Pro-life
Preaching Hints
June 27 - Thirteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time
1 Kgs 19:16b,
19-21 Gal 5:1, 13-18 Lk 9:51-62
The second reading’s teaching on freedom creates the
opportunity to preach today on the relationship between freedom
and the right to life.
Unwilling to describe the details of dismemberment that the
abortion procedure entails, supporters of its legality have
taken refuge in much more positive words like “freedom” and
“choice.” Ironically, of course, abortions do not happen because
of “freedom of choice,” but rather because some pregnant women
think they have no freedom and no choice but to have an
abortion. Hence the pro-life movement works daily to provide
alternatives to abortion.
But to invoke “freedom” to justify abortion twists the very
notion of freedom, in a way that today’s second reading warns
against. The corrective truth that Paul gives is that we are to
love our neighbor as ourselves. The unborn children are our
neighbors, and loving them starts with protecting them from
violence.
The command to “love our neighbor as ourselves” doesn’t
simply mean to love them “to the same extent” as we love
ourselves, but more fundamentally to love them “as a person like
ourselves.” In other words, it means that we recognize in them a
person with the same worth, value, dignity, and rights as we
ourselves have. This is precisely where the “pro-choice”
mentality has gone wrong, when it fails to see the unborn child
as our neighbor. The justifications for abortion would not hold
if invoked as a reason to kill a born child. “Love your neighbor
as a person like yourself.”
Our Declaration of Independence invokes the “right to life”
as an “unalienable right” granted to all “by their Creator,” not
their government. What God gives, government cannot take away.
This is the foundation of our freedom – that God himself grants
our human rights, and that “to secure these rights, governments
are instituted.” This is the basis of the freedom we enjoy in
America. Preserving that freedom requires preserving the
fundamental rights that are its foundation, starting with life
itself.
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