Something to think about
Do we think that there is nothing we can do to end abortion?

Walter Ciszek, S.J.
Pro-Life Bulletin Board, 4/2002

Every single day in the U.S., thousands of God's children die. They are destroyed by in vitro fertilization labs. They are extinguished during their first days of life by the birth control pill, the I.U.D., the morning-after pill, Depo-Provera, Norplant and other chemicals. They are ripped apart by various types of surgical abortion.

Every single day our brothers and sisters die. What can we do? Are we too comfortable in our personal worlds to step out and take a stand to defend life, to make sure no one in our community is considering killing a preborn baby?

Do we take God for granted?

How easy it is, in times of ease, for us to become dependent on our routines, on the established order of our day-to-day existence, to carry us along. We begin to take things for granted, to rely on ourselves and on our own resources, to "settle in" in this world and look to it for our support. We all too easily come to equate being comfortable with a sense of well being, to seek our comfort solely in the sense of being comfortable. Friends and possessions surround us, one day is followed by the next, good health and happiness for the most part are ours. We don't have to desire much of things of this world -- to be enamored of riches, for example, or greedy or avaricious -- in order to have gained this sense of comfort and well being, to trust in them as our supportÑand to take God for granted. It is the status quo that we rely on, that carries us from day to day, and somehow we begin to lose sight of the fact that under all these things and behind all these things it is God who supports and sustains us. We go along, taking for granted that tomorrow will be very much like today, comfortable in the world we have created for ourselves, secure in the established order we have learned to live with, however imperfect it may be, and give little thought to God at all.

Somehow, then, God must contrive to break through those routines of ours and remind us once again, like Israel, that we are ultimately dependent only upon Him, that He has made us and destined us for life with Him through all eternity, that the things of this world and this world itself are not our lasting city, that His we are and that we must look to Him and turn to Him in everything. Then it is, perhaps, that He must allow our whole world to be turned upside down in order to remind us it is not our permanent abode or final destiny, to bring us to our senses and restore our sense of values, to turn our thoughts once more to Him -- even if at first our thoughts are questioning and full of reproaches. Then it is that He must remind us again, with terrible clarity, that He meant exactly what He said in those seemingly simple words of the Sermon on the Mount: "Do not be anxious about what you shall eat, or what you shall wear, or where you shall sleep, but seek first the kingdom of God and His justice."

(By Father Walter Ciszek, S.J., who spent 23 years in Soviet prisons after being convicted of being a "Vatican spy," Magnificat Press, September 2001)

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