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Letters 10.18.2009
October 18-24, 2009 Issue |
Posted 10/9/09 at 12:34 PM
NFP’s Message
I read with interest Dr. Mary
Martin’s journey toward natural family planning (“One Brave Doctor,” Sept. 27).
She, like most couples, needed measured, deliberate and multiple introductions
to the NFP message before becoming convicted of the truth about NFP vs.
contraception.
I believe this type of an approach
is good and necessary in many cases because it provides the best sort of
conversion. A slow, deliberate conversion allows necessary undoing, erasing and
replacement of a previously misguided worldview and/or conviction; these
worldviews are most often “indoctrinated” by a society that explains life
through the lens of pragmatism and with rhetoric rather than looking at the
world through the lens of God.
He alone is able to show us that it
is in sacrifice that we are saved; we are not redeemed by the world or its
sense of practicality, expediency, common sense or rhetoric.
Couple to Couple League is pleased
to have been one of the first NFP providers to introduce Mary to NFP; as in so
many conversion stories, it is often the subsequent introduction which makes
the most sense — the way paved in part by previous encounters with a similar
message.
We believe that the many natural
family planning providers are actually all part of the one body of Christ,
striving to help his message take root in married couples. May we always look
to each other to help convince another person or couple of the truth about NFP
and contraception; sometimes it will seem like an organizations’ initial
efforts were at best incomplete only to discover later that it was part of the
conversion journey.
These discoveries are energizing and
re-convicting. May we always work together without accusing another of having
been ineffective or less effective; we just never know God’s plan for another
person. We wish Mary the best in her NFP-only OB-GYN efforts.
Linda Kracht
chairwoman, board of directors
Couple to Couple League
Abortion’s Wages
Regarding “Unacceptable ‘Option’”
(Oct. 11): For decades the decriminalization of abortion has been justified on
the basis of reducing maternal deaths from illegal abortions.
Nevertheless, the International
Planned Parenthood Federation recognizes that legal abortion has an alarmingly
growing rate of maternal death.
For example, in South Africa,
between the years 2005 and 2007, this mortality rate has increased 20 times,
exceeding 48 times the same rate on the Mauritius Islands, where the law
protects the unborn.
Ireland bans abortion; it has the
lowest rate in the world. But in many countries, post-abortion deaths are not
recorded as such. In the U.S., legal abortions are the fifth-leading cause of
death in pregnant women.
Women who’ve had abortions are twice
as likely to develop embolisms, hemorrhages, infections, breast, ovarian or
liver cancer, uterine perforation, cervical lacerations and placenta previa in
subsequent pregnancies, ectopic pregnancy, preterm birth and risk of abnormal
placenta development. All of these complications may cause disabilities in infants.
Also, abortions may increase promiscuity, drug abuse and even eating disorders.
Politicians who promote legal abortion are truly a threat to the public.
María Catalán
Barcelona, Spain
Feeling and Relating
I appreciate the book/movie review
of Jodi Picoult’s My Sister’s Keeper
and the comment that “scientific innovation that directly attacks innocent
human life rarely provokes outrage.”
Too true in today’s culture where
lie is truth and truth considered discriminatory.
My comment regards Joan Frawley
Desmond’s comment that “its sentimentality will prompt some viewers to recoil
from the emotional arguments that cloud our ability to scrutinize immoral
choices” and the title, “Bioethical Tearjerker Misses the Story” (Aug. 23).
The bioethical tear-jerking is
the story.
In 50-plus years of social work and
mental-health therapy, I have learned that many people do not relate without
“feeling.” What Picoult did was to make the unimaginable a possibility. She
also honored the sisters and their individual worth in an extraordinary
situation.
Jodi is an exceptionally ambitious
writer. Each of her novels has brought to life many of today’s ethical and
social problems and allowed the reader to put into meaningful perspective moral
realities that contradict today’s “truth.” The devil has turned lie into truth
and truth into illegality. We need Jodi, and other authors, to allow people to
see, feel and believe the truth. Go Jodi!
Barbara Triska
Lebanon, Oregon
Reject ‘ObamaCare’
In the reports “ObamaCare and the
Right to Life” (Aug. 9), we are told that the horrific congressional
health-care bills are a “moving target” and the U.S. bishops’ action alerts are
being delayed. But the health-care bills have so much wrong with them they all
must be rejected now. Federally funded abortion, the elimination of conscience
rights and the elimination of state laws such as parental notification are
featured in the bills. The Church’s teachings on life are immutable and the
goals of culture-of-death pro-abortion groups won’t change, so why the delay?
As written, the health-care bills, combined with a measure passed in the
stimulus bill last winter, will certainly drift toward euthanasia and rationing
of care for the elderly. There is a provision for Planned Parenthood to
establish clinics in schools that are not answerable to school administrators.
The bills also include a provision for taxpayers to fund medically necessary
and “medically appropriate” procedures that will cost trillions. Finally, the
bills abridge our liberties.
The report indicates the bishops
have “issued a series of action plans to spur grassroots resistance to an
abortion mandate ... and any threats against Catholic health institutions and
providers,” but since the bishops’ successful postcard campaign last January
against the Freedom of Choice Act, they have not sponsored any campaign to
protect human life.
I hope and pray the bishops and all
Catholic health barbarizations will soon engage laypeople to reject the current
bills and demand reform that leads to health coverage for all while respecting
all human life and freedoms.
John Naughton
Silver Spring, Maryland
Simply ‘Catholic’
Relevant to “Evangelical
Appreciation” (July 26): One of your recent writers, an evangelical Christian,
responding to a column by Mark Shea, wrote that he was “not crazy about the
term ‘Protestant.’” I have much sympathy for him.
After several years at an Anglican
school, I developed an intense dislike for the term “Roman Catholic.” To my
ear, it reeks of arrogance and sectarian bigotry. I have never met anyone with
a bias against the Church who does not prefer the term. Not surprisingly, the
secular media have developed a preference for it, too. (The BBC has an
excessive fondness.)
The pejorative “Roman Catholic,”
along with “papist,” “popery,” “Romanist,” etc. came into common usage during
the reign of Elizabeth I, at a time of fierce anti-Catholic persecution. It is
a particularly English phenomenon practically unknown in other cultures.
Sadly, some authentic Catholics
mistakenly believe that its use emphasizes their loyalty to the Holy See. On
the other hand, Eastern-rite Catholics perceive the term as exclusionary and
resent it. The late author, convert and Una Voce president Michael Davies
attacked the phrase in the pages of Christian Order on
more than one occasion.
It could be argued that “Roman
Catholic” is an oxymoron. Those who defend its use claim it prevents confusion
with Anglo Catholicism. With great respect, Anglo Catholics, a shrinking but
courageous minority within the Anglican Communion, itself a major Protestant
body, cannot be described as Catholic in any true sense.
The Catholic Encyclopedia
has this to say about the term: “Its use by Catholics is unnecessary and,
having regard to its connotation for many non-Catholics, should be avoided.”
It
is difficult to see how anyone could be confused or offended by the simple word
“Catholic.”
Kevin Tighe
Los Angeles, California
Can’t Get Away
I subscribed to your newsletter,
blog or whatever you call it, because I wanted to get away from the
perversion I have come to see and dislike more and more in the mainstream
media. So now I have to hear about David Letterman’s sex life here
(“Media Morality,” Daily Blog, Oct. 2)? How sad.
Michael Schoneman
Seattle, Washington
86 the End Quote
Regarding “Media Morality”: The
article was very good, until it added a quote by a Jesuit priest at the end,
which made it seem all priests used to think they were above the law. That
should have been clarified at the end, or perhaps before the quote, as
statements must be crystal clear on this all-important matter.
Judy Capistrant
St. Louis, Missouri
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