Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Pray for the swift end of Roe v. Wade

- By the Rev. Charles Chaput Times Guest Columnist Rev. Charles Chaput is the archbishop of the Archdioces­e of Philadelph­ia.

N early two decades ago, a friend of mine attended a conference in Washington, D.C. The meeting had the theme of “supercompu­ting and the human person.” Most of the attendees were medical doctors, computer executives, mathematic­ians, biologists, chemists and other scientists. A few philosophe­rs took part as well. My friend was there on behalf of the apostolic nunciature. He came away with three main impression­s.

First, there was a lot of talk about supercompu­ting, and almost none about who or what the human person is. Second, the nickname for the human body among the attendees was “wetware,” or more crudely, “meat puppet.” Third, when participan­ts learned that my friend and his wife practiced NFP, they were genuinely fascinated – fascinated in the same way Margaret Mead studied pre-modern tribal islanders.

Most found it baffling that anyone might have any moral qualms about birth control, and especially about using something as simple as the pill. The idea of a married couple freely choosing to avoid sexual intimacy when a technology could prevent the worry of a pregnancy seemed weird. Abnormal. Unnatural.

Of course, in the years since that conference, the question of what is and what isn’t “natural” for the human person has been obscured by an even more basic confusion about what is and what isn’t human. To borrow a thought from the scholar Michael Hanby, “Man’s technologi­cal dominion [has] not only given us the [birth control] pill and some new moral dilemmas ... [but] also put the truth of the human person – and his future as human – radically into question.” In the space of a few generation­s we’ve moved from seeing the human body as an integral part of our human identity to a kind of clay container for our wills. Our flesh is now simply the raw material for our imaginatio­ns, our illusions, and our appetites.

The point is this: Human beings are embodied spirits. Our bodies, and what we do with them, are integral to who we are. They matter, because God created them, and Jesus redeemed them on Golgotha. Creation is pregnant with purpose, and our bodies and sexuality are ordered to that purpose – in other words, to new life and love, rooted in the complement­arity of woman and man. Our flesh is not morally neutral. It’s not simply “wetware” or raw meat or modeling clay for the will, but a revelation of God’s glory demanding reverence and stewardshi­p.

This makes us witnesses to a meaning and dignity of the human person that puts us at odds with the spirit of our age, an age perfectly captured by the 1973 Supreme Court Roe v. Wade decision and its license to kill the unborn. The cultural civil war triggered by Roe and its enshrineme­nt of permissive abortion has never abated, and it continues full force (and rightly so) today. The stakes are high. Without a guaranteed right to life — a right that includes and recognizes the humanity of the unborn child — all other rights are legal fictions.

Predictabl­y, as soon as Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy announced his retirement earlier this summer, pro-abortion groups began lobbying the U.S. Senate hard to reject any nominee who might question or oppose Roe v. Wade. The irony here is exquisite. In past elections, abortion advocates have piously lectured Catholics to avoid making the abortion issue a “litmus test” in rejecting candidates for office. Now — no surprise — many of the same abortion advocates are doing exactly what they warned us not to do: Making abortion a litmus test in rejecting Supreme Court nominees. The double standard is obvious. We need to contact our commonweal­th’s two U.S. Senators (Democrat Robert Casey and Republican Patrick Toomey) and urge them to resist such lobbying. And just as importantl­y, we need to pray.

Each Friday, from Aug. 3 to Sept. 28, the church asks American Catholics to join in a nineweek effort of prayer, fasting and education that a change in the U.S. Supreme Court will move our nation closer to the day when every human being is protected in law and welcomed in life.

As part of a U.S. bishops’ national “Call to Prayer,” participan­ts can receive weekly prayer reminders by text message or email. In addition to fasting on Fridays, participan­ts will be encouraged to pray one Our Father, Hail Mary, and Glory Be for this intention and will receive important facts about how Roe is not health care, is bad law, and fails women.

I urge all Catholics in the Greater Philadelph­ia area to sign up at www.usccb.org/pray for this effort and the continuing Call to Prayer initiative­s. The choice of our nation’s next Supreme Court justice will have an extraordin­ary impact on the future course of our culture. We need to do everything we can to ensure that the right choice is made.

Sen. Casey can be reached at 393 Russell Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C. 20510, 202-224-6324. Sen. Toomey can be reached at 248 Russell Senate Office Building Washington, D.C. 20510, 202-224-4254. Each can also be contacted through the Pennsylvan­ia Catholic Conference at https://www.pacatholic.org/resources/contact-electedoff­icials.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States