
Following Christ: To Be 'For Life'
By Bishop Paul S. Loverde
Herald Columnist
(From the issue of 1/25/07)
The following homily was given by Arlington
Bishop Paul S. Loverde on January 13 at a Respect Life Mass celebrated
at Blessed Sacrament Church in Alexandria.
Is the scene described in today’s Gospel account
only a memory recorded in the Scriptures, or is it repeated, re-enacted?
We see Jesus passing by Levi, son of Alphaeus, sitting at the customs
post. Levi is also known as Matthew. Jesus looks at him and says, “Follow
me.” And Matthew gets up and follows Jesus.
This scene is repeated and re-enacted at each of our own baptisms. Jesus
comes to us as we are being reborn of water and the Holy Spirit and says,
“Follow me!” Baptized into Christ Jesus, we begin to belong
to God.
Yes, the call of Jesus — “Follow me” — is spoken
at Baptism. Jesus was calling each one of us to follow Him, to allow Him
to live in us by sharing in His life of divine grace, and to be and to
act in our lives as He did when He lived among us.
Allowing Jesus to live in us and consciously imitating how He lived includes
being “for life.” Pope John Paul II taught us so clearly when
he wrote in his encyclical letter Evangelium Vitae, “Through the
waters of baptism, we have been made a part of him (cf. Rom 6: 4-5; Col
2: 12), as branches which draw nourishment and fruitfulness from the one
tree (cf Jn 15: 5). Interiorly renewed by the grace of the Spirit, ‘Who
is the Lord and giver of life,’ we have become a people for life
and we are called to act accordingly” (no. 79).
What then are the implications for us as baptized members of Christ’s
Church, members who are “for life” precisely because we belong
to Christ?
One implication is that we are called to witness to life’s inestimable
dignity and worth in both speech and action. A concrete example of this
two-fold witness is the March for Life, which will again take place this
year on Jan. 22. Hundreds of thousands of people come to Washington each
year to march as a tangible witness to being “for life”. Young
people especially will be at the March, a dynamic witness to their conviction
about the primacy of life from conception to natural death. Yes, our young
people have the understanding, the will, the energy and the determination
to turn our country around, to make this great land not a place where
death dominates but where life triumphs. The faithful of Arlington will
join in this tangible witness on Jan. 22.
Another concrete example of this two-fold witness of speech and action
will occur on the last Monday of this month, Jan. 29, when we shall go
Richmond and participate in Catholic Advocacy Day. Visiting our state
legislators gives us the opportunity to voice our conviction about the
life issues and to enlist this support for legislation that will be “for
life.”
Among these life issues is embryonic stem cell research. As we are aware,
the Church supports adult stem cell research but opposes embryonic stem
cell research. Why? Because to destroy an embryo is to take away, to kill,
human life. Adult stem cell research has already shown positive signs
of curing illness and disease, while embryonic stem cell research has
not yet produced any such signs. Yet, the push is on within the media
and in our own state and nation to advance and to fund with public monies
this research which in fact destroys human life. This past week the New
York Times published an editorial urging the use of these embryonic stem
cells, and the House of Representatives voted overwhelmingly in favor
of this type of research. We must see the truth of the matter and witness
accordingly — “for life!”
A second implication of today’s Gospel and first reading is conversion
and repentance. Not everyone in the Church has been such a staunch witness.
Yet, Jesus is passing by daily, repeating His invitation to follow Him
and to be “for life” as He is. It is never too late to respond
to this call of our Lord! Conversion is possible and attainable. Leaving
behind whatever dampened your witness, now — today — you can
begin anew as did Matthew in response to Jesus’ call.
A third implication of today’s Scriptures is the awareness that
to be “for life” demands that we be rooted in the Word of
God. God’s Word reveals authentic truth and real love, especially
for the people entrusted to us. You and I must always seek and know that
truth as it comes to us through the sacred Scriptures, the living Tradition
of the Church and the Magisterium of the Church.
A fourth and final implication of today’s sacred Scriptures is our
attitude toward those who have in fact sinned against life. Our attitude
must be no more and no less that the attitude of Christ. How do we know
Christ’s attitude? We heard only moments ago, “For we do not
have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weakness, but
one who has similarly been tested in every way yet without sin.”
Again, we also heard Jesus say in our midst, “Those who are well
do not need a physician, but the sick do. I did not come to call the righteous
but sinners.” Most people who have had an abortion later deeply
regret that action. We must be the heralds of hope and welcome. Yes, we
must invite them to come back home, to Jesus, Who stands ready to forgive
them. Indeed, having the mind and heart of Christ, we offer hope, welcome
and practical help to those struggling with making a decision about abortion
and other life issues and to those who have wrongly decided. They will
be forgiven if they are truly contrite and seek out Christ in the person
of the priest in the confessional.
The call to be “for life” is intrinsic to Christ’s call
to us at Baptism: “Follow me.” Asking the help of our blessed
Mother, let our witness for life be clear, convincing and, above all,
Christ-like. After all, as baptized members of the Church, we are “the
people of life and for life, and this is how we must present ourselves
to everyone” (cf. Evangelium Vitae, 78).
Copyright (c) 2007 Arlington Catholic
Herald
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