Archbishop Chaput: “Being Human in an Age of Unbelief”
By Dave Andrusko
Charles J. Chaput, O.F.M. Cap., is the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Philadelphia, and author of several books, including “Render Unto Caesar: Serving the Nation by Living our Catholic Beliefs in Political Life.” He has spoken at National Right to Life’s annual convention and is the recipient of NRL Educational Trust Fund’s “Proudly Pro-Life Award.”
Archbishop Chaput is a resource whom pro-lifers can profitably mine for moral, ethical, and spiritual counsel. He is a dazzlingly brilliant thinker and a clear and inspirational writer.
On the pro-life site www.thepublicdiscourse.com you’ve find an adaptation of a lecture Archbishop Chaput delivered at the University of Pennsylvania. Do yourself an enormous favor and take ten minutes to digest his speech titled, “Being Human in an Age of Unbelief.”
Let me offer just one, albeit quite lengthy, excerpt, that speaks to the heart of all pro-lifers:
That leads to my fourth and final
point. The pro-life movement needs to be understood and respected for
what it is: part of a much larger, consistent, and morally worthy vision
of the dignity of the human person. You don’t need to be Christian or
even religious to be “pro-life.” Common sense alone is enough to make a
reasonable person uneasy about what actually happens in an abortion. The
natural reaction, the sane and healthy response, is repugnance.
What makes abortion so grievous
is the intimacy of the violence and the innocence of the victim.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer—and remember this is the same Lutheran pastor who
helped smuggle Jews out of Germany and gave his life trying to overthrow
Hitler—wrote that the “destruction of the embryo in the mother’s womb
is a violation of the right to live which God has bestowed on this
nascent life. To raise the question whether we are here concerned
already with a human being or not is merely to confuse the issue. The
simple fact is that God certainly intended to create a human being and
that this nascent human being has been deliberately deprived of his
life. And that is nothing but murder.”
Bonhoeffer’s words embody
Christian belief about the sanctity of human life present from the
earliest years of the Church. Rejection of abortion and infanticide was
one of the key factors that set the early Christians apart from the
pagan world. From the Didache in the First Century through the Early
Fathers of the Church, down to our own day, Catholics—and until well
into the twentieth century all other Christians—have always seen
abortion as gravely evil. As Bonhoeffer points out, arguing about
whether abortion is homicide or only something close to homicide is
irrelevant. In the Christian view of human dignity, intentionally
killing a developing human life is always inexcusable and always gravely
wrong.
Working against abortion doesn’t
license us to ignore the needs of the homeless or the poor, the elderly
or the immigrant. It doesn’t absolve us from supporting women who find
themselves pregnant or abandoned. All human life, no matter how wounded,
flawed, young or old, is sacred because it comes from God. The dignity
of a human life and its right to exist are guaranteed by God. Catholic
teaching on abortion and sexuality is part of the same integral vision
of the human person that fuels Catholic teaching on economic justice,
racism, war, and peace.
These issues don’t all have the
same content. They don’t all have the same weight. All of them are
important, but some are more foundational than others. Without a right
to life, all other rights are contingent. The heart of the matter is
what [Alexander] Solzhenitsyn implied in his [1978] Harvard comments.
Society is not just a collection of sovereign individuals with appetites
moderated by the state. It’s a community of interdependent persons and
communities of persons; persons who have human obligations to one
another, along with their human rights. One of those obligations is to
not intentionally kill the innocent. The two pillars of Catholic social
teaching are respect for the sanctity of the individual and service to
the common good. Abortion violates both.
In the American tradition, people
have a right to bring their beliefs to bear on every social, economic,
and political problem facing their community. For Christians, that’s not
just a privilege. It’s not just a right. It’s a demand of the Gospel.
Obviously, we have an obligation to respect the dignity of other people.
We’re always bound to treat other people with charity and justice. But
that good will can never be an excuse for our own silence.
Believers can’t be silent in
public life and be faithful to Jesus Christ at the same time. Actively
witnessing to our convictions and advancing what we believe about key
moral issues in public life is not “coercion.” It’s honesty. It’s an act
of truth-telling. It’s vital to the health of every democracy. And
again, it’s also a duty—not only of our religious faith, but also of our
citizenship.
The University of Pennsylvania’s
motto is Leges sine moribus vanae. It means “Laws without morals are
useless.” All law has moral content. It’s an expression of what we
“ought” to do. Therefore law teaches as well as regulates. Law always
involves the imposition of somebody’s judgments about morality on
everyone else. That’s the nature of law. But I think the meaning of
Penn’s motto goes deeper than just trying to translate beliefs into
legislation. Good laws can help make a nation more human; more just;
more noble. But ultimately even good laws are useless if they govern a
people who, by their choices, make themselves venal and callous, foolish
and self-absorbed.
It’s important for our own
integrity and the integrity of our country to fight for our pro-life
convictions in the public square. Anything less is a kind of cowardice.
But it’s even more important to live what it means to be genuinely human
and “pro-life” by our actions—fidelity to God; love for spouse and
children; loyalty to friends; generosity to the poor; honesty and mercy
in dealing with others; trust in the goodness of people; discipline and
humility in demanding the most from ourselves.
These things sound like pieties,
and that’s all they are—until we try to live them. Then their cost and
their difficulty remind us that we create a culture of life to the
extent that we give our lives to others. The deepest kind of revolution
never comes from violence. Even politics, important as it is, is a poor
tool for changing human hearts. Nations change when people change. And
people change through the witness of other people—people like each of
you reading this. You make the future. You build it stone by stone with
the choices you make. So choose life. Defend its dignity and witness its
meaning and hope to others. And if you do, you’ll discover in your own
life what it means to be fully human.
Source: NRLC News
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