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Do You See What I See?
I am taking today off to quiet my
soul for Christmas. In place of a new TN&V, I am
reprinting one of my all-time favorite National
Right to Life News stories. I hope you like it
as well. If you have any thoughts on it, send
them to
daveandrusko@gmail.com. Merry Christmas from
the Andruskos.
"Today human relations are
irregulars and seconds at the closing days of
the warehouse sale of life."
From the book, “Social Amnesia,” by Russell Jacoby
"O little town of Bethlehem."
Traditional Christmas carol
Editor's note. This
editorial first ran a decade ago and garnered
more response than almost any article we've ever
run. I hope our many new readers find it a
blessing and longtime readers rediscover its
charm.
It was late in the afternoon
the Saturday after Thanksgiving. My wife, Lisa,
and I had established a temporary safe haven in
our kitchen free from the usual chaos that comes
with the presence of four joyfully rambunctious
children. We'd somehow managed to wrest free a
few minutes just to read the paper, enjoy a cup
of coffee together, and chat. It was nice!
For reasons I did not fully
understand at the time, when I read in our local
paper that the Salvation Army was experiencing a
dramatic shortage in volunteer bell ringers to
man its familiar red kettles, I was so shocked I
jumped up from the table and searched out the
local number.
Violet, the gentle lady who
answered, mistakenly thought I was someone
inquiring about a paid position. When I assured
her otherwise, she was so pathetically grateful
for my willingness to help them help the poor a
wave of shame washed over me.
How many times, I thought
guiltily, had I brushed past these magnanimous
folks, who patiently waited for some sign my
heart was a few degrees warmer than the
temperature outside? How many times had I been
so self-absorbed that these devoted volunteers
simply blended into the brick facades behind
them?
I was mortified when I recall
that even though I had occasionally given money,
never once had I emerged from my self-absorption
long enough to actually "see" them, let alone
grasp what their silent vigil stood for. Because
I had always looked through them, they never
really existed for me. I hastily volunteered for
several assignments. (In what was surely a
feeble attempt at expiation, I made sure that
one of them was on my birthday.)
The moral of this story
needn't be belabored to tenderhearted
pro-lifers.
When
our culture "looks" at the vulnerable, all too
often there is a failure to recognize and
therefore an inability to reach out in love and
compassion. This is never more true than in our
treatment of the unborn, the littlest Americans.
However, it
wasn't just because of the news account and the
subsequent phone call that I saw these kindly
souls with new eyes. I was already predisposed,
if you will, because Christmas was approaching,
to Christians the celebration of the birth of
the Messiah.
Even those who do not share
the faith honor Jesus for his unconditional love
for widows and orphans, the sick, and the social
outcast, his loving admonition to care for the
least among us. This most assuredly included
little children, as Luke's poignant gospel
account reminds us so beautifully.
Jesus healed out of a deep
well of empathy and compassion. He restored many
whose bodies, hearts, and souls were weighed
down with physical and emotional burdens. But he
was also teaching us a timeless lesson: unless
we are willing to open our eyes, we, too, will
be blind to the hurting around us.
While it is not my intention
to idealize pro-lifers, it would be false
modesty to ignore that they demonstrate a
tremendous capacity to truly "see" what others
either cannot, or choose not, to see. It is no
accident that pro-lifers defend unborn babies.
Love and concern for the downtrodden, the
dispossessed, and the marginalized is what gives
their lives a rich unity of purpose.
The great hope of the pro-life
movement is that despite our nation's descents
into inhumanity and indifference, the self-image
of Americans is deservedly of a good people,
blessed in a unique way. And it is because
Americans are fundamentally decent people that
the significance of the debate over
partial-birth abortion cannot be exaggerated.
People needn't be anywhere
near where we are to be virtually sent reeling.
Witnessing even a simple line drawing of this
abomination can turn opinions inside out. A
pseudo-serious support for "choice" in the
abstract cannot coexist for very long with the
concrete reality of this brutal assassination of
helpless children. For many, many people, head
knowledge will become heart knowledge and
ambivalence will be transformed into empathy.
Our culture has chosen to
willfully suppress what it always knew - - that
unborn children are children yet to be born, a
classic example of what historian Russell Jacoby
once called "social amnesia." But the monstrous
evil that is partial-birth abortion - - a
procedure that is essentially indistinguishable
from infanticide - - is shearing away the excuse
people have used from the time immemorial to
explain away their complicity in evil: "I didn't
know."
And because eyes are being
opened, ears unstopped, and hearts unshackled,
what William McKenna calls our "unforced
revulsion" at abortion is finding a wider
audience. These telltale signs suggest we are
cutting through the static of lies and
distortions, establishing a clear channel to
convey our message of love and hope for mother
and unborn child.
One day soon, the ethos of
discrimination and brutality toward the unborn
will prove itself to have been an aberration, a
loathsome interim ethic. And that glorious day
will come because you have proven yourselves to
be the antidote to the poison of inhumanity,
indifference, and injustice.
Let me say, humbly, bless you
for all you have done. |