A PASTORAL LETTER FROM BISHOP MARTINO

We Cannot Be Timid in Our Faith 
 

My Dear Sisters and Brothers:

Every year at this time, we celebrate Respect Life Sunday. This annual observance, which would have been welcome at any time in our country’s history, became a dire necessity in the wake of the legalization of procured abortion in the United States in 1973.

In 1968 our late Holy Father, Pope Paul VI, warned in his encyclical letter Humanae Vitae (which stated that artificial contraception is incompatible with authentic Christian marriage) that the “contraceptive mentality” would lead to many other devaluations of the dignity of redeemed human life. How prophetic he was! Since then, we have seen the ongoing (hopefully reversible) triumph of the “culture of death,” as Pope John Paul II described our current era.

In our day, abortion has become commonplace. Indeed, infanticide is not unknown. Euthanasia is increasing in occurrence, and some forms of illicit stem-cell research are being legitimized in public discourse and in scientific practice. In addition, just in the last few years, we have seen laws redefine marriage and family into entities we cannot recognize.

What is most sad in all of these developments is that a form of scandal has occurred, most egregiously among Catholics and other followers of Christ, who above all should know better. When I speak of “scandal,” I do not mean what the world means by the term “scandal.” The world uses the term “scandal” to describe a shocking matter about which people become upset and unfortunately sometimes gossip. I am not referring to that usage of the word “scandal” at all.

To Catholics, a “scandal” is something which causes our faith to be diminished. Often it takes the form of disillusionment which happens when we discover that someone, whose authentic Catholic faith and witness we have long admired, is a hypocrite or living a double life. Suddenly, we begin to question the good things which that person and others have taught us. Instead of good example, there is now bad example, with the consequent loss of our faith in part or in its entirety.

From time to time, I hear good Catholics say they understand that contraception, abortion, infanticide, euthanasia, certain forms of scientific research, and the new false but legal definitions of family and marriage are all an affront to God and sinful. But then these otherwise good Catholics say: “But what can we do? That’s the law. That’s the way things are. There’s nothing we can bring about to change matters.” This sort of talk is not an assessment of reality. It is a statement of fear and surrender. Where would we be as Catholics today if our forebears in the faith had been so timid?

There are indeed things that we can do. First of all, we must respond to the Church’s insistence that there be absolute coherence between the faith we profess and the life we lead. Otherwise, sorry to say, we are indeed hypocrites. In our lukewarm attitude, we will lead people to become comfortable with a timid witness to our faith, and thereby cause scandal.

To have this coherence in our lives, we need to remain fervent in our participation in the Holy Eucharist and the Sacrament of Penance. We should extend our sacramental lives into our daily living by prayer and the examination of conscience. We must say the “Our Father” authentically, especially when we pray “Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.” The coherence between our faith and daily life has to be brought to bear on the “public square,” which is the daily business of life in our civil society.

Would the “culture of death” have marched along so successfully thus far in the United States if we Catholics had remained one and firm in our opposition? Would our American society opt so frequently for the convenient dispatching of inconvenient human persons if we loved one another as Jesus demands? Would we have so many Catholic politicians in the forefront of promoting the “culture of death,” if we had demanded greater coherence between the Catholic faith about which they boast so loudly and the scurrilous voting record which they have accrued.

In 1973, it was generally non-Catholics who fostered the legalization of abortion. Today, as Cardinal Francis George of Chicago recently noted, the leading figures promoting the “culture of death” in government and in civil society are Catholics. They can get away with excuses like “I am personally opposed to abortion, but I can’t impose my Catholic faith on others…” because we let them say and do such things. Shame on us. Shame on them.

As we celebrate Respect Life Sunday in our Diocese on October 7, let us all engage in a profound and honest examination of conscience. Why has the “culture of death” triumphed so much in our midst? What am I doing about it? Instead of expecting “others” or some abstract ecclesiastical authorities to do all the pro-life work, what am I doing to promote the “culture of life and the civilization of love,” which Pope John Paul has described as the only antidote to the culture of death?

Is my own daily life fully in conformity with my faith and the Church’s liberating teachings? If not, what concrete steps will I take to correct it? If my Catholic life is what it should be, in what form of specific witness will I engage to bring others to the same vital practice of the faith? How can I live the “civilization of love” right here and now, and not in some far off place?

May Mary, the Mother of Jesus, who helped us to “have life and in abundance” through her divine Son, guide us to be honest with ourselves, open to authentic conversion, and steeped in the future in concrete acts of love and life.

Please pray for me that I, above all, will do the Lord’s bidding and lead the clergy and people into a diocesan-wide, eleven-county “culture of life and civilization of love.” 

Sincerely in Our Lord,  

Most Rev. Joseph F. Martino, D.D., Hist. E.D.
Bishop of Scranton