Pro-life
Preaching Hints
September 20 – 25th Sunday in Ordinary Time
Jas 3:16 - 4:3
Mk 9:30-37
Receiving the child is tantamount to receiving God, the
Gospel of this weekend tells us. This is why Pope John Paul II
could write in “The Gospel of Life,” “whoever attacks human
life, in some way attacks God himself” (n. 9), and “rejection of
human life, in whatever form that rejection takes, is really a
rejection of Christ” (104).
Jesus places this teaching in the context of humble service
to others, and his lesson on service is, furthermore, in the
wider context of his impending passion, death and resurrection.
In other words, at the heart of the Christian life is the
Paschal Mystery. That is what brings salvation and changes us.
It changes us precisely into people who have the power to love
by giving ourselves away. The dynamic of giving ourselves away
in humble service is that “self-emptying” of which St. Paul
speaks when he writes to the Philippians and says that the Lord
Jesus “emptied himself” (Phil. 2:7). The link between these
themes in today’s Gospel is that the same self-emptying is
exactly what is needed in order to welcome one another, from the
elderly to the unborn, from those who are like us to those who
differ in a thousand ways. Self-emptying frees us from the
prejudice that fails to see the one who is different as our
neighbor, and frees us from the selfishness that welcomes only
those whom we choose to welcome. The Christian faith demands
that we accept responsibility for our neighbor based on God’s
choice, not ours. The “pro-choice” Culture of Death, on the
other hand, says we have responsibility only for those for whom
we choose to have responsibility.
By claiming that “circumstances” leave no other choice than
to abort a child, those who justify abortion are placing back on
God the responsibility that we each have to take to empty
ourselves in humble service, imitating the Master and welcoming
the child.
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