Unborn children remain the persons whose lives are most at risk in America: Over one million children each year die in abortion facilities.
Cardinal Rigali: 'It bears repeating: Abortion – the direct, intentional killing of an unborn girl or boy – is not health care.'
WASHINGTON, D.C. (Catholic Online) - We are pleased to present the entire message of His Eminence Justin Cardinal Rigali for Respect Life Sunday. Cardinal Rigali is the
Chairman of the USCCB Committee on Pro-life Activities.He is a champion of life, of women and of the family.
For Respect Life Sunday
Respect Life Sunday, this year celebrated on October 4this a day set aside for Catholics in the United States to reflect with gratitude on God’s priceless gift of human life. It is also an occasion to examine how well we, as a nation and individually, are living up to our obligation to protect the rights of those who, due to age, dependency, poverty or other circumstances, are at risk of their very lives.
In the current debate over health care reform, it has become evident that a number of Americans believe that the lives and health of only some people are worth safeguarding, while other classes of people are viewed as not deserving the same protection. Such an attitude is deplorable, all the more so in the context of health care. Sanctioning discrimination in the quality of care given to different groups of people has no place in medicine, and directly contravenes the ethical norms under which Catholic hospitals and health care providers operate.
Unborn children remain the persons whose lives are most at risk in America: Over one million children each year die in abortion facilities. The Roe v. Wadedecision in 1973 rendered states powerless to halt this killing. Thankfully Congress and most states acted to prevent public funding of abortions (with narrowly defined exceptions). Yet despite the opposition of 67% of Americans to taxpayer-funded abortion, all current health care proposals being considered by Congress would allow or mandate abortion funding, either through premiums paid into government programs or out of federal revenues.
It bears repeating: Abortion – the direct, intentional killing of an unborn girl or boy – is not health care. Abortion robs an innocent child of his or her life, and robs mothers of their peace and happiness. For 25 years, the Project Rachel post-abortion ministry of the Catholic Church has helped women move beyond their grief and remorse after abortion, helping them find peace by accepting God’s forgiveness and by forgiving themselves and others involved in the abortion decision. Abortion funding can only increase the number of dead and grieving.
Unborn children are not the only human beings disfavored under current proposals. Many people insist that undocumented persons living and working in the United States should not be allowed in any new system to purchase health-care coverage, and that poor legal immigrants be denied coverage for the first five years they are in the United States. Do immigrants forfeit their humanity at the border? How can a just society deny basic health care to those living and working among us who need medical attention? It cannot and must not.
While most Americans agree that those who cannot afford health insurance should have access to health care, some commentators have gone so far as to suggest offsetting the cost of expanded coverage by curtailing the level of care now given to elderly Americans. Other pundits have suggested that treatment decisions should be based not on the needs of the elderly patient, but on the patient’s allegedly low “quality of life” or the cost-effectiveness of treatment calculated over the patient’s projected lifespan. Such calculations can ignore the inherent dignity of the person needing care, and undermine the therapeutic relationship between health professionals and their patients.
It should not be surprising that the neglect, and even the death, of some people are offered as a solution to rising health care costs. Population control advocates have long espoused aborting children in the developing world as a misguided means for reducing poverty.
Some environmentalists now claim that the most efficient way to curb global climate change is to make “family planning” more widely available in the developing world. They report that an average of 2.3 pounds per day of exhaled carbon dioxide can be eliminated from the atmosphere by eliminating one human being. As used by population control advocates, the innocuous term “family planning” includes abortifacient contraceptives, sterilization, and manual vacuum aspiration abortions.
Oregon, where health care for low-income patients is rationed by the state, has denied several patients the costly prescription drugs needed to prolong their lives, while reminding them that the assisted suicide option is conveniently offered under Oregon’s health plan.
Many scientists justify the manipulation and killing of embryonic human beings in stem cell research, based on unsubstantiated hopes of finding new cures. Yet the facts increasingly show ...
"I am loathe to criticize our Bishops. They have a most difficult job to do, and they need all our support and all our prayers. However, sometimes what the Word of God states in plain language has to be pointed out and implemented."
I'm certain there are millions of devout Catholics who share your exact feelings. God Help us.
Bill Sr. | 10/5/2009
"How can a just society deny basic health care to those living and working among us who need medical attention?" - Amen.
Its amazing how we are often left with a choice between those who are cold and indifferent because of money and nationalism, and those who are cold and indifferent for the sake of licentiousness and personal "power".
Each side pointing a finger at the other and the government.
At some point, we need to point a finger at ourselves, and start providing health care for the poor, and real alternatives for girls facing the "choice" of murder. Like project Rachel - maybe we need to formulate/strengthen our own social economy as this one breaks down.
Andy Holland | 10/2/2009
The problem in all this is that while the USCCB is to be lauded for its stand against abortion, concern remains that the Bishops themselves have not, do not and will not hold pro-abortion Catholic politicians to task by denying them Holy Communion because of their publicly scandalous apostasy. 1 Corinthians 11:27-32 is quite explicit:
Therefore whoever eats the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord unworthily will have to answer for the body and blood of the Lord. A person should examine himself, and so eat the bread and drink the cup. For anyone who eats and drinks without discerning the body, eats and drinks judgment on himself. That is why many among you are ill and infirm, and a considerable number are dying. If we discerned ourselves, we would not be under judgment; but since we are judged by (the) Lord, we are being disciplined so that we may not be condemned along with the world.
If we are our brother's keeper as the Bishops so often point out, then one wonders how they, the Lord's very Anointed, can allow these Catholic politicians to eat and drink damnation to their eternal souls. This would be different if the transgression were private and done out of ignorance. But no Catholic politician can justifiably claim ignorance of Church teaching on abortion, and all Catholic politicians who support abortion do so publicly and scandalously; hence, the repentance must be just as public. Denying Communion to public apostates in political office is NOT use of Communion as a political tool, but reverence for the very Body and Blood of our Lord Jesus Christ as His very Body and Blood, and respect for the souls of the apostates themselves.
I am loathe to criticize our Bishops. They have a most difficult job to do, and they need all our support and all our prayers. However, sometimes what the Word of God states in plain language has to be pointed out and implemented.
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