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Msgr. Charles Pope: “Life is Not
Always What it Seems”
By Dave Andrusko
As I concluded one of my blog
entries yesterday, I advised that a very good use of your time
would be to go to
http://blog.adw.org/2010/10/a-life-like-yours-on-the-dignity-of-the-disabled-and-the-call-to-save-them-from-abortion.
Msgr. Charles Pope, from the
Archdiocese of Washington, D.C., had just spend an afternoon
taking part in a “webinar” that “focused on providing support,
Church teaching and information to families who receive a
pre-natal diagnosis that their child will be disabled in some
way.” His reflections are captured in the title of his blog
entry-- “A Life Like Yours”: On The Dignity of the Disabled and
the Call to Save Them From Abortion.”
I don’t bother you with links
unless I think the piece is very worth reading. This one is,
many times over. But the real reason you should go there is the
responses found at the end.
Those of us who are not the
parents of children with a disability may still think we
understand what Msgr. Pope describes as the “enormous pressure”
to abort when parents are “informed that the child will have
Down Syndrome, or perhaps a birth defect that will lead either
to early death, or to a lifetime of challenges.” We can’t, even
those of us with family members who have faced exactly those
pressures.
Msgr. Pope helps us to understand
the powerful impact of the idea that “there is such a thing as a
life not worth living.” We have, he writes, “stumbled upon the
very unusual and tragically ironic concept that death is a form
of therapy, that the ‘treatment’ for disabled babies is to kill
them.”
90% of these babies with a poor
prenatal diagnosis are “lost,” he writes. “We in the Church
cannot remain silent in the face of this. We must prophetically
and compassionately reach out to families in such a crisis.” The
remainder of his remarks are filled with examples of very
un-dramatic but pivotal things we can do—“gifts”—to help
families resist “the urgent pressure that they terminate the
pregnancy now.”
Not everyone will have the time
to go to
http://blog.adw.org/2010/10/a-life-like-yours-on-the-dignity-of-the-disabled-and-the-call-to-save-them-from-abortion,
so I want to end with one paragraph that especially moved me.
Msgr. Pope writes,
Life is not usually what it
seems. In this world we esteem things like wealth, ability,
strength and power. But God is not all that impressed by these
sorts of things. God has a special place for the poor and the
humble. The Lord has said that many who are last in this life
are going to be first in the next (Matthew 19:30). There is a
great reversal coming wherein the mighty are cast down and the
lowly are raised up. In this world we may look upon those who
suffer disability with a misplaced pity.
But understand this: they are
going to be the exalted ones in the kingdom of heaven. As we
accept the disabled and the needy into our midst we are
accepting those who will be the royalty in heaven. We ought to
learn to look up to them, beg their prayers and only hope that
their coattails may also help us attain to some of the glory
they will specially enjoy. They have a dignity that this world
may refuse to see but we who believe cannot fail to remember
that the last are going to be the first. Life is not always what
it seems. |