Dear Friends in Christ,
No matter what kind of face we may put on today, no matter how strong our
hopes for the future, and our faith in the ultimate victory of God, we must
admit, that at the heart of our celebration today is not found the joy that we
would rather revel in - but instead, a sorrow, a sorrow that follows us in our
daily steps, and cries out to us, inconsolably, like the voice of Rachel,
mourning her children who are no more.
This is not itself a funeral Mass, for at the end, we must have hope, and we
must believe in the power of good to overcome, and the power of Divine love to
redeem all that has been lost. And yet, in a real sense, it is a day of funeral
remembrance - remembrance of all infants who have died under the knife of the
abortionist, especially those who have died in the year since we last gathered,
and especially for those who have died near to us, in and around this part of
Georgia that we call our home.
And as we express our sorrow and the pain of our hearts over these little
souls, who left little to recommend them to our memories other than their pure
and holy innocence, we also let rise a wailing from our hearts over the sins
and transgressions of our country, of our people, and of those who among us are
sworn to save life, but who for expedience and for money, do not hesitate to
take life, and to throw it away, in the nearest and most convenient trash-heap
- for whatever you might call abortion clinics, or hospital facilities that
provide abortions, or the people who pretend to work in them for the sake of
someone's right to choose death - to them, life is cheap, an unwanted baby
clinical garbage, and the final solution to the problem, evacuation and
disposal.
Not only the voice of Rachel, not only the voice of the Faithful, but the
voices of the angels themselves rise up in mourning for these children, and the
same voices also rise up in an outraged cry, against this terrible evil, that
shuns the gaze of a loving just people, and hides its terrible work, behind
webs of legal , and veils of misleading language.
But to those dedicated and baptized in truth, there is no successful deceit
in terms like reproductive freedom, or a woman's right to choose, or
"planned parenthood." We might as well call murder pleasant, or death
inviting, or pain refreshing - but whatever evil and death might be called,
they are still evil and death, and God will not, in the end, suffer evil to
exist, nor invite to the heavenly banquet, any who have stolen His right, and
His alone, to judge when the end should come for any of us.
It is this hope, to see justice, and to see the vindication of our own
efforts, that we bring before God today - it is this hope, that a difference
may be made in the world around us, that enlivens once again our personal,
individual, and collective dedication to the cause of life, and to the cause of
ending those evils in our society which profane life - abortion, murder,
suicide, and euthanasia - it is this hope, that we both give now to God, and
that we receive back from Him in increased measure, that makes us attentive to
the words of Scripture, to the words which turn us around in our sorrow, and
tell us of a light to follow, a light that will bring us eventually to the
Kingdom of Christ's love, and the eternal world of His peace. For "Thus
says the Lord:
Cease your cries of mourning, wipe the tears from your eyes. The sorrow you
have shown shall have its reward.
Dear friends, let us mourn as our hearts bid us mourn, for not to mourn the
innocents that have been sacrificed, would be callous and unworthy of Catholic
life. Do we believe for a moment that Mary, our Lady and Mother, did not mourn
when she heard the prophecies of Simeon about her own trials, or do we think
that, burdened with the necessity for taking flight from her home into the
distant and uninviting land of Egypt, she did not sorrow for the friends and
family that were left behind, or can any of us envision that her sorrow at the
foot of the cross was not sorrow of the deepest, most profound, most anguished
type?
I think not - I think that we can know too well the depth of maternal pain
that more than once, clinched and held the heart of our dear Blessed Mother.
But I also think that we can see in her life, persistent hope in her Son,
persistent hope in the salvation he was sent to bring. For all her sorrow and
fear, and the sorrow and fear of her chaste spouse, St. Joseph, she still
accepted the message of the angels, who told her: "Your child will be
great, and will be called the Son of the Most High. . . and of his kingdom
there will be no end." And who told St. Joseph, in their exile:
"Rise, take the child and his mother and to the land of Israel, for those
who sought the child's life are dead."
Dear friends, we do not wish the death of anyone, we who gather here in the
Lord's presence, to mourn the many children innocently slaughtered - we do not
pray to God for the deliverance of anyone unto death, but rather, deliverance
into life, into love, and into the chance for salvation that is the birthright
of every human being, however conceived. But we do know, that death stalks the
footsteps of those who deal in death, and we believe what the Lord has taught,
that those who live by violence, will die by violence, in their bodies, and in
their souls. God help them, and help us to overcome the evil that they do, so
that perhaps, one day, sooner than later, we may all experience together, the
comfort of God's promise:
They departed in tears, but I will console them and guide them; I will lead
them to brooks of water, on a level road, that none shall stumble.
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