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“We Shall Not Weary, We Shall Not Rest”
Part Three of Three
Editor’s note. The following
is the speech Fr. Richard John Neuhaus
delivered at the Saturday night banquet that
closed NRLC 2008.
Once again this year, the
National Right to Life convention is partly
a reunion of veterans from battles past and
partly a youth rally of those recruited for
the battles to come. And that is just what
it should be. The pro-life movement that
began in the 20th century laid the
foundation for the pro-life movement of the
21st century. We have been at this a long
time, and we are just getting started.
All that has been and all
that will be is prelude to, and anticipation
of, an indomitable hope. All that has been
and all that will be is premised upon the
promise of Our Lord’s return in glory when,
as we read in the Book of Revelation, “he
will wipe away every tear from their eyes,
and death shall be no more, neither shall
there be sorrow nor crying nor pain any
more, for the former things have passed
away.” And all things will be new.
That is the horizon of hope
that, from generation to generation,
sustains the great human rights cause of our
time and all times—the cause of life. We
contend, and we contend relentlessly, for
the dignity of the human person, of every
human person, created in the image and
likeness of God, destined from eternity for
eternity—every human person, no matter how
weak or how strong, no matter how young or
how old, no matter how productive or how
burdensome, no matter how welcome or how
inconvenient. Nobody is a nobody; nobody is
unwanted. All are wanted by God, and
therefore to be respected, protected, and
cherished by us.
We shall not weary, we shall
not rest, until every unborn child is
protected in law and welcomed in life. We
shall not weary, we shall not rest, until
all the elderly who have run life’s course
are protected against despair and
abandonment, protected by the rule of law
and the bonds of love. We shall not weary,
we shall not rest, until every young woman
is given the help she needs to recognize the
problem of pregnancy as the gift of life. We
shall not weary, we shall not rest, as we
stand guard at the entrance gates and the
exit gates of life, and at every step along
way of life, bearing witness in word and
deed to the dignity of the human person—of
every human person.
Against the encroaching
shadows of the culture of death, against
forces commanding immense power and wealth,
against the perverse doctrine that a woman’s
dignity depends upon her right to destroy
her child, against what St. Paul calls the
principalities and powers of the present
time, this convention renews our resolve
that we shall not weary, we shall not rest,
until the culture of life is reflected in
the rule of law and lived in the law of
love.
It has been a long journey,
and there are still miles and miles to go.
Some say it started with the notorious
Roe v. Wade decision of 1973 when, by
what Justice Byron White called an act of
raw judicial power, the Supreme Court wiped
from the books of all fifty states every law
protecting the unborn child. But it goes
back long before that. Some say it started
with the agitation for “liberalized abortion
law” in the 1960s when the novel doctrine
was proposed that a woman cannot be
fulfilled unless she has the right to
destroy her child. But it goes back long
before that. It goes back to the movements
for eugenics and racial and ideological
cleansing of the last century.
Whether led by enlightened
liberals, such as Margaret Sanger, or brutal
totalitarians, whose names live in infamy,
the doctrine and the practice was that some
people stood in the way of progress and were
therefore non-persons, living, as it was
said, “lives unworthy of life.” But it goes
back even before that. It goes back to the
institution of slavery in which human beings
were declared to be chattel property to be
bought and sold and used and discarded at
the whim of their masters. It goes way on
back.
As Pope John Paul the Great
wrote in his historic message Evangelium
Vitae (the Gospel of Life) the culture
of death goes all the way back to that
fateful afternoon when Cain struck down his
brother Abel, and the Lord said to Cain,
“Where is Abel your brother?” And Cain
answered, “Am I my brother’s keeper?” And
the Lord said to Cain, “The voice of your
brother’s blood is crying out to me from the
ground.”
The voice of the blood of
brothers and sisters beyond numbering cry
out from the slave ships and battlegrounds
and concentration camps and torture chambers
of the past and the present. The voice of
the blood of the innocents cries out from
the abortuaries and sophisticated biotech
laboratories of this beloved country today.
Contending for the culture of life has been
a very long journey, and there are still
miles and miles to go.
The culture of death is an
idea before it is a deed. I expect many of
us here, perhaps most of us here, can
remember when we were first encountered by
the idea. For me, it was in the 1960s when I
was pastor of a very poor, very black, inner
city parish in Brooklyn, New York. I had
read that week an article by Ashley Montagu
of Princeton University on what he called “A
Life Worth Living.” He listed the
qualifications for a life worth living: good
health, a stable family, economic security,
educational opportunity, the prospect of a
satisfying career to realize the fullness of
one’s potential. These were among the
measures of what was called “a life worth
living.”
And I remember vividly, as
though it were yesterday, looking out the
next Sunday morning at the congregation of
St. John the Evangelist and seeing all those
older faces creased by hardship endured and
injustice afflicted, and yet radiating hope
undimmed and love unconquered. And I saw
that day the younger faces of children
deprived of most, if not all, of those
qualifications on Prof. Montagu’s list.
And it struck me then, like a
bolt of lightning, a bolt of lightning that
illuminated our moral and cultural moment,
that Prof. Montagu and those of like mind
believed that the people of St. John the
Evangelist—people whom I knew and had come
to love as people of faith and kindness and
endurance and, by the grace of God, hope
unvanquished—it struck me then that, by the
criteria of the privileged and enlightened,
none of these my people had a life worth
living. In that moment, I knew that a great
evil was afoot. The culture of death is an
idea before it is a deed.
In that moment, I knew that I
had been recruited to the cause of the
culture of life. To be recruited to the
cause of the culture of life is to be
recruited for the duration; and there is no
end in sight, except to the eyes of faith.
Perhaps you, too, can specify
such a moment when you knew you were
recruited. At that moment you could have
said, “Yes, it’s terrible that in this
country alone 4,000 innocent children are
killed every day, but then so many terrible
things are happening in the world. Am I my
infant brother’s keeper? Am I my infant
sister’s keeper?” You could have said that,
but you didn’t. You could have said, “Yes,
the nation that I love is betraying its
founding principles—that every human being
is endowed by God with inalienable rights,
including, and most foundationally, the
right to life. But,” you could have said,
“the Supreme Court has spoken and its word
is the law of the land. What can I do about
it?”
You could have said that, but
you didn’t. That horror, that betrayal,
would not let you go. You knew, you knew
there and then, that you were recruited to
contend for the culture of life, and that
you were recruited for the duration.
The contention between the
culture of life and the culture of death is
not a battle of our own choosing. We are not
the ones who imposed upon the nation the
lethal logic that human beings have no
rights we are bound to respect if they are
too small, too weak, too dependent, too
burdensome. That lethal logic, backed by the
force of law, was imposed by an arrogant
elite that for almost forty years has been
telling us to get over it, to get used to
it.
But “We the People,” who are
the political sovereign in this
constitutional democracy, have not gotten
over it, we have not gotten used to it, and
we will never, we will never ever, agree
that the culture of death is the
unchangeable law of the land.
“We the People” have not and
will not ratify the lethal logic of Roe
v. Wade. That notorious decision of
1973 is the most consequential moral and
political event of the last half century of
our nation’s history. It has produced a
dramatic realignment of moral and political
forces, led by evangelicals and Catholics
together, and joined by citizens beyond
numbering who know that how we respond to
this horror defines who we are as
individuals and as a people. Our opponents,
once so confident, are now on the defensive.
Having lost the argument with
the American people, they desperately cling
to the dictates of the courts. No longer
able to present themselves as the wave of
the future, they watch in dismay as a
younger generation recoils in horror from
the bloodletting of an abortion industry so
arrogantly imposed by judges beyond the rule
of law.
We do not know, we do not
need to know, how the battle for the dignity
of the human person will be resolved. God
knows, and that is enough. As Mother Teresa
of Calcutta and saints beyond numbering have
taught us, our task is not to be successful
but to be faithful. Yet in that faithfulness
is the lively hope of success. We are the
stronger because we are unburdened by
delusions. We know that in a sinful world,
far short of the promised Kingdom of God,
there will always be great evils. The
principalities and powers will continue to
rage, but they will not prevail.
In the midst of the
encroaching darkness of the culture of
death, we have heard the voice of him who
said, “In the world you will have trouble.
But fear not, I have overcome the world.”
Because he has overcome, we shall overcome.
We do not know when; we do not know how. God
knows, and that is enough. We know the
justice of our cause, we trust in the
faithfulness of his promise, and therefore
we shall not weary, we shall not rest.
Whether, in this great
contest between the culture of life and the
culture of death, we were recruited many
years ago or whether we were recruited only
yesterday, we have been recruited for the
duration.
We go from this convention
refreshed in our resolve to fight the good
fight. We go from this convention trusting
in the words of the prophet Isaiah that
“they who wait upon the Lord will renew
their strength, they will mount up with
wings like eagles, they will run and not be
weary, they will walk and not be faint.”
The journey has been long, and there are
miles and miles to go. But from this
convention the word is carried to every
neighborhood, every house of worship, every
congressional office, every state house,
every precinct of this our beloved
country—from this convention the word is
carried that, until every human being
created in the image and likeness of God—no
matter how small or how weak, no matter how
old or how burdensome—until every human
being created in the image and likeness of
God is protected in law and cared for in
life, we shall not weary, we shall not rest.
And, in this the great human rights struggle
of our time and all times, we shall
overcome.
Part One
Part Two
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