Posted by
AveMaria on Saturday, October 25, 2008 2:18:55 PM
Look At This Picture
Current mood:
touched
Category: Life
Please pass this along to anyone and everyone you can ~
The following is a letter from Cardinal Egan which appeared in Catholic New York. Read it. It's the single best pro-life plea I've read in a long time. Here it is:
Just Look
The
picture on this page is an untouched photograph of a being that has
been within its mother for 20 weeks. Please do me the favor of looking
at it carefully.
Have you any doubt that it is a human being?
If you do not have any such doubt, have you any doubt that it is an innocent human being?
If
you have no doubt about this either, have you any doubt that the
authorities in a civilized society are duty-bound to protect this
innocent human being if anyone were to wish to kill it?
If your
answer to this last query is negative, that is, if you have no doubt
that the authorities in a civilized society would be duty-bound to
protect this innocent human being if someone were to wish to kill it, I
would suggest—even insist—that there is not a lot more to be said about
the issue of abortion in our society. It is wrong, and it cannot—must
not—be tolerated.
But you might protest that all of this is too
easy. Why, you might inquire, have I not delved into the opinion of
philosophers and theologians about the matter? And even worse: Why have
I not raised the usual questions about what a "human being" is, what a
"person" is, what it means to be "living," and such? People who write
books and articles about abortion always concern themselves with these
kinds of things. Even the justices of the Supreme Court who gave us
"Roe v. Wade" address them. Why do I neglect philosophers and
theologians? Why do I not get into defining "human being," defining
"person," defining "living," and the rest? Because, I respond, I am
sound of mind and endowed with a fine set of eyes, into which I do not
believe it is well to cast sand. I looked at the photograph, and I have
no doubt about what I saw and what are the duties of a civilized
society if what I saw is in danger of being killed by someone who
wishes to kill it or, if you prefer, someone who "chooses" to kill it.
In brief: I looked, and I know what I saw.
But what about the
being that has been in its mother for only 15 weeks or only 10? Have
you photographs of that too? Yes, I do. However, I hardly think it
necessary to show them. For if we agree that the being in the
photograph printed on this page is an innocent human being, you have no
choice but to admit that it may not be legitimately killed even before
20 weeks unless you can indicate with scientific proof the point in the
development of the being before which it was other than an innocent
human being and, therefore, available to be legitimately killed. Nor
have Aristotle, Aquinas or even the most brilliant embryologists of our
era or any other era been able to do so. If there is a time when
something less than a human being in a mother morphs into a human
being, it is not a time that anyone has ever been able to identify,
though many have made guesses. However, guesses are of no help. A man
with a shotgun who decides to shoot a being that he believes may be a
human being is properly hauled before a judge. And hopefully, the judge
in question knows what a "human being" is and what the implications of
someone's wishing to kill it are. The word "incarceration" comes to
mind.
However, we must not stop here. The matter becomes even
clearer and simpler if you obtain from the National Geographic Society
two extraordinary DVDs. One is entitled "In the Womb" and illustrates
in color and in motion the development of one innocent human being
within its mother. The other is entitled "In the Womb—Multiples" and in
color and motion shows the development of two innocent human
beings—twin boys—within their mother. If you have ever allowed yourself
to wonder, for example, what "living" means, these two DVDs will be a
great help. The one innocent human being squirms about, waves its arms,
sucks its thumb, smiles broadly and even yawns; and the two innocent
human beings do all of that and more: They fight each other. One gives
his brother a kick, and the other responds with a sock to the jaw. If
you can convince yourself that these beings are something other than
living and innocent human beings, something, for example, such as "mere
clusters of tissues," you have a problem far more basic than merely not
appreciating the wrongness of abortion. And that problem is—forgive
me—self-deceit in a most extreme form.
Adolf Hitler convinced
himself and his subjects that Jews and homosexuals were other than
human beings. Joseph Stalin did the same as regards Cossacks and
Russian aristocrats. And this despite the fact that Hitler and his
subjects had seen both Jews and homosexuals with their own eyes, and
Stalin and his subjects had seen both Cossacks and Russian aristocrats
with theirs. Happily, there are few today who would hesitate to condemn
in the roundest terms the self-deceit of Hitler, Stalin or even their
subjects to the extent that the subjects could have done something to
end the madness and protect living, innocent human beings.
It is
high time to stop pretending that we do not know what this nation of
ours is allowing—and approving—with the killing each year of more than
1,600,000 innocent human beings within their mothers. We know full well
that to kill what is clearly seen to be an innocent human being or what
cannot be proved to be other than an innocent human being is as wrong
as wrong gets. Nor can we honorably cover our shame (1) by appealing to
the thoughts of Aristotle or Aquinas on the subject, inasmuch as we are
all well aware that their understanding of matters embryological was
hopelessly mistaken, (2) by suggesting that "killing" and "choosing to
kill" are somehow distinct ethically, morally or criminally, (3) by
feigning ignorance of the meaning of "human being," "person," "living,"
and such, (4) by maintaining that among the acts covered by the right
to privacy is the act of killing an innocent human being, and (5) by
claiming that the being within the mother is "part" of the mother, so
as to sustain the oft-repeated slogan that a mother may kill or
authorize the killing of the being within her "because she is free to
do as she wishes with her own body."
One day, please God, when
the stranglehold on public opinion in the United States has been
released by the extremists for whom abortion is the center of their
political and moral life, our nation will, in my judgment, look back on
what we have been doing to innocent human beings within their mothers
as a crime no less heinous than what was approved by the Supreme Court
in the "Dred Scott Case" in the 19th century, and no less heinous than
what was perpetrated by Hitler and Stalin in the 20th. There is nothing
at all complicated about the utter wrongness of abortion, and making it
all seem complicated mitigates that wrongness not at all. On the
contrary, it intensifies it.
Do me a favor. Look at the
photograph again. Look and decide with honesty and decency what the
Lord expects of you and me as the horror of "legalized" abortion
continues to erode the honor of our nation. Look, and do not absolve
yourself if you refuse to act.
Edward Cardinal Egan
Archbishop of New York