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Lay Witness
In
Brief...
The Holy Father’s
Intentions
Pope John Paul
II has announced the following general and missionary intentions
for January and February 2001:
January
That Christians
may foster the evangelization of new generations through
the constant search for the unity desired by Christ.
That through
civic and religious education, every form of intolerance
and discrimination may be uprooted all over the world.
February
That children
never again will be obliged to participate in any war, but
may be freed from hatred and violence and may live, as children
should, enjoying friendship in their family, school, and
society.
That, through
the acceptance of the Gospel, the family may be an evangelizing
instrument to make humanity a true family of peoples.
Reaching Minds
Through the Media
The largest public
information campaign ever against abortion was recently launched.
The Caring Foundation
initiated a media campaign in the greater Orlando region in
the Spring of 2000. The objective was to reach women of child-bearing
age with a positive, pro-life message and, in particular,
to reach out to women facing a crisis pregnancy with a toll-free
phone number that offered free counseling and support. This
was the first time such a campaign had been aired in the area,
and the first large-scale campaign in Florida. Orlando is
an important market because it is the 18th largest television
market in the United States. Research also revealed that this
market had the greatest rise in the number of reported abortions
in the nation.
The current ads
of The Caring Foundation are of two different types: those
focused more on changing public opinion, and those targeting
women who are currently experiencing a crisis pregnancy, as
well as those who may know or counsel such a woman. Given
that this geographic area has experienced an astonishing increase
of 62 percent in the number of abortions reported over the
last 10 years, it was decided to air the second type of campaign.
Ads were aired
from March 20 to June 18, reaching approximately 95 percent
of women 12-34, with an average viewer seeing a Caring Foundation
ad approximately 28-30 times.
The Caring Foundation
has worked successfully in many markets with CareNet, a group
that trains and supports pregnancy support centers around
the country. CareNet also maintains a national toll-free number
that even allows local centers not affiliated with CareNet
to join during a Caring Foundation campaign. This means that
when a woman calls the toll-free number for help, the phone
will ring at the pregnancy center nearest to her. If a center
is closed, or if a busy signal is detected, the phone system
automatically reroutes the call to a center that is open.
CareNet utilizes a 24-hour out-of-state counseling service
as a backup, so there is currently 24-hour coverage, seven
days a week, to assure that every woman will be able to speak
directly with a qualified counselor.
While the months
without a campaign saw an average of under 15 calls per month,
during the ad campaign, calls jumped to approximately 39 times
that amount, or 580 calls per month.
Other good news
comes from Wisconsin, a state that has aired these ads annually
since the early 90s. Wisconsin reported, again, that their
abortion rate declined. Whereas the national abortion rate
is 20 abortions per 1,000 women of childbearing age, Wisconsin
has a rate of only 9 per 1,000. Their abortion numbers have
dropped over 40 percent!
To find out
more about the Caring Foundation and its media campaign against
abortion, contact Paul Swope toll-free at (800) 705-9497,
or write: The Caring Foundation, Regional Office, 10 Park
Ave., Derry, NH 03038-2114.
Bishop Bans
Pro-Abortion Speakers
Bishop James T.
McHugh of Rockville Center, New York, has instituted a policy
banning pro-abortion individuals from addressing "Catholic
agencies or organizations, school or parish groups, even if
he/she does not intend to express their pro-abortion views."
The bishop explained his reasoning for this ban in saying
that it would be "foolish and counterproductive to provide
a platform" to those who support a public policy that
is inimical to Catholic teaching. Bishop McHugh also said
that it would be "extremely misleading" to provide
a platform to them "even on other issues, lest they claim
that the Church somehow implicitly tolerates their rejection
of Church teaching on pro-life issues."
The bishop continued,
"Parishes and other diocesan agencies or organizations
should not bestow public honors or privileges of any type
on such persons."
Bishop McHugh is
responding to the common practice in Catholic colleges and
universities of inviting individuals with views contrary to
Catholic teaching to speak on campuses and at graduation ceremonies
or to receive awards. Restricting such activities do not violate
the principle of academic freedom, because such activities
are contrary to the Catholic educational mission.
U.S. Bishops
Unconditionally Pro-Life
Bishop Joseph A.
Fiorenza, the president of the National Conference of Catholic
Bishops and Baltimore Archbishop, Cardinal William H. Keeler,
chairman of the conference’s Pro-Life Activities Committee,
have issued a statement on partial-birth abortion and whether
the conference supports inclusion of language concerning the
health of the mother.
"As Catholics
we benefit from a rich tradition of public theology and social
teaching, which provides us with a unique guide in the search
for the common good. We are unconditionally pro-life, since
respect for the right to life is necessary for a human being
to be able to exercise any other human right.
"We have received
inquiries whether the National Conference of Catholic Bishops
would lend support to a ban on partial-birth abortion that
would include an exception for the health of the mother. We
want to state again that such an exception is too broad. We
look for the elimination of abortion, beginning with the banning
of partial-birth abortion, without reservation or exception.
"We unite
our commitment to this fundamental right with our many other
concerns in such fields as family life, social justice, and
global solidarity in order to build up the common good and
promote the dignity of each person."
CUF Episcopal
Advisor Dies
Retired Archbishop
Daniel E. Sheehan of Omaha died of a brain tumor at age 83
on October 24 at the Mercy Care Center in Omaha, after serving
the archdiocese for 58 years. He is remembered for his assiduous
work in promoting Catholic education. Omaha Archbishop Elden
Curtiss said that Sheehan "was a man of faith and integrity
who loved the people of this archdiocese whom he served his
entire life." An episcopal advisor to CUF, Archbishop
Sheehan assisted our work and mission to support, defend and
advance the efforts of the teaching Church. We share the sense
of loss as expressed in these sentiments of Archbishop Curtiss:
"All of us will miss this gentle shepherd who was such
a loving presence in our midst for so many years."
The Door Opens
to Infanticide
Roe v Wade was
a watershed event. One day, we were a nation that protected
the lives of unborn human beings. The next day, seven justices
of the U.S. Supreme Court said that throughout pregnancy abortion
is a fundamental constitutional right. That was January 1973.
Over the next decade the number of abortions skyrocketed to
1.6 million a year.
Twenty-seven years
later, another major shift occurs. In June 2000, the U.S.
Supreme Court expanded the right to kill, from children in
the womb (Roe v Wade) to children almost completely
born (Stenberg v Carhart).
It is a horrid
thing to think about. A doctor starts to deliver a living
child in her second or third trimester of development. He
stops mid-delivery. And with only the child’s head still inside
her mother, the doctor kills her. Brutally. Confronted with
the fact that this takes place thousands of times in this
country each year, even those who consider themselves staunchly
"pro-choice" have been known to shudder.
It is this, partial-birth
abortion, that the U.S. Supreme Court has now wrapped in the
mantle of our nation’s Constitution. The Court overrode the
judgment of the American Medical Association and respected
specialists that partial-birth abortion is never medically
necessary. It ran roughshod over the decisive judgment of
legislators in Nebraska (and, by extension, in 29 other states)
who had voted to ban partial-birth abortion. And it disregarded
the will of more than 70 percent of Americans who believe
that partial-birth abortion should be banned.
Instead, the Court
relied on the testimony of Nebraska’ leading abortionist who
does these "procedures," and the abortionist’s expert
witness, a doctor who has never performed a single partial-birth
abortion.
With its decision
in Carhart, the U.S. Supreme Court has moved beyond
abortion to near infanticide. And in doing so it has created
a new level of moral blindness and insensitivity. How much
killing can we stand without losing our humanity?
Learn what you
can do by contacting the bishops’ Secretariat for Pro-Life
Activities at (202) 541-3070, or visit their website at www.nccbuscc.org/prolife.
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