Homily given by Fr. Hezuk Shroff at Good Shepherd Parish in Ottawa on Saturday March 12, 2016
Today, we come together from all parts
of the Archdiocese of Ottawa to celebrate this pro-life Mass and to
pray for a restoration of the culture of life in this country and
throughout the world. Sometimes, a Mass with a pro-life theme is seen
as being simply a Mass against abortion. But we are united today not
primarily to pray against something; rather to pray for something
much greater. We are all here this morning because we believe that
all human life is sacred, from natural conception to natural death.
We do not buy into the lie that we are somehow against women’s
rights, or against freedom: we believe very strongly in free will,
because we know that we were created free by God. However, we also
know that there is a difference between freedom and licence. Freedom,
we know, is always ordered to the good, and one can never use the
argument of freedom to do something that is intrinsically evil or
contrary to the good. No one would stand up and defend a rapist’s
“freedom to rape” or a thief’s “freedom to steal.” No one
would say that we should be “free to hate” or “free to lie”
or “free to hurt” another human being intentionally. Then why is
it that so many in today’s society can’t understand the fact
there there is no such thing as the “freedom to kill”? When a
person takes an innocent human life at will, he is implying that his
so-called “freedom to kill” trumps the other person’s freedom
to live. But there is no such thing as the freedom to kill, since
freedom can never be used to justify doing evil. Freedom is ordered
to truth, to charity, and therefore also to the good.
We are blessed to be gathered together
this morning in this Church of the Good Shepherd (and not just
because of the pastor who is assigned here!). We are here because we
believe in life, and it is Christ who told His disciples, “The good
shepherd is the one who lays down his life for his sheep.” In other
words, the good shepherd stands up for what is true and just and
noble (the dignity of life, that each one of his sheep possesses),
and willfully even undergoes death if necessary in order to protect
their life. The good shepherd, in that sense, is unequivocally
pro-life. And of course, we are not just talking about sheep here. We
are using a metaphor to describe human souls. The good shepherd will
willfully give up his own life so that those souls entrusted to his
spiritual care might be saved.
The first reading from today’s Mass
is rather providential. It is a prophetic passage from the book of
Jeremiah. The one who is speaking is Christ himself (through the
mouth of the prophet). “I was like a gentle lamb led to the
slaughter. I did not know it was against me that they devised
schemes, saying, ‘Let us destroy the tree with its fruit, let us
cut him off from the land of the living, that his name be remembered
no more.” This prophecy is a prediction of the Passion of Christ,
in which Our Lord would be led “like a gentle lamb to the
slaughter.” But those who devised such a scheme against the Lord
did not do so because they loved evil or death per se. They crucified
Our Lord all the while believing that somehow they were doing good.
No one chooses evil for the sake of evil itself; they choose evil
because they mistakenly see it as a form of good. That is what the
great theologian St. Thomas Aquinas says. It is the human will that
chooses. And the object of the human will is some good. Therefore,
the human will cannot deliberately choose an evil; what it does do is
choose something because it has an aspect of goodness. In other
words, the human will can only choose what it believes to be good.
Saint Thomas summarizes this by saying that whatever we will, we will
sub ratione boni (which in Latin means literally “under the reason
of good”).
What does this mean for us who seek to
restore a culture of life in this country? It means that we must
understand why those who oppose life do so. They are not opposing
life because they prefer death. They are not saying that death is
better than life — at least not in an absolute sense. But very
often, they are placing some other good above the most fundamental
good that is life itself. What is that other good that they place
above life? For some, it is freedom. For others, it is convenience or
comfort or pleasure. For others still, it is compassion. But the
problem is that theirs is a misunderstood notion of freedom, and a
false view of human compassion. Those who seek to end life at its
conception are very often motivated by an excessive love for comfort
and convenience (a newborn child, after all, requires much sacrifice
and hard work). Or else they see “the right to abort” as a
freedom to do whatever they want, regardless of any moral standards
or norms, or any sense of basic human decency. Those who promote
euthanasia, on the other hand, play the trump card of human
compassion. It is wrong for others to suffer without us trying to do
something to alleviate their suffering. And what is the easiest thing
to do? In their eyes, the easiest thing to do is to terminate that
person’s life. Killing in an easy solution. Suicide sometimes
appears as the easiest way to end human suffering. But is it the
right way?
The Church has a very important role to
play in this regard. The Church is not against human liberty, nor
does she shun the importance of human compassion. Think of all those
religious orders (especially orders of consecrated women) who give
their lives to serving the suffering, the sick, the poor. Such forms
of social charity were born in the heart of the Church. But the
Church knows the difference between true and false freedom, between
true and false compassion. The Church knows what true freedom is, and
what authentic compassion involves. True freedom requires the ability
to choose what is good and right and just; an authentic compassion is
one that aids and accompanies one who is suffering or ill or dying,
rather than hastening that person’s death.
The modern-day, scientific world seeks
quick fixes and instant solutions to everything: even to the
challenges of human free will and suffering. But the Church,
following the Gospel of Jesus Christ, gives us the only real
solution. The only real solution to the problems of human liberty and
of suffering is love. The world says that we should kill someone whom
we love (out of compassion); but the Church says that we should love
someone to death (in other words, love someone who is suffering, up
until the moment of natural death).
The Catholic Church is the last
institution standing in the world today that is unequivocally and
unconditionally in favour of life. And the reason that she is so
totally and completely pro-life is because she is at the same time
uncompromisingly pro-love! The Church alone teaches that man must
love until it hurts; that he must love until he can love no more.
Self sacrificial, self-denying love! Mother Teresa of Calcutta (whose
decree of canonisation will be signed by Pope Francis in just a few
days — on March 15)…Mother Teresa often said to her Missionaries
of Charity: “Sisters, you must love the poorest of the poor until
it hurts. If you do not love until it hurts, then you haven’t loved
with the Heart of Jesus!” This love, of which the Saint from
Calcutta was so thoroughly imbued, is so essential to the Christian
message that it has become the very symbol of Christianity itself.
What is the most recognisable symbol of the Christian Faith? It is
the Cross!
Jesus Christ shows us that true love
and authentic compassion are to be found nowhere else than on the
Cross. The world cannot understand suffering and pain, because it
cannot understand the deepest meaning of the Christian message which
is this: Love, in its greatest expression, involves self-sacrifice
and self-denial. It involves dying to oneself, as Jesus died on the
Cross! That is why the world rejects Christ and why it rejects this
radical love; that is why the world chooses death over life! Because
it simply cannot see that suffering and love are not mutually
exclusive, but rather that they go hand-in-hand. The world cannot see
this because it has become blind to God. That is why it has no
problem with abortion, with contraception, with euthanasia.
Our role, dear brothers and sisters in
Christ, is two-fold: firstly, to pray that the world may see; and
secondly, to help the world to see. In other words, it is through
prayer and through education that we will be able to restore a
culture of life. The only way of doing this (and I am not, by any
means, exaggerating — it is truly the only way)….the only way of
doing this is by bringing the world back to God, by bringing the
world to Jesus Christ, for He alone can open the eyes of the blind
and grant that they may see. And when He does that, then the world
will finally be able to see that all human life is sacred and
precious, from natural conception to natural death.
May God bless you all, and may Our
Lady, the one who bore the Author of Life itself, give you strength
and courage as you fight to preserve the dignity of all human life.
In the Name + of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.
Amen.
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