We've hear that we are all one Body in Christ so MANY times, which is good, but we probably lose the REVOLUTIONARY nature of what St. Paul was saying.
Every culture before Christ had, in one way or another, looked at some people as "more human" and other people as "less human" or even "expendable non-humans"
Saint Paul says - "THOSE DAYS ARE OVER"
Additionally, not only does St. Paul say the days of marginalizing the weaker members of the Body of Christ over, he also says those
"That seem to be weaker are all the more necessary, and those parts of the body that we consider
less honorable we surround with greater honor"
The Church is the immune system of the Body of Christ. It looks for threats to the Body of Christ, threats that attack the dignity of any single member of the Body of Christ, and the Church points out those threats.
A great example of the "Church as Body of Christ immune system" is this very month that we are in right now. January is
1) Poverty Awareness month
2) Mid January - Migrant awareness week
3) This past week, we, for the 43rd year, remembered through prayer and fasting the anniversary of Roe v.
Wade
There are a lot of ways the Body of Christ is attacked. The Church speaks to all of the threats and attacks.
Several years ago, the bishops of the US wrote a letter addressing all these attacks to the dignity of the human person. They mention:
1) starvation,
2) denial of health care
3) deadly violence of armed conflict and the scandalous arms trade that
spawns such conflict.
4) domestic violence,
5) the spread of drugs,
6) a reckless tampering with the world's ecological balance.
Military people are always assessing – “What are our GREATEST
threats…most eminent threats”?
A question for us as Catholics - "Who
do we listen to on this topic?" Whose "humanity threat assessment do we utilize?"
EVERYONE believes that SOME of these threats are a problem. But which one's are MOST EMINENT? Some people listen to the UN on how to order these threats. Some people listen to news outlets. Some listen to political parties, some listen to celebrities, and some listen to Jesus through the Church He founded.
This whole assessing of threats and deciding which are most eminent leads some to say two things (which are equally wrong)
1) Some say: “We can’t speak up against abortion
and euthanasia because it will water down our speaking up on the other threats against the human person.
2) Some say: “I won’t speak up against anything
else except abortion and euthanasia, lest someone think I’m wavering on abortion and
Euthanasia"
These are both WRONG!
On Friday, we diverted our planned trip to Washington DC for the March for Life and instead went to Indy to avoid "snowmaggedon". Archbishop Tobin had two beautiful homilies at our vigil and Mass for Life.
He noted the same thing that our US bishops noted several years ago - there are a lot of attacks on the Body of Christ, but he too singled out abortion and euthanasia as the two preeminent threats. He noted that what is most troubling about them is that they are both often done by people who have been trained to bring healing and health to people.
Archbishop Tobin also talked about what we, as faithful Catholics, ought to be doing about all these issues.
“We do not fight against darkness and
the culture of death with violence…but we do not take a vow of silence either,
we speak the truth”
Saint Boniface: Let us be neither dogs that do not bark nor silent onlookers
nor paid servants who run away before the wolf. Let us preach the whole of God's plan to the powerful and the
humble, to rich and to poor, to men of every rank and age, as far as God
gives us the strength, in season and out
of season.
May the Eucharist strengthen us to preach the WHOLE of God's plan, and not just the parts that suit our politics
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