by
Theresa Notare
September 4, 2009
LifeNews.com
Note: Theresa Notare, PhD, is the Assistant Director of the Natural
Family Planning Program of the United States Conference of Catholic
Bishops, Washington, DC.
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It
seems I'm constantly at the eye doctor monitoring my poor eyesight.
This life-long condition has caused me to reflect on other ways I
have been short-sighted or blind. As I struggle to have clear vision
in my life, I have to contend not only with my own faults, but also
with false cultural messages that promise easy answers to all our
desires:
• Want sexual freedom? Use contraception.• Want a relationship without the hassle of commitment? Live together.• Want a baby with your own genes even though you are 45? Pay a surrogate-mother to do it for you.• Don't want to be pregnant right now? Get an abortion.
False
cultural messages are repeated so much that eventually they take up
residence in our interior homes, causing us to think that they are
okay. One of the more insidious things false messages can do is to
masquerade as necessary parts of basically good things, for example,
that womens healthcare includes access to abortion.
Lets talk about this last point.
Civil
law is the great educator of a people. If something is legal, many
of us presume it must also be good. When the U.S. Supreme Court ruled
in 1973 that abortion was a constitutional right, it taught that the
human being in the womb is of no value. The pre-born person was, in
fact, disposable.
Roe v. Wade led many people to miss the humanity of children who are
aborted. The horror that abortion initially signaled to the majority
of people in 1973 slowly eroded over time. Today, some people can't
understand why there is a fuss over abortions legality. A type
of social blindness has occurred.
A
similar phenomenon is poised to happen with regard to health care.
In the public debate over much-needed health care reform, the lie
that abortion is a needed medical procedure and part
of womans reproductive health care is being promoted by
many legislators.
However, abortion is not health care. It is the intentional killing
of a pre-born person, of someone who deserves to be seen as a patient
and not a disease.
The
health care profession exists to care for peopleall people no
matter their size, social status, economic bracket, race, ethnicity,
or level of physical or mental capacity. Abortion advocates sometimes
complain that abortion practice is stigmatized and practitioners are
shunned by other physicians.
Theres a reason for that: killing is not health care. If American
law enshrines abortion as a standard practice in health care, it will
forever change the identity of that healing profession and further
blind Americans to the humanity of the pre-born person.
As followers of Jesus we should see as Jesus sees, recognizing Gods image in our brothers and sisters. Since we have been given this clear vision, we must take actionprotect the vulnerable, support health care professionals, and hold them true to their noble call to heal when possible and always to provide care. We must also make our voices heard. Learn more about health care reform at http://www.usccb.org/healthcare.
Visit
http://www.usccb.org/prolife
and choose Action Alert! Health Care Reform to send an
e-mail to Congress.
Call the U.S. Capitol switchboard at 202-224-3121, or call the local
offices of your representative and senators. Contact information can
be found on Members' web sites at www.house.gov
and www.senate.gov. Act now, urging
our elected representatives to promote life-affirming health care,
not abortion. Lets not be blind to the good we can do!
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