that are personally inconvenient to us, we know we must have laws or have chaos. It is one of our proudest traditions that bad laws can be changed. There is no better example than the Slave Laws. And while many blacks still suffer in our country, and are still far from enjoying all the human and civil rights due them by both moral and civil law, the reality is that if the 1857 Supreme Court decision in the famous <em>Dred Scott</em> case had been allowed to stand, they would still be legally slaves, non-citizens, forever unable to become citizens. In 1857, it was not enough for people of good will to call slavery wrong; it was absolutely essential that they call the law wrong, and worked to change it.<br />
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<span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><strong>Consequences of Abortion Mentality</strong><br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">We need only look at the mentality that has developed under current laws in recent years. An assistant district attorney argues in the case of the smothering of a newborn by her grandmother: &#8220;This is what you might call a two-minute abortion because the baby was unwanted.&#8221; A Nobel Prize winner has suggested that parents should be given a period of three days after the birth of a baby to determine whether the baby should live or die. Physicians are asked to determine by amniocentesis and other means the sex of the unborn so that an abortion can be performed if the sex is not acceptable to the parents. We hear of trafficking in fetuses which are sold nationally and internationally for commercial purposes such as the manufacture of cosmetics. The judicial trend since 1973 has even allowed a court&#8217;s ordering abortion for a mentally retarded or incompetent woman.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Why maintain laws against child abuse when abortion&#8211;the most violent form of child abuse in society&#8211;is protected as a right? Why have laws against racism when&#8211;as the ten black Roman Catholic bishops of the United States recently charged &#8212; liberal abortion policies amount to another form of subjugation of poor black people.<br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Deeply as we feel the pain of the individual, and aware as we are that many, many women have abortions because that seems to them their only choice, we cannot, we must not treat abortion as though it were a matter of concern only to an individual woman or man or family. We are already seeing cruel signs of what an abortion mentality can mean for all society.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Again we ask how safe will the retarded be, the handicapped, the aged, the wheelchaired, the incurably ill, when the so-called &#8220;quality of life&#8221; becomes the determinant of who is to live and who is to die? Who is to determine which life is &#8220;meaningful,&#8221; which life is not? Who is to have a right to the world&#8217;s resources, to food, to housing, to medical care? The prospects are frightening and far too realistic to be brushed aside as &#8220;scare tactics.&#8221;<br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;font-family:verdana;">Father Hesburgh of Notre Dame phrases the issue well. &#8220;It is difficult to explain how a moral America, so brilliantly successful in confronting racial injustice in the &#8217;60s, has the most permissive abortion law of any Western country, recognizing virtually no protection for unborn human beings. . . .&#8221;<br />
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<span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><strong>A Call for Change</strong><br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;font-family:verdana;">So we must change the laws. This is one reason why I am encouraged by Governor Cuomo&#8217;s calling for a task force to &#8220;take our highest aspirations and most notable pronouncements about life and seek to convert them into working laws and policies.&#8221; I applaud such an objective vigorously as long as it, is indeed pointed toward changing the current laws, as long as we forthrightly recognize that a task force, can but recommend. We continue to look to our highest elected officials for leadership in bringing about those changes in current laws and policies so critically needed to protect every human life at every stage of its existence.<br />
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<span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><strong>False Charges of Abortion Advocates: A Response</strong><br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">There is strong resistance by some to any change in the laws to make them less permissive or to reduce the possibility of &#8220;abortion-on-demand&#8221; (for that is the real issue). Some costly advertising campaigns are designed to discredit the &#8220;pro-life&#8221; movement.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Some pro-abortionists convey the impression that &#8220;masses&#8221; of women would die undergoing &#8220;back-alley&#8221; abortions if abortions were illegal. We are informed that this is not supported by figures issued by the United States Government before 1973 nor following the 1979 cutoff of Medicaid funds for abortion.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Certainly rape is always a frightening possibility and a crime to be abhorred in every way. It is understandable that many would feel that an abortion should be justifiable if a woman or a young girl becomes pregnant through rape. We in no way minimize the horror and trauma of rape. Obviously, whether we are speaking of a thousand cases or one case, a woman&#8217;s life, a family&#8217;s future, can be virtually destroyed. But as we have asked before, will violence against an unborn child compensate for the violence against the woman raped, or will it, in many cases, simply increase her suffering? Is it at least possible that bearing a child, however conceived, and either rearing it or offering it for adoption to the hundreds of thousands of couples pleading to adopt, might bring, even out of the tragedy or rape, a rich fulfillment?<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Permit me to read you just one of the letters I have received from women who have been raped.<br />
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</span><em><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Twenty-two years ago I was raped. I had no home at this time. Some sisters took me in when I became ill.<br />
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</span></em><em><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">I could not give my daughter what she needed when my own life was so hard, so I let her go (for adoption).<br />
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</span></em><em><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Sixteen years later &#8211; without even knowing her name I found my daughter. My daughter and I are close friends. She is now married.<br />
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</span></em><em><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">I tell you all of this because no matter how life was conceived, we are to stand firm in being thankful for the gift of life no matter what tragedy is connected with it.<br />
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</span></em><em><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Yes, it was a horrible experience to be raped. Yes, it was I who felt like the bad person. Yes, there was worry if my child would be healthy. Yes, I had no idea how I could take care of my baby. Yes, I was ashamed to be seen &#8211; so young and not married.<br />
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</span></em><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><em>Still, I suffered through this nightmare that deeply affected me rather than have an abortion because of my deep reverence for all living creatures created by God. I wasn&#8217;t a Catholic at the time and yet I knew what the truth was, and still is. I had taken, my child&#8217;s life before she was born, there wouldn&#8217;t be a daughter telling her friends that she is proud of me for being just me.<br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">The charge that the &#8220;pro-life&#8221; movement considers abortion a political decision, rather than personal and medical, is equally misleading. Certainly the lives of its future citizens are of concern to the &#8220;body politic.&#8221; Appropriate political activity is both a right and duty for every citizen. It is precisely concern for the personal that prompts us to exercise our right and duty to use the political process to try to bring about legislation that protects the right of every person, including the unborn. This is a far cry from asking our politicians to tell us what is morally good for us. We have no more desire to see politicians determine what is moral and immoral than we have to see such abortion decisions forced upon medical doctors.<br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">There is also the implication that the &#8220;pro-life&#8221; movement sees &#8220;birth control&#8221; and abortion as equal evils. These are, of course, grossly untrue. Abortion destroys life already conceived.<br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Again, while anything is possible, and therefore some groups or individuals somewhere may be attempting to have all contraception declared illegal, this is not the intention of the &#8220;pro-life&#8221; movement, whatever may be proposed by individuals within the movement. And it is certainly not an intention approved by the bishops.<br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Nor is the &#8220;pro-life&#8221; movement dedicated, as some critics imply, to a world without sex and the legitimate, joys it can bring to those who engage in sexual activity responsibly in marriage. The Church teaches very explicitly that married couples need not intend to conceive a child to enjoy the sexual relations of marriage, and those of our acquaintance in the &#8220;pro-life&#8221; movement share this belief. They see the sexual as beautiful, sacred, meaningful, joyous. They would add what some others might deny &#8211; that it must also and always be responsible.<br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Much of the argument of pro-abortionists is based on the assumption that the right to be born is dependent on being wanted. How many unplanned children have been born to parents whose attitudes changed completely to total acceptance and love? How many unwanted children have made enormous contributions to the world, as musicians, writers, doctors, entertainers, teachers, parents, or in other capacities?<br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">But beyond such questions lies an even more basic one: Who can claim the right to be wanted? Does the Constitution guarantee such a right? Could the Congress legislate that babies are to be wanted by parents, or that a husband is to be wanted by his wife, a wife by her husband? When we speak of Equal Employment Opportunity we don&#8217;t argue that employers must personally want to hire given individuals. The law requires only that individuals not be refused employment because of a characteristic unrelated to the nature of the job, such as color. Is anyone arguing seriously today that an employee has a right to be wanted? Hardly. But certainly an employee has a right to life!<br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Is an unborn baby to be denied such a right? Is an unborn baby to be denied even the opportunity to have someone plead with a mother to let the baby live, wanted or not? Is the unwanted baby to be denied the opportunity given to millions of refugees who have been admitted into the United States?<br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;font-family:verdana;">Finally, we deeply regret any allegations that in arguing for the protection of the unborn, or in questioning the positions held by others, any of our bishops have encouraged violence in any form, or have invited attacks on property. First, such charges take the spotlight off the basic violence of the deaths of 4,000 unborn every day. Secondly, in any movement involving millions of people, the possibilities of reprehensible activity on the part of a minority&#8211;particularly a very small minority&#8211;are obvious. Such activity is to be abhorred. It has no place in a true &#8220;pro-life&#8221; movement. We reject it completely. Violence is not the answer to violence.<br />
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<span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><strong>Responsibility of Catholic Bishops</strong><br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;font-family:verdana;">I come finally to the questions that have been raised about the involvement of the bishops of the United States in the matters at hand and the allegations of undue intervention in the political process, including even the charge that in a programmed and conspiratorial fashion, the bishops, or some of us, are trying to destroy the so-called wall between Church and State; that the bishops are &#8220;perilously close&#8221; to threatening the tax-exempt status of their churches, or even more crudely, that the bishops are simply lusting for power.<br />
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<span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><strong>Long and Consistent Tradition of Addressing Social Issues</strong><br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">What is actually going on? The bishops have been saying substantially the same thing about abortion for years. Likewise, for years the bishops have been challenging the state on a broad spectrum of laws and policies, economic, racial, social, military. Most recently the challenge was addressed to issues of war and peace, with the widely publicized formulation of the pastoral letter, <em>The Challenge of Peace: God&#8217;s Promise and Our Response</em>. While much was made in that letter of nuclear war, even more was made&#8211;and has been little noted&#8211;of the causes of war, injustice, oppression, economic and other forms of violence and exploitation and indignities against the human person. It was not by accident that the bishops included in that document on war and peace the following:<br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><em>No society can live in peace with itself or with the world without a full awareness of the worth and dignity of every human person, and of the sacredness of all human life. When we accept violence in any form as commonplace, our sensitivities become dulled… Abortion in particular blunts a sense of the sacredness of all human life. In a society where the innocent unborn are killed wantonly, how can we expect people to feel righteous revulsion at the act or threat of killing noncombatants in war?…<br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;font-family:verdana;">What would those who criticize our speaking out during an election campaign have us do? Were those holding or seeking public office expressing explicit support for racism, for drug abuse, for pornography, for rape, for nuclear war, would we be expected to remain silent? Or would we be damned for doing so? Obviously, no one in or seeking office is calling for any of these. Are we to remain silent, then, on the question of abortion, if we are convinced that it is the taking of human life? Why would we be free to indict racism &#8211; indeed, be generally applauded for doing so &#8211; but damned for indicting abortion? Why would we not be &#8220;imposing our morality&#8221; on others if we opposed rape, but &#8220;imposing our morality&#8221; on others when we oppose abortion? What a strange democracy it would be that would encourage bishops to cry out their convictions as long as these were popular, but to remain mute when so ordered!<br />
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<span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><strong>Welcome in the Marketplace: Right and Duty of Bishops to Speak</strong><br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">In his speech previously mentioned, Speaker O&#8217;Neill referred to the letter on national economic policy being drafted by the Catholic bishops of the United States, predicting that it will have &#8220;a dramatic impact on public debate in our country,&#8221; He cited critics who &#8220;say the Church should stay out of economic issues &#8230; argue that religious concerns have no place in the market place &#8230; that the only thing that matters in the business world is personal drive and ambition; that the only thing that matters in the affairs of man is force of arms,&#8221; and he replied: &#8220;I believe that we who share Christian values have a responsibility to put those values into action&#8211;whether those values are popular or not, whether they are fashionable or not, whether they are high in the polls or not.&#8221;<br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">As one who argued strongly on Labor Day of this year that the bishops have a long tradition of addressing economic issues and the right and the obligation to do so, I am personally grateful to Speaker O&#8217;Neill for his statement and applauding efforts to put values into action, whether or not they are popular, fashionable or high in the polls. In the same address, he stated that &#8220;We must protect those people who cannot, protect themselves.&#8221; I must assume that the Speaker would want to include all people, certainly those least able to protect themselves, the unborn, and would want to welcome the bishops into today&#8217;s debate on this issue of critical public policy, as well.<br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">I am grateful, too, for a letter from Governor Cuomo to the President of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops in 1983, in which he praised the bishops&#8217; pastoral letter on war and peace. As a member of the committee of bishops that formulated the pastoral I am proud of the Governor&#8217;s words:<br />
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</span><em><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">It would have been easy to compromise your position so as to offend no one. You chose instead to tend to your duties as shepherds, to teach the moral law as best you can. You can do no more.<br />
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</span></em><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><em>Our Church has sometimes been accused of not having spoken out when it might have. Now you, our bishops, show the courage and moral judgment to meet this issue of nuclear holocaust with a collective expression of where the Church in America stands.<br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;font-family:verdana;">The pastoral letter on war and peace, of course, made much of a fundamental principle of moral law that we can never, under any circumstances for any reason, deliberately and intentionally attack the innocent. Since the pastoral explicitly referred both to innocent civilians who must be protected in war, and to the innocent unborn who must be protected in their mothers&#8217; wombs, I must assume, also, that the governor would have intended to include our protection of the unborn in his praise of the pastoral letter. I know, of course, that the governor welcomes the bishops into the debate on the subject. He has said so, loudly and clearly.<br />
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<span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><strong>My Obligation to Speak</strong><br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;font-family:verdana;">I feel an obligation as a citizen to address issues of critical moral import whenever opportunity is given me to do so within the framework of our political system I have another obligation, however, that I can delegate to no one. The primary teacher of Catholic doctrine in any diocese is the bishop. As Archbishop of New York I have the responsibility of spelling out for our Catholic people with accuracy and clarity what the Church officially teaches about all human life, the life of the unborn, and abortion. I have simultaneously the obligation to try to dispel confusion about such teaching wherever it exists, however it has been generated, regardless of who may have generated it. It is easy to dismiss a bishop as narrow, rigid, ultraconservative, unfeeling, lacking in theological training or understanding, anti-feminist, or guilty of a thousand other alleged charges for presenting this teaching exactly as it is, rather than as some might like it to be.<br />
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<span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><strong>Church Divided?</strong><br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">But let no one be mistaken about the unanimity of this teaching on the part of the bishops. Those who would seek divisiveness between or among bishops do not understand the principles on which we stand. Those who would seem to suggest, for example, that the &#8220;consistent ethic of life&#8221; approach so well articulated by my good and valued friend, Joseph Cardinal Bernardin Archbishop of Chicago, differs in what it has to say about abortion from what some others of us are saying, including myself, simply do not understand Cardinal Bernardin, or me, or our mutual unconditional commitment to the life of the unborn and to life at every stage of its existence.<br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;font-family:verdana;">Those who would try to derive comfort from the &#8220;consistent ethic of life&#8221; approach, by interpreting it to suggest that an office holder&#8217;s or a candidate&#8217;s position on abortion does not matter, so long as positions on other life issues are acceptable, miss the point of Cardinal Bernardin&#8217;s argument altogether. Indeed, they distort the very essence of his argument.<br />
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<span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><strong>Teaching Clear and Unequivocal</strong><br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">So what does the Church really teach? Catholics the world over recognize the authority of the Second Vatican Council. Its teaching is as clear and unambiguous as anything could possibly be. &#8220;God, the Lord of life, has entrusted to human beings the noble mission of safeguarding life, and they must carry it out in a manner worthy of themselves. Life must be protected with the utmost care from the moment of conception: abortion and infanticide are abominable crimes.&#8221;<br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Pope Paul VI left no doubt. In his words: &#8220;To attack human life under any pretext whatsoever and under whatever form &#8230; is to repudiate one of the essential values of our civilization. In the very depths of our consciences&#8211;as each one of us experiences&#8211;we affirm as an incontestable and sacred principle respect for every form of human life, life that is awakening, life that asks only to develop, life that is drawing to a close; life especially that is weak, unprovided for, defenseless, at the mercy of others.&#8221;<br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">The bishops of the United States have been equally clear and unequivocal. In 1970 they stated: &#8220;Our defense of human life is rooted in the biblical prohibition, &#8216;Thou shall not kill&#8217;… The life of the unborn child is a human life. The destruction of any human life is not a private matter, but the concern of every responsible citizen.&#8221;<br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">Pope John Paul II has stated forcefully: &#8220;It is the task of the Church to reaffirm that abortion is death, it is the killing of an innocent creature. Consequently, the Church considers all legislation in favor of abortion as a very serious offense against primary human rights and the Divine Commandment, &#8216;You shall not kill.&#8217;&#8221;<br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;font-family:verdana;">The Declaration on Abortion issued by the, Vatican&#8217;s Sacred Congregation of the Faith and promulgated by Pope Paul VI in 1974, declared: &#8220;It must be clearly understood that whatever may be laid down by civil law in this matter (of abortion), one can never obey a law which is in itself immoral, and such is the case of a law which would admit in principle the liceity of abortion. Nor can one take part in a propaganda campaign in favor of such a law, or vote for it. Moreover, one may not collaborate in its application.&#8221;<br />
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<span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><strong>Who Speaks for the Church?</strong><br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">So speaks the Church. What do I mean here by &#8220;the Church&#8221;? I mean what the average individual means when he or she asks: &#8220;What does the Catholic Church teach?&#8221; Such a question is not intended to ask what occasional theologians may speculate, or what any group of individuals who form organizations have to say, or what one finds in letters to the editor or on Op/Ed pages. Indeed, it is sometimes these speculations and accusations and claims that lead people to ask: &#8220;What does the Catholic Church really teach?&#8221;<br />
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</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">It has ever been the belief of the Church and is no less so today, that we must turn to the bishops, the teachers of the Church, when we seek to discern the truths of our Faith. The Second Vatican Council stated it simply and clearly: &#8220;By virtue of the Holy Spirit who has been given to them, bishops have been constituted true and authentic teachers of the faith. . .&#8221;<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">&#8216;Church teaching on abortion is quite clear, regardless of allegations that it has changed through the years. Speculations on such questions as when the soul enters the body have changed, as scientific knowledge has accrued. Church penalties for abortion have changed. The teaching about the grave immorality of abortion itself has never changed.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">We hear a great deal about opinion polls and are frequently told that Catholics seem to approve of abortion in about the same percentages that other people do. There are several things wrong with such statements. Polling results depend in part on the knowledge of the persons polled; ignorance concerning the real nature of abortion and many of the so-called facts surrounding abortion is appalling. Unfortunately, some ignorance and confusion even seem to be provoked. The main issue, however, is that polling results depend primarily on the way the questions are asked. Who would be prepared to ask, for example, &#8220;Under what circumstances would you feet justified in putting your unborn baby to death?&#8221; The fact is, that in poll after poll, only 25 percent of those polled support abortion on demand. Much abortion advertising would have us believe that an overwhelming majority would favor it. Even were such the case, however, Catholic teaching on morality is simply not determined on the basis of polls.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">I recognize the dilemma confronted by some Catholics in political life. I cannot resolve that dilemma for them. As I see it, their disagreement, if they do disagree, is not with me; it is with the teaching of the Catholic Church.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;font-family:verdana;">CONCLUSION<br />
</span><a name="bkmrk26"></a><br />
<span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><strong>A Plea to Those of Good Will</strong><br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;font-family:verdana;">I beg leave to add one further plea&#8211;that all women and men of good will try to open their minds and hearts to at least the possibility that we are unjustifiably taking 4,000 innocent human lives each day, regardless of whatever conclusions they may hold to the contrary. I plead for the understanding that it is not the national effort to protect the unborn that is divisive; it is the destruction of the unborn that is divisive. And I plead for honest and open dialogue toward the goal of saving human lives. As Father Hesburgh of Notre Dame has observed: tragically, in essence, we may never come again to an agreement in our land that all abortion should be declared illegal, and some may passionately believe that exception should be made in cases of rape, of incest, or truly grave threat to the actual physical survival of the mother. Whatever we may believe about such exceptions, however, we know that they constitute a fraction of the abortions taking place, so that at the very least we can come to grips with what is the real and the frightening issue of the day: abortion on demand.<br />
</span><a name="bkmrk27"></a><br />
<span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><strong>The Power of Love</strong><br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">And so I come to the end of this long address this personal&#8211;pilgrimage, if you will&#8211;fearing I have said so little of what must yet be said, and that I have said virtually nothing of what, in the final analysis, alone makes everything understandable&#8211;the indispensable power of love. Before leaving a recent visit to Flower Hospital, now the Terence Cardinal Cooke Health Care Center, I told the director of the hospital that I really need not give a speech at all. I need but ask the world to visit that hospital, to see, not merely what doctors and nurses and staff are doing for their helpless patients, but what the helpless patients are doing for the doctors, the nurses and the staff.<br />
</span><br />
</span><span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-family:verdana;">The love those helpless ones generate in those who serve as their arms and legs and eyes and ears and tongues is more beautiful to behold than the most magnificent work of art in our own Metropolitan Museum. Except that such love is not a museum piece. It is vibrantly alive, pulsating through the corridors of that hospital and through the very being of those medical professionals and staff, women and men, literally giving their own lives every day, that the least of God&#8217;s little ones may not only live, but that in the depths of their beings, far removed from our sight and unfathomable by the most sophisticated techniques that science can devise, they, the helpless, may, in turn, love and teach us to love, who need so desperately to learn how.<br />
</span><br />
<span style="font-family:verdana;">And thus it can happen through the creative power of God&#8217;s own mysterious love for each one of us, of whatever color, or creed, or background, or sex, or personal beliefs&#8211;thus the miracle can happen in the strange design of that God who writes straight with crooked lines&#8211;that every child in this world, born or unborn, wanted or unwanted, with or without limbs or hearing or sight, nurtured lovingly, or horrifyingly battered, abused and neglected, becomes not only what Mother Teresa of Calcutta calls something beautiful for God, but someone extraordinarily beautiful for every one of us, their brothers and sisters in the Lord. </span></span></p>
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		<title>Abortion and a Failure of Community</title>
		<link>http://sfgabrielproject.wordpress.com/2010/06/28/abortion-and-a-failure-of-community/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 28 Jun 2010 21:40:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Fredi D'Alessio</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[A 1996 pastoral letter by Archbishop Harry J. Flynn of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis: Dear Brothers and Sisters, I write to you today with concern and hope. My concern is for the many women in our community who do not find the support they need for their health, safety and well-being during [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=sfgabrielproject.wordpress.com&amp;blog=9780024&amp;post=862&amp;subd=sfgabrielproject&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>A 1996 </strong><strong><a href="http://www.archspm.org/reference/pastoral-letters-detail.php?intResourceID=155">pastoral letter</a> by Archbishop Harry J. Flynn of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis</strong><strong>:</strong></p>
<p>Dear Brothers and Sisters,</p>
<p>I write to you today with concern and hope. My concern is for the many women in our community who do not find the support they need for their health, safety and well-being during pregnancy or after their children are born. My hope is for you and me to respond as the people of Jesus Christ.</p>
<p>I want our local church to say loudly and clearly: &#8220;No woman should feel so alone that abortion seems her only alternative. No man need feel so trapped or fearful that he believes there is no other answer.&#8221; I want us to be able to say to any woman: &#8220;Come to any Catholic parish in this archdiocese and you will find help.&#8221; I am asking you, the Catholic people of this archdiocese, to make this promise a reality. I make this request in the belief that to keep this promise to a pregnant woman is a way to demonstrate in action the reality of God&#8217;s love.</p>
<p>In a recent pastoral letter, the United States bishops called on the Catholic community to confront the culture of violence that permeates our nation. This call was vigorously supported by Pope John Paul II in his encyclical letter, The Gospel of Life (Evangelium Vitae). The Holy Father described abortion as one form of violence and appealed to each of US to &#8220;respect, protect, love, and serve life, every human life&#8221; (Section #5). We are members of a Church which has always believed that the life of every child is God&#8217;s gift, which society must nurture and must protect with its laws and statutes.</p>
<p>Our archdiocese has developed programs to assist women and their families during pregnancy. Catholic Charities&#8217; Seton Services offers medical, social, and adoption services throughout pregnancy, birth, and afterward. The Respect Life Office provides emergency financial assistance through the LIFE FUND, helps with housing through the Share-A-Life Program, and in the Marian Project reaches out to women and men hurting after an abortion.</p>
<p>But programs of assistance only begin to address the needs of those for whom pregnancy becomes a time of crisis. We recognize the many pressures that may lead a woman to consider abortion, or may prompt those close to her to encourage one. She may face physical stress and financial hardship. Both she and the baby&#8217;s father may feel overwhelmed by the prospect of being parents. They may have trouble continuing their education, finding a job, health insurance, or housing. A woman may fear how her loved ones will respond when they learn she is pregnant. She may be afraid she will be abandoned by the child&#8217;s father or even by her own family. Alone, faced with such obstacles and unaware of the support and help available, she may believe abortion is her only choice.</p>
<p>As a church we can do more to be there for her. St. Paul says in his second letter to the Corinthians, our God &#8220;encourages us in our every affliction, so that we may be able to encourage those who are in any affliction&#8221; (2 Corinthians 1:4).</p>
<p>If we ask a pregnant woman to &#8220;respect, protect and love&#8221; the life of her child, let us demand of ourselves at least a small share of the heroism we ask of her. Then we will recognize that pregnancy is not just a &#8220;women&#8217;s issue&#8221; but should be the joy and responsibility of the mother, the father, and the entire community. To our formal programs of assistance, we will add a welcoming spirit of hospitality and acceptance. We will proclaim the Gospel through our actions, by giving of ourselves, just as Joseph stood by Mary throughout her pregnancy.</p>
<p>Let us start as close to home as possible-in our families and our parishes. I ask you today to commit yourselves, your parish and your archdiocese to join with me in offering care and support to women and men who need our community to stand with them. I am asking that you gather in your parishes to listen to women in your community describe their experiences and needs during pregnancy and the raising of their children. I ask your parish to reach out and respond to those needs with tenderness. The formal pro-life programs are already in place. Now let us join together in becoming the kind of community that makes clear by our own lives that no one need be alone in a difficult pregnancy. Let us become ever more deeply a people of compassion and justice, a community caring for life!<strong> </strong></p>
<p><strong> </strong></p>
<p><strong>Most Reverend Harry J. Flynn</strong><em><br />
Archbishop</em><br />
Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis</p>
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		<title>A human embryo is a human person</title>
		<link>http://sfgabrielproject.wordpress.com/2010/06/26/a-human-embryo-is-a-human-person/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 26 Jun 2010 21:33:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Fredi D'Alessio</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[By Bishop Robert Vasa “The dignity of a person must be recognized in every human being from conception to natural death.” So begins the Sept. 8, 2008 Instruction from the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith on the dignity of the human person. This instruction is a follow-up and updating of a previous instruction [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=sfgabrielproject.wordpress.com&amp;blog=9780024&amp;post=849&amp;subd=sfgabrielproject&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span class="submitted"><strong>By Bishop Robert Vasa</strong></span></p>
<p>“The dignity of a person must be recognized in every human being from conception to natural death.”</p>
<div class="content">
<p>So begins the Sept. 8, 2008 Instruction from the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith on the dignity of the human person. This instruction is a follow-up and updating of a previous instruction from the same Congregation titled, Donum Vitae (The gift of life). The new instruction is not long and I would certainly encourage that it be read. It can be found on the Vatican website (www.vatican.va) under “Latest Updates.” There are a few areas which <strong><a href="http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/cfaith/documents/rc_con_cfaith_doc_20081208_dignitas-personae_en.html">Dignitas Personae</a></strong>, as the instruction is titled in Latin, tackles which bear repeating and comment upon here.</p>
<p>“The human being is to be respected and treated as a person from the moment of conception; and therefore from that same moment his rights as a person must be recognized, among which in the first place is the inviolable right of every innocent human being to life.” (DP, 4)</p>
<p>Like Donum Vitae, this instruction bases its teaching on that which is scientifically verifiable. At the same time this instruction strengthens the position of its predecessor. If Donum Vitae, in order to avoid a statement of an explicitly philosophical nature, did not define the embryo as a person, it nonetheless did indicate that there is an intrinsic connection between the ontological dimension and the specific value of every human life. Although the presence of the spiritual soul cannot be observed experimentally, the conclusions of science regarding the human embryo give “a valuable indication for discerning by the use of reason a personal presence at the moment of the first appearance of a human life: how could a human individual not be a human person?” [DV,8]</p>
<p>“Indeed, the reality of the human being for the entire span of life, both before and after birth, does not allow us to posit either a change in nature or a gradation in moral value, since it possesses full anthropological and ethical status. The human embryo has, therefore, from the very beginning, the dignity proper to a person.” (DP, 5)</p>
<p>While the document does not make an explicit statement affirming the personhood of the human embryo, I think it would be fair to create our own little syllogism. We start with a premise: That which has the dignity proper to a human person is a human person. We continue with an affirmation of this document: A human embryo, from the earliest stage of its existence, has the dignity proper to a human person. If the premise is true, as I would assert that it is, however unverifiable such a premise might be from a purely scientific point of view because the soul cannot be seen or measured, then the necessary conclusion follows: Therefore, a human embryo, from the earliest stage of its existence is a human person.</p>
<p>This is not something new. Most Catholics believe that the human embryo from its earliest stages is a human person and yet we often speak in terms of a human being because it is possible to prove scientifically that one embryo is of human origin (a human being) and that another is not (i.e. an animal). For a Pro-Life Advocate to defend innocent human life on the grounds that the Pre-Born child is a human person opens the door to the challenge to “prove” that the Pre-Born child is a “person.” Such a challenge is not possible when we defend innocent human life on the grounds that he or she is a human “being.” This is not at all a denial of the personhood of the innocent Pre-Born child, it is rather the use of an argument which might be more compelling in our excessively scientific / rationalistic age.</p>
<p>There are a number of issues which flow from this reaffirmation that the “dignity of a person must be recognized in every human being from conception to natural death.” The instruction gives moral direction for us and specifically mentions a number of more recent scientific advancements for which this reaffirmation has serious ramifications.</p>
<p>A majority of these have to do with the scientific manipulation of human genetic material or with the scientific utilitarian utilization of human embryonic “biological material.” These are generally seen as attempts to improve the health and well being of persons or as means to assist in the achieving of a pregnancy. These include in vitro fertilization, embryo adoption, cryopreservation, embryonic stem cell research, cloning and vaccines derived from embryonic tissue.</p>
<p>At the same time the instruction reiterates and strengthens the Church’s constant teaching about the serious sinfulness of contraceptives, interceptives and contragestatives used to prevent pregnancy, implantation or birth.</p>
<p>These are all areas which touch in a very direct way the mandate, which we all have, to recognize and respect the dignity of a person in every human being from conception to natural death.</p>
<p>Next week, and possibly beyond that, I will spend some time discussing these issues in greater detail. In the meantime, I think the conclusion of the Congregation might spur us on to study these matters with greater diligence.</p>
<p>“In virtue of the Church’s doctrinal and pastoral mission, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith has felt obliged to reiterate both the dignity and the fundamental and inalienable rights of every human being, including those in the initial stages of their existence, and to state explicitly the need for protection and respect which this dignity requires of everyone.</p>
<p>“The fulfillment of this duty implies courageous opposition to all those practices which result in grave and unjust discrimination against unborn human beings, who have the dignity of a person, created like others in the image of God. Behind every “no” in the difficult task of discerning between good and evil, there shines a great “yes” to the recognition of the dignity and inalienable value of every single and unique human being called into existence.</p>
<p>“The Christian faithful will commit themselves to the energetic promotion of a new culture of life by receiving the contents of this instruction with the religious assent of their spirit, knowing that God always gives the grace necessary to observe his commandments and that, in every human being, above all in the least among us, one meets Christ himself (cf. Mt 25:40).” (DP, 37)</p>
<p><a href="http://sentinel.org/node/9747"><span style="color:#265e15;">Source</span></a></p>
<p><strong>*</strong><a href="http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/cfaith/documents/rc_con_cfaith_doc_20081208_dignitas-personae_en.html"><span style="color:#265e15;"><strong>Dignitas Personae</strong></span></a></p>
<p><strong>RELATED: <a title="A Person From Conception – Pope Benedict XVI on the embryo in the womb" href="http://sfgabrielproject.wordpress.com/2010/11/29/a-person-from-conception-pope-benedict-xvi-on-the-embryo-in-the-womb/">A Person From Conception – Pope Benedict XVI on the embryo in the womb</a></strong></p>
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		<title>Moral teachings of the Church are in accord with human dignity</title>
		<link>http://sfgabrielproject.wordpress.com/2010/06/26/moral-teachings-of-the-church-are-in-accord-with-human-dignity/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 26 Jun 2010 21:13:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Fredi D'Alessio</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Bishop Robert Vasa The Office of Readings for the 27th Sunday in Ordinary Time contains one of my favorite and most challenging passages. Citing from the &#8220;Pastoral Guide of Pope Saint Gregory the Great,&#8221; the reading contains these words: &#8220;A spiritual guide should be silent when discretion requires and speak when words are of service. [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=sfgabrielproject.wordpress.com&amp;blog=9780024&amp;post=842&amp;subd=sfgabrielproject&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://sentinel.org/columns/vasa">Bishop Robert Vasa</a></p>
<p>The Office of Readings for the 27th Sunday in Ordinary Time contains one of my favorite and most challenging passages. Citing from the &#8220;Pastoral Guide of Pope Saint Gregory the Great,&#8221; the reading contains these words: &#8220;A spiritual guide should be silent when discretion requires and speak when words are of service. Otherwise he may say what he should not or be silent when he should speak. Indiscreet speech may lead men into error and an imprudent silence may leave in error those who could have been taught. Pastors who lack foresight hesitate to say openly what is right because they fear losing the favor of men. As the voice of truth tells us, such leaders are not zealous pastors who protect their flocks, rather they are like mercenaries who flee by taking refuge in silence when the wolf appears.&#8221;</p>
<p>I have just returned from the annual educational conference of the Catholic Medical Association at which I again heard, from the medical and scientific community, that the teachings of the Catholic Church are fully in accord with a proper philosophical understanding of man and with the prudent practice of the healing arts. I was reminded again that bishops and priests, as shepherds, are perhaps a bit reluctant to speak to our secular and relativistic culture those truths which could perhaps be described as &#8220;inconvenient.&#8221; The theme of the conference was &#8220;Theology of the Body: The Dignity of Woman.&#8221; Starting with the series of talks by Pope John Paul II, in which he presented a rather comprehensive theology of the body, the conference presenters pointed out how this teaching interfaces with the practice of medicine. </p>
<p>As you can imagine, the Theology of the Body is fully consistent with the moral teachings of the Church. For example, there was a presentation on the use of the contraceptive pill as the medicine of choice for the impairment of fertility and the treatment of a variety of ailments which women might experience. In keeping with the theme of the dignity of women it was pointed out that many studies confirm the significant increase in the risk of breast cancer for women who use the contraceptive pill. The conclusion: The pill is not good for women. Furthermore, another presenter pointed out that the contraceptive pill, because it is a type of hormonal therapy, is used to treat the symptoms of a whole series of other underlying problems. Some of these, because they go undiagnosed, cause even more serious problems in the future. The pill may be convenient but it is not good morality when it is used contraceptively and it is not good medicine when used therapeutically. </p>
<p>Contraceptive tubal ligations are morally illicit and it is hard to imagine a tubal ligation which is not contraceptive. Such surgeries are a violation of the integral dignity of women, they further promote the objectification of women and there are sometimes serious adverse health consequences. </p>
<p>In vitro fertilization, also known as IVF, is frequently used as a means for a couple to achieve a desired pregnancy. This process diminishes the dignity of both the man and the woman, it objectifies both of them, and it even objectifies the child to be conceived. In some ways that child, who has a right to be born of natural processes in the context of the embrace of love, now becomes the manipulated product of laboratory technology. The Church, while recognizing the longing of couples to achieve a pregnancy, also recognizes that achieving such a pregnancy &#8220;at any cost&#8221; involves a diminution of the dignity of woman, of man, of the marital relationship and that such a cost is too high. IVF is immoral. Furthermore, thanks to IVF we now have the seemingly insoluble problem of approximately 400,000 frozen embryos, frozen microscopic human beings who have parents who are morally responsible for them but who have either abandoned them to their frozen fate or who do not have the ability to rescue them. This kind of situation clearly diminishes our respect for life, further objectifies the innocent child and treats him or her like a product of the freezer section of the local market. This absurd fate of the innocent child is the product of a technology detached from morality, a technology which does not give proper regard to the dignity of the human person, the dignity of the woman, the dignity of the man, the dignity of the child. There are legitimate modalities which assist, very effectively I might add, married couples desiring to achieve and sustain a pregnancy and these do not involve IVF or freezing embryos or donor gametes or selective reductions or designer babies or gender selection or genetic testing, all of which further dehumanize and objectify the child. Good morality is good medicine. Good medicine respects the nature and dignity of the human person.</p>
<p>Abortion harms women. This is one of the signs often held by the proponents of life when advocating a deeper respect for life. Direct abortion undoubtedly kills an innocent human being and this fact alone should be sufficient for all of us to see its absolute immorality. Unfortunately, it appears that a fuller recognition of the immeasurable harm this procedure does to women will be necessary before this crime against humanity can be seen for what it is, the destruction of an innocent human being and a great harm to women. I do not believe there is any other freely chosen action which has a greater detrimental impact on women than abortion. This medical procedure is certainly a grave moral evil. This medical procedure is an assault, not only on the individual woman, but an assault on the dignity of women in general.</p>
<p><span style="font-family:verdana;">It often happens that the Church is accused of disdaining and condemning the joy of sexual expression and that all these moral laws are really about sex. Pope Benedict mentioned this in his Encyclical, Deus Caritas Est. &#8220;Doesn&#8217;t the Church, with all her commandments and prohibitions, turn to bitterness the most precious thing in life? Doesn&#8217;t she blow the whistle just when the joy, which is the Creator&#8217;s gift, offers us a happiness which is itself a certain foretaste of the Divine?&#8221; In a word, no. The Church, because she sees, recognizes and seeks to defend the dignity of the human person, perhaps especially the dignity of women, is a strong shepherd in speaking out against those things which are immoral and which are contrary to the dignity of the human person. To do otherwise would be &#8220;imprudent silence.&#8221;</span></p>
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