Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Answer to just-slightly-insane

The following it an answer to a question posed over at Kelly Thinks (a little more often). I'm posting it here because it's too long for a decent tumblr post, in my opinion.
The question is presumably in response to a couple of quotes from Msgr Phillip Reilly which I posted there earlier today. This was the question (my response follows.)

Abortion has existed for thousands of years (in ancient times, women used to ingest large quantities of certain herbs, which would induce a miscarriage), yet it has never led to any sort of a "culture of death." So what makes you think that's a possibility at all?
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The wilful death of an innocent person is not only a cause of the Culture of Death, but a fruit of that Culture. Murder, War, Prostitution and Slavery have also all existed for thousands of years and are all both fruits and causes of the Culture of Death.

The difference between then and now - though admittedly, where the change occured is a blurred period of decades or centuries - is that, save at the end of various civilisations, it has never been thought a decent, humane, fair or reasonable thing to intentionally destroy the life of another huaman being. This is particulalry so if that person had done no wrong to another.

A culture which accepts an inherrent moral evil as its norm is already one of Death, rather than Life. A culture which accepts multiple inherrently moral evils is one that has been totally swept up in a Culture of Death.

It is important to note that the Culture of Life and the Culture of Death have been competing world-views since the first decision mankind* ever made. That is to say, when we chose to disobey the Natural Law - the Law that is "written in the heart of every man and woman" (Evangelium Vitae, n 29) - we turned away from our natural end and became teleologically disordered.

In not being ordered toward our natural end or goal, we necessarily became ordered towards a certain [type of] death.

In short, it is not abortion as such that has lead to the Culture of Death that we are currently deeply immersed in. However, abortion, the killing of a unborn - and therefore totally innocent - human being for the well-being and/or comfort of another, is "the final nail in the coffin of the Culture of Life, so to speak," as Msgr Reilly once said to me.
As Mother Teresa said at the 1994 National Prayer Breakfast in the USA, "[T]he greatest destroyer of peace today is abortion, because it is a war against the child, a direct killing of the innocent child, murder by the mother herself.
And if we accept that a mother can kill even her own child, how can we tell other people not to kill one another?"





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*mankind, still not a misogynistic was of saying 'humanity.'

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Brief post on birthdays, blogs and bookings

It's Tom's birthday today. It's also Fr Doug's. It was Montana's and Emily's the other day (on different days). It's Eliza's birthday in a few days.
So birthday shout-outs and prayers to all of them.

I am still working on that series from my trip to NY. The next installment (God willing) will be up in a few weeks. Uni's just been getting on top of me lately.

Also, flight bookins make me RAGEAAARRRGHHHOAOIWEFJKBFVOJNAODJPJAJHOAAHHH!!!!!1!!!oneoneone!

Monday, October 10, 2011

During Respect Life Month

Check this out:
During Respect Life Month

Saturday, October 1, 2011

Holy Suffering


I had a conversation months and months ago with Caroline about the Catholic teaching on suffering. At the time, I was unable to form the right words to express the teaching of the Church. This video has those words.
It also speaks to some of the questions I posed yesterday in my post, How Long, Oh Lord.