Pro-life
Preaching Hints
October 25 – 30th Sunday in Ordinary Time
Jer 31:7-9
Heb 5:1-6
Mk 10:46-52
The Gospel passage today about Jesus’ response to Bartimaeus
epitomizes a key aspect of Christian teaching on social justice,
namely, our preferential option for the poor. A “sizable crowd”
was passing by, and the center of attention was Jesus. Not only
were people not paying attention to the man by the side of the
road, but his cries proved to be a nuisance, and people tried to
silence him. Bartimaeus symbolizes the marginalized of our
society, the inconvenient and burdensome – in short, the
unwanted. Crowds pass them by every day and don’t even want to
think about them.
Jesus, however, pays attention neither to the crowd nor to
those who tried to eliminate the nuisance. He paid attention to
the man at the margins. And he called him and healed him.
As we promote a Culture of Life, there are some who want to
silence even further the already silent screams of the unborn,
who constitute the most marginalized and oppressed segment of
humanity today. Yet as a Church we are called to give urgent
attention and priority to these children. We are called to
embody the response of Christ, ignoring the rebukes of the
“politically correct” segments of our society, and identifying
ourselves with the “man at the margins.” Not only is this an
imitation of Christ, but it is a fulfillment in our day of the
prophecy of Jeremiah that we hear in the first reading. God’s
promise regarding his scattered and oppressed people is, “I will
gather them.” That’s what the pro-life effort of the Church does
– it gathers back together those who are scattered by the legal
fiction that their lives are not equal to the rest of people; it
restores protection to those who would otherwise be scattered by
the physical violence of abortion.
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