"You are God's own people, that you may declare the wonderful deeds of him who
called you out of darkness into his marvellous light" (1 Pet 2:9): a people of
life and for life
78. The Church has received the Gospel as a proclamation and a source of joy
and salvation. She has received it as a gift from Jesus, sent by the Father "to
preach good news to the poor" (Lk 4:18). She has received it through the
Apostles, sent by Christ to the whole world (cf. Mk 16:15; Mt 28:19-20). Born
from this evangelizing activity, the Church hears every day the echo of Saint
Paul's words of warning: "Woe to me if I do not preach the Gospel!" (1 Cor
9:16). As Paul VI wrote, "evangelization is the grace and vocation proper to
the Church, her deepest identity. She exists in order to evangelize".101
Evangelization is an all-embracing, progressive activity through which the
Church participates in the prophetic, priestly and royal mission of the Lord
Jesus. It is therefore inextricably linked to preaching, celebration and the
service of charity. Evangelization is a profoundly ecclesial act, which calls
all the various workers of the Gospel to action, according to their individual
charisms and ministry.
This is also the case with regard to the proclamation of the Gospel of life, an
integral part of that Gospel which is Jesus Christ himself. We are at the
service of this Gospel, sustained by the awareness that we have received it as
a gift and are sent to preach it to all humanity, "to the ends of the earth"
(Acts 1:8). With humility and gratitude we know that we are the people of life
and for life, and this is how we present ourselves to everyone.
79. We are the people of life because God, in his unconditional love, has given
us the Gospel of life and by this same Gospel we have been transformed and
saved. We have been ransomed by the "Author of life" (Acts 3:15) at the price
of his precious blood (cf. 1 Cor 6:20; 7:23; 1 Pet 1:19). Through the waters of
Baptism we have been made a part of him (cf. Rom 6:4-5; Col 2:12), as branches
which draw nourishment and fruitfulness from the one tree (cf. Jn 15:5).
Interiorly renewed by the grace of the Spirit, "who is the Lord and giver of
life", we have become a people for life and we are called to act
accordingly.
We have been sent. For us, being at the service of life is not a boast but
rather a duty, born of our awareness of being "God's own people, that we may
declare the wonderful deeds of him who called us out of darkness into his
marvellous light" (cf. 1 Pet 2:9). On our journey we are guided and sustained
by the law of love: a love which has as its source and model the Son of God
made man, who "by dying gave life to the world".102
We have been sent as a people. Everyone has an obligation to be at the service
of life. This is a properly "ecclesial" responsibility, which requires
concerted and generous action by all the members and by all sectors of the
Christian community. This community commitment does not however eliminate or
lessen the responsibility of each individual, called by the Lord to "become the
neighbour" of everyone: "Go and do likewise" (Lk 10:37).
Together we all sense our duty to preach the Gospel of life, to celebrate it in
the Liturgy and in our whole existence, and to serve it with the various
programmes and structures which support and promote life.
"That which we have seen and heard we proclaim also to you" (1 Jn 1:3):
proclaiming the Gospel of life
80. "That which was from the beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen
with our eyes, which we have looked upon and touched with our hands, concerning
the word of life ... we proclaim also to you, so that you may have fellowship
with us" (1 Jn 1:1, 3). Jesus is the only Gospel: we have nothing further to
say or any other witness to bear.
To proclaim Jesus is itself to proclaim life. For Jesus is "the word of life"
(1 Jn 1:1). In him "life was made manifest" (1 Jn 1:2); he himself is "the
eternal life which was with the Father and was made manifest to us" (1 Jn 1:2).
By the gift of the Spirit, this same life has been bestowed on us. It is in
being destined to life in its fullness, to "eternal life", that every person's
earthly life acquires its full meaning.
Enlightened by this Gospel of life, we feel a need to proclaim it and to bear
witness to it in all its marvellous newness. Since it is one with Jesus
himself, who makes all things new 103 and conquers the "oldness" which comes
from sin and leads to death,104 this Gospel exceeds every human expectation and
reveals the sublime heights to which the dignity of the human person is raised
through grace. This is how Saint Gregory of Nyssa understands it: "Man, as a
being, is of no account; he is dust, grass, vanity. But once he is adopted by
the God of the universe as a son, he becomes part of the family of that Being,
whose excellence and greatness no one can see, hear or understand. What words,
thoughts or flight of the spirit can praise the superabundance of this grace?
Man surpasses his nature: mortal, he becomes immortal; perishable, he becomes
imperishable; fleeting, he becomes eternal; human, he becomes divine".105
Gratitude and joy at the incomparable dignity of man impel us to share this
message with everyone: "that which we have seen and heard we proclaim also to
you, so that you may have fellowship with us" (1 Jn 1:3). We need to bring the
Gospel of life to the heart of every man and woman and to make it penetrate
every part of society.
81. This involves above all proclaiming the core of this Gospel. It is the
proclamation of a living God who is close to us, who calls us to profound
communion with himself and awakens in us the certain hope of eternal life. It
is the affirmation of the inseparable connection between the person, his life
and his bodiliness. It is the presentation of human life as a life of
relationship, a gift of God, the fruit and sign of his love. It is the
proclamation that Jesus has a unique relationship with every person, which
enables us to see in every human face the face of Christ. It is the call for a
"sincere gift of self" as the fullest way to realize our personal freedom.
It also involves making clear all the consequences of this Gospel. These can be
summed up as follows: human life, as a gift of God, is sacred and inviolable.
For this reason procured abortion and euthanasia are absolutely unacceptable.
Not only must human life not be taken, but it must be protected with loving
concern. The meaning of life is found in giving and receiving love, and in this
light human sexuality and procreation reach their true and full significance.
Love also gives meaning to suffering and death; despite the mystery which
surrounds them, they can become saving events. Respect for life requires that
science and technology should always be at the service of man and his integral
development. Society as a whole must respect, defend and promote the dignity of
every human person, at every moment and in every condition of that person's
life.
82. To be truly a people at the service of life we must propose these truths
constantly and courageously from the very first proclamation of the Gospel, and
thereafter in catechesis, in the various forms of preaching, in personal
dialogue and in all educational activity. Teachers, catechists and theologians
have the task of emphasizing the anthropological reasons upon which respect for
every human life is based. In this way, by making the newness of the Gospel of
life shine forth, we can also help everyone discover in the light of reason and
of personal experience how the Christian message fully reveals what man is and
the meaning of his being and existence. We shall find important points of
contact and dialogue also with non- believers, in our common commitment to the
establishment of a new culture of life.
Faced with so many opposing points of view, and a widespread rejection of sound
doctrine concerning human life, we can feel that Paul's entreaty to Timothy is
also addressed to us: "Preach the word, be urgent in season and out of season,
convince, rebuke, and exhort, be unfailing in patience and in teaching" (2 Tim
4:2). This exhortation should resound with special force in the hearts of those
members of the Church who di- rectly share, in different ways, in her mission
as "teacher" of the truth. May it resound above all for us who are Bishops: we
are the first ones called to be untiring preachers of the Gospel of life. We
are also entrusted with the task of ensuring that the doctrine which is once
again being set forth in this Encyclical is faithfully handed on in its integ-
rity. We must use appropriate means to defend the faithful from all teaching
which is contrary to it. We need to make sure that in theological faculties,
seminaries and Catholic institutions sound doctrine is taught, explained and
more fully investigated.106 May Paul's exhortation strike a chord in all
theologians, pastors, teachers and in all those responsible for catechesis and
the formation of consciences. Aware of their specific role, may they never be
so grievously irresponsible as to betray the truth and their own mission by
proposing personal ideas contrary to the Gospel of life as faithfully presented
and interpreted by the Magisterium.
In the proclamation of this Gospel, we must not fear hostility or unpopularity,
and we must refuse any compromise or ambiguity which might conform us to the
world's way of thinking (cf. Rom 12:2). We must be in the world but not of the
world (cf. Jn 15:19; 17:16), drawing our strength from Christ, who by his Death
and Res- urrection has overcome the world (cf. Jn 16:33).
"I give you thanks that I am fearfully, wonderfully made" (Ps 139:14):
celebrating the Gospel of life
83. Because we have been sent into the world as a "people for life", our
proclamation must also become a genuine celebration of the Gospel of life. This
celebration, with the evocative power of its gestures, symbols and rites,
should become a precious and significant setting in which the beauty and
grandeur of this Gospel is handed on.
For this to happen, we need first of all to foster, in ourselves and in others,
a contemplative outlook.107 Such an outlook arises from faith in the God of
life, who has created every individual as a "wonder" (cf. Ps 139:14). It is the
outlook of those who see life in its deeper meaning, who grasp its utter
gratuitousness, its beauty and its invitation to freedom and responsibility. It
is the outlook of those who do not presume to take possession of reality but
instead accept it as a gift, discovering in all things the reflection of the
Creator and seeing in every person his living image (cf. Gen 1:27; Ps 8:5).
This outlook does not give in to discouragement when confronted by those who
are sick, suffering, outcast or at death's door. Instead, in all these
situations it feels challenged to find meaning, and precisely in these
circumstances it is open to perceiving in the face of every person a call to
encounter, dialogue and solidarity.
It is time for all of us to adopt this outlook, and with deep religious awe to
rediscover the ability to revere and honour every person, as Paul VI invited us
to do in one of his first Christmas messages.108 Inspired by this contemplative
outlook, the new people of the redeemed cannot but respond with songs of joy,
praise and thanksgiving for the priceless gift of life, for the mystery of
every individual's call to share through Christ in the life of grace and in an
existence of unending communion with God our Creator and Father.
84. To celebrate the Gospel of life means to celebrate the God of life, the God
who gives life: "We must celebrate Eternal Life, from which every other life
proceeds. From this, in proportion to its capacities, every being which in any
way participates in life, receives life. This Divine Life, which is above every
other life, gives and preserves life. Every life and every living movement
proceed from this Life which transcends all life and every principle of life.
It is to this that souls owe their incorruptibility; and because of this all
animals and plants live, which receive only the faintest glimmer of life. To
men, beings made of spirit and matter, Life grants life. Even if we should
abandon Life, because of its overflowing love for man, it converts us and calls
us back to itself. Not only this: it promises to bring us, soul and body, to
perfect life, to immortality. It is too little to say that this Life is alive:
it is the Principle of life, the Cause and sole Wellspring of life. Every
living thing must contemplate it and give it praise: it is Life which overflows
with life".109
Like the Psalmist, we too, in our daily prayer as individuals and as a
community, praise and bless God our Father, who knitted us together in our
mother's womb, and saw and loved us while we were still without form (cf. Ps
139:13, 15-16). We exclaim with overwhelming joy: "I give you thanks that I am
fearfully, wonderfully made; wonderful are your works. You know me through and
through" (Ps 139:14). Indeed, "despite its hardships, its hidden mysteries, its
suffering and its inevitable frailty, this mortal life is a most beautiful
thing, a marvel ever new and moving, an event worthy of being exalted in joy
and glory".110 Moreover, man and his life appear to us not only as one of the
greatest marvels of creation: for God has granted to man a dignity which is
near to divine (Ps 8:5-6). In every child which is born and in every person who
lives or dies we see the image of God's glory. We celebrate this glory in every
human being, a sign of the living God, an icon of Jesus Christ.
We are called to express wonder and gratitude for the gift of life and to
welcome, savour and share the Gospel of life not only in our personal and
community prayer, but above all in the celebrations of the liturgical year.
Particularly important in this regard are the Sacraments, the efficacious signs
of the presence and saving action of the Lord Jesus in Christian life. The
Sacraments make us sharers in divine life, and provide the spiritual strength
necessary to experience life, suffering and death in their fullest meaning.
Thanks to a genuine rediscovery and a better appreciation of the significance
of these rites, our liturgical celebrations, especially celebrations of the
Sacraments, will be ever more capable of expressing the full truth about birth,
life, suffering and death, and will help us to live these moments as a
participation in the Paschal Mystery of the Crucified and Risen Christ.
85. In celebrating the Gospel of life we also need toappreciate and make good
use of the wealth of gestures and symbols present in the traditions and customs
of different cultures and peoples. There are special times and ways in which
the peoples of different nations and cultures express joy for a newborn life,
respect for and protection of individual human lives, care for the suffering or
needy, closeness to the elderly and the dying, participation in the sorrow of
those who mourn, and hope and desire for immortality.
In view of this and following the suggestion made by the Cardinals in the
Consistory of 1991, I propose that a Day for Life be celebrated each year in
every country, as already established by some Episcopal Conferences. The
celebration of this Day should be planned and carried out with the active
participation of all sectors of the local Church. Its primary purpose should be
to foster in individual consciences, in families, in the Church and in civil
society a recognition of the meaning and value of human life at every stage and
in every condition. Particular attention should be drawn to the seriousness of
abortion and euthanasia, without neglecting other aspects of life which from
time to time deserve to be given careful consideration, as occasion and
circumstances demand.
86. As part of the spiritual worship acceptable to God (cf. Rom 12:1), the
Gospel of life is to be celebrated above all in daily living, which should be
filled with self-giving love for others. In this way, our lives will become a
genuine and respon- sible acceptance of the gift of life and a heartfelt song
of praise and gratitude to God who has given us this gift. This is already
happening in the many different acts of selfless generosity, often humble and
hidden, carried out by men and women, children and adults, the young and the
old, the healthy and the sick.
It is in this context, so humanly rich and filled with love, that heroic
actions too are born. These are the most solemn celebration of the Gospel of
life, for they proclaim it by the total gift of self. They are the radiant
manifestation of the highest degree of love, which is to give one's life for
the person loved (cf. Jn 15:13). They are a sharing in the mystery of the
Cross, in which Jesus reveals the value of every person, and how life attains
its fullness in the sincere gift of self. Over and above such outstanding
moments, there is an everyday heroism, made up of gestures of sharing, big or
small, which build up an authentic culture of life. A particularly praiseworthy
example of such gestures is the donation of organs, performed in an ethically
acceptable manner, with a view to offering a chance of health and even of life
itself to the sick who sometimes have no other hope.
Part of this daily heroism is also the silent but effective and eloquent
witness of all those "brave mothers who devote themselves to their own fam- ily
without reserve, who suffer in giving birth to their children and who are ready
to make any effort, to face any sacrifice, in order to pass on to them the best
of themselves".111 In living out their mission "these heroic women do not
always find support in the world around them. On the contrary, the cultural
models frequently promoted and broadcast by the media do not encourage
motherhood. In the name of progress and modernity the values of fidelity,
chastity, sacrifice, to which a host of Christian wives and mothers have borne
and continue to bear outstanding witness, are presented as obsolete ... We
thank you, heroic mothers, for your invincible love! We thank you for your
intrepid trust in God and in his love. We thank you for the sacrifice of your
life ... In the Paschal Mystery, Christ restores to you the gift you gave him.
Indeed, he has the power to give you back the life you gave him as an
offering".112
"What does it profit, my brethren, if a man says he has faith but has not
works?" (Jas 2:14): serving the Gospel of life
87. By virtue of our sharing in Christ's royal mission, our support and
promotion of human life must be accomplished through the service of charity,
which finds expression in personal witness, various forms of volunteer work,
social activity and political commitment. This is a particularly pressing need
at the present time, when the "culture of death" so forcefully opposes the
"culture of life" and often seems to have the upper hand. But even before that
it is a need which springs from "faith working through love" (Gal 5:6). As the
Letter of James admonishes us: "What does it profit, my brethren, if a man says
he has faith but has not works? Can his faith save him? If a brother or sister
is ill-clad and in lack of daily food, and one of you says to them, ?Go in
peace, be warmed and filled', without giving them the things needed for the
body, what does it profit? So faith by itself, if it has no works, is dead"
(2:14-17).
In our service of charity, we must be inspired and distinguished by a specific
attitude: we must care for the other as a person for whom God has made us
responsible. As disciples of Jesus, we are called to become neighbours to
everyone (cf. Lk 10:29-37), and to show special favour to those who are
poorest, most alone and most in need. In helping the hungry, the thirsty, the
foreigner, the naked, the sick, the imprisoned--as well as the child in the
womb and the old person who is suffering ornear death--we have the opportunity
to serve Jesus. He himself said: "As you did it to one of the least of these my
breth- ren, you did it to me" (Mt 25:40). Hence we cannot but feel called to
account and judged by the ever relevant words of Saint John Chrysostom: "Do you
wish to honour the body of Christ? Do not neglect it when you find it naked. Do
not do it homage here in the church with silk fabrics only to neglect it
outside where it suffers cold and nakedness".113
Where life is involved, the service of charity must be profoundly consistent.
It cannot tolerate bias and discrimination, for human life is sacred and
inviolable at every stage and in every situation; it is an indivisible good. We
need then to "show care" for all life and for the life of everyone. Indeed, at
an even deeper level, we need to go to the very roots of life and love.
It is this deep love for every man and woman which has given rise down the
centuries to an outstanding history of charity, a history which has brought
into being in the Church and society many forms of service to life which evoke
admiration from all unbiased observers. Every Christian community, with a
renewed sense of responsibility, must continue to write this history through
various kinds of pastoral and social activity. To this end, appropriate and
effective programmes of support for new life must be implemented, with special
closeness to mothers who, even without the help of the father, are not afraid
to bring their child into the world and to raise it. Similar care must be shown
for the life of the marginalized or suffering, especially in its final
phases.
88. All of this involves a patient and fearless work of education aimed at
encouraging one and all to bear each other's burdens (cf. Gal 6:2). It requires
a continuous promotion of vocations to service, particularly among the young.
It involves the implementation of long-term practical projects and initiatives
inspired by the Gospel.
Many are the means towards this end which need to be developed with skill and
serious commitment. At the first stage of life, centres for natural methods of
regulating fertility should be promoted as a valuable help to responsible
parenthood, in which all individuals, and in the first place the child, are
recognized and respected in their own right, and where every decision is guided
by the ideal of the sincere gift of self. Marriage and family counselling
agencies by their specific work of guidance and prevention, carried out in
accordance with an anthropology consistent with the Christian vision of the
person, of the couple and of sexuality, also offer valuable help in
rediscovering the meaning of love and life, and in supporting and accompanying
every family in its mission as the "sanctuary of life". Newborn life is also
served by centres of assistance and homes or centres where new life receives a
welcome. Thanks to the work of such centres, many unmarried mothers and couples
in difficulty discover new hope and find assistance and support in overcoming
hardship and the fear of accepting a newly conceived life or life which has
just come into the world.
When life is challenged by conditions of hardship, maladjustment, sickness or
rejection, other programmes--such as communities for treating drug addiction,
residential communities for minors or the mentally ill, care and relief centres
for AIDS patients, associations for solidarity especially towards the
disabled--are eloquent expressions of what charity is able to devise in order
to give everyone new reasons for hope and practical possibilities for life.
And when earthly existence draws to a close, it is again charity which finds
the most appropriate means for enabling the elderly, especially those who can
no longer look after themselves, and the terminally ill to enjoy genuinely
humane assistance and to receive an adequate response to their needs, in
particular their anxiety and their loneliness. In these cases the role of
families is indispensable; yet families can receive much help from social
welfare agencies and, if necessary, from recourse to palliative care, taking
advantage of suitable medical and social services available in public
institutions or in the home.
In particular, the role of hospitals, clinics and convalescent homes needs to
be reconsidered. These should not merely be institutions where care is provided
for the sick or the dying. Above all they should be places where suffering,
pain and death are acknowledged and understood in their human and specifically
Christian meaning. This must be especially evident and effective in institutes
staffed by Religious or in any way connected with the Church.
89. Agencies and centres of service to life, and all other initiatives of
support and solidarity which circumstances may from time to time suggest, need
to be directed by people who are generous in their involvement and fully aware
of the importance of the Gospel of life for the good of individuals and
society.
A unique responsibility belongs to health-care personnel: doctors, pharmacists,
nurses, chaplains, men and women religious, administrators and volunteers.
Their profession calls for them to be guardians and servants of human life. In
today's cultural and social context, in which science and the practice of
medicine risk losing sight of their inherent ethical dimension, health-care
professionals can be strongly tempted at times to become manipulators of life,
or even agents of death. In the face of this temptation their responsibility
today is greatly increased. Its deepest inspiration and strongest support lie
in the intrinsic and undeniable ethical dimension of the health-care
profession, something already recognized by the ancient and still relevant
Hippocratic Oath, which requires every doctor to commit himself to absolute
respect for human life and its sacredness.
Absolute respect for every innocent human life also requires the exercise of
conscientious objection in relation to procured abortion and euthanasia.
"Causing death" can never be considered a form of medical treatment, even when
the intention is solely to comply with the patient's request. Rather, it runs
completely counter to the health- care profession, which is meant to be an
impassioned and unflinching affirmation of life. Bio- medical research too, a
field which promises great benefits for humanity, must always reject
experimentation, research or applications which disregard the inviolable
dignity of the human being, and thus cease to be at the service of people and
become instead means which, under the guise of helping people, actually harm
them.
90. Volunteer workers have a specific role to play: they make a valuable
contribution to the service of life when they combine professional ability and
generous, selfless love. The Gospel of life inspires them to lift their
feelings of good will towards others to the heights of Christ's charity; to
renew every day, amid hard work and weariness, their awareness of the dignity
of every person; to search out people's needs and, when necessary, to set out
on new paths where needs are greater but care and support weaker.
If charity is to be realistic and effective, it demands that the Gospel of life
be implemented also by means of certain forms of social activity and commitment
in the political field, as a way of defending and promoting the value of life
in our ever more complex and pluralistic societies. Individuals, families,
groups and associations, albeit for different reasons and in different ways,
all have a responsibility for shaping society and developing cultural,
economic, political and legislative projects which, with respect for all and in
keeping with democratic principles, will contribute to the building of a
society in which the dignity of each person is recognized and protected and the
lives of all are defended and enhanced.
This task is the particular responsibility of civil leaders. Called to serve
the people and the common good, they have a duty to make courageous choices in
support of life, especially through legislative measures. In a democratic
system, where laws and decisions are made on the basis of the consensus of
many, the sense of personal responsibility in the consciences of individuals
invested with authority may be weakened. But no one can ever renounce this
responsibility, especially when he or she has a legislative or decision-making
mandate, which calls that person to answer to God, to his or her own conscience
and to the whole of society for choices which may be contrary to the common
good. Although laws are not the only means of protecting human life,
nevertheless they do play a very important and sometimes decisive role in
influencing patterns of thought and behaviour. I repeat once more that a law
which violates an innocent person's natural right to life is unjust and, as
such, is not valid as a law. For this reason I urgently appeal once more to all
political leaders not to pass laws which, by disregarding the dignity of the
person, undermine the very fabric of society.
The Church well knows that it is difficult to mount an effective legal defence
of life in pluralistic democracies, because of the presence of strong cultural
currents with differing outlooks. At the same time, certain that moral truth
cannot fail to make its presence deeply felt in every conscience, the Church
encourages political leaders, starting with those who are Christians, not to
give in, but to make those choices which, taking into account what is
realistically attainable, will lead to the re- establishment of a just order in
the defence and promotion of the value of life. Here it must be noted that it
is not enough to remove unjust laws. The underlying causes of attacks on life
have to be eliminated, especially by ensuring proper support for families and
motherhood. A family policy must be the basis and driving force of all social
policies. For this reason there need to be set in place social and political
initiatives capable of guaranteeing conditions of true freedom of choice in
matters of parenthood. It is also necessary to rethink labour, urban,
residential and social service policies so as to harmonize working schedules
with time available for the family, so that it becomes effectively possible to
take care of children and the elderly.
91. Today an important part of policies which favour life is the issue of
population growth. Certainly public authorities have a responsibility to
"intervene to orient the demography of the population".114 But such
interventions must always take into account and respect the primary and
inalienable responsibility of married couples and families, and cannot employ
methods which fail to respect the person and fundamental human rights,
beginning with the right to life of every innocent human being. It is therefore
morally unacceptable to encourage, let alone impose, the use of methods such as
contraception, sterilization and abortion in order to regulate births. The ways
of solving the population problem are quite different. Governments and the
various international agencies must above all strive to create economic,
social, public health and cultural conditions which will enable married couples
to make their choices about procreation in full freedom and with genuine
responsibility. They must then make efforts to ensure "greater opportunities
and a fairer distribution of wealth so that everyone can share equitably in the
goods of creation. Solutions must be sought on the global level by establishing
a true economy of communion and sharing of goods, in both the national and
international order".115 This is the only way to respect the dignity of persons
and families, as well as the authentic cultural patrimony of peoples.
Service of the Gospel of life is thus an immense and complex task. This service
increasingly appears as a valuable and fruitful area for positive cooperation
with our brothers and sisters of other Churches and ecclesial communities, in
accordance with the practical ecumenism which the Second Vatican Council
authoritatively encouraged.116 It also appears as a providential area for
dialogue and joint efforts with the followers of other religions and with all
people of good will. No single person or group has a monopoly on the defence
and promotion of life. These are everyone's task and responsibility. On the eve
of the Third Millennium, the challenge facing us is an arduous one: only the
concerted efforts of all those who believe in the value of life can prevent a
setback of unforeseeable consequences for civilization.
"Your children will be like olive shoots around your table" (Ps 128:3): the
family as the "sanctuary of life"
92. Within the "people of life and the people for life", the family has a
decisive responsibility. This responsibility flows from its very nature as a
community of life and love, founded upon marriage, and from its mission to
"guard, reveal and communicate love".117 Here it is a matter of God's own love,
of which parents are co-workers and as it were interpreters when they transmit
life and raise it according to his fatherly plan.118 This is the love that
becomes selflessness, receptiveness and gift. Within the family each member is
accepted, respected and honoured precisely because he or she is a person; and
if any family member is in greater need, the care which he or she receives is
all the more intense and attentive.
The family has a special role to play throughout the life of its members, from
birth to death. It is truly "the sanctuary of life: the place in which life-the
gift of God-can be properly welcomed and protected against the many attacks to
which it is exposed, and can develop in accordance with what constitutes
authentic human growth".119 Consequently the role of the family in building a
culture of life is decisive and irreplaceable.
As the domestic church, the family is summoned to proclaim, celebrate and serve
the Gospel of life. This is a responsibility which first concerns married
couples, called to be givers of life, on the basis of an ever greater awareness
of the meaning of procreation as a unique event which clearly reveals that
human life is a gift received in order then to be given as a gift. In giving
origin to a new life, parents recognize that the child, "as the fruit of their
mutual gift of love, is, in turn, a gift for both of them, a gift which flows
from them".120
It is above all in raising children that the family fulfils its mission to
proclaim the Gospel of life. By word and example, in the daily round of
relations and choices, and through concrete actions and signs, parents lead
their children to authentic freedom, actualized in the sincere gift of self,
and they cultivate in them respect for others, a sense of justice, cordial
openness, dialogue, generous service, solidarity and all the other values which
help people to live life as a gift. In raising children Christian parents must
be concerned about their children's faith and help them to fulfil the vocation
God has given them. The parents' mission as educators also includes teaching
and giving their children an example of the true meaning of suffering and
death. They will be able to do this if they are sensitive to all kinds of
suffering around them and, even more, if they succeed in fostering attitudes of
closeness, assistance and sharing towards sick or elderly members of the
family.
93. The family celebrates the Gospel of life through daily prayer, both
individual prayer and family prayer. The family prays in order to glorify and
give thanks to God for the gift of life, and implores his light and strength in
order to face times of difficulty and suffering without losing hope. But the
celebration which gives meaning to every other form of prayer and worship is
found in the family's actual daily life together, if it is a life of love and
self-giving.
This celebration thus becomes a service to the Gospel of life, expressed
through solidarity as experienced within and around the family in the form of
concerned, attentive and loving care shown in the humble, ordinary events of
each day. A particularly significant expression of solidarity between families
is a willingness to adopt or take in children abandoned by their parents or in
situations of serious hardship. True parental love is ready to go beyond the
bonds of flesh and blood in order to accept children from other families,
offering them whatever is necessary for their well-being and full development.
Among the various forms of adoption, consideration should be given to
adoption-at-a-distance, preferable in cases where the only reason for giving up
the child is the extreme poverty of the child's family. Through this type of
adoption, parents are given the help needed to support and raise their
children, without their being uprooted from their natural environment.
As "a firm and persevering determination to commit oneself to the common
good",121 solidarity also needs to be practised through participation in social
and political life. Serving the Gospel of life thus means that the family,
particularly through its membership of family associations, works to ensure
that the laws and institutions of the State in no way violate the right to
life, from conception to natural death, but rather protect and promote it.
94. Special attention must be given to the elderly. While in some cultures
older people remain a part of the family with an important and active role, in
others the elderly are regarded as a useless burden and are left to themselves.
Here the temptation to resort to euthanasia can more easily arise.
Neglect of the elderly or their outright rejection are intolerable. Their
presence in the family, or at least their closeness to the family in cases
where limited living space or other reasons make this impossible, is of
fundamental importance in creating a climate of mutual interaction and
enriching communication between the different age-groups. It is therefore
important to preserve, or to re-establish where it has been lost, a sort of
"covenant" between generations. In this way parents, in their later years, can
receive from their children the acceptance and solidarity which they themselves
gave to their children when they brought them into the world. This is required
by obedience to the divine commandment to honour one's father and mother (cf.
Ex 20:12; Lev 19:3). But there is more. The elderly are not only to be
considered the object of our concern, closeness and service. They themselves
have a valuable contribution to make to the Gospel of life. Thanks to the rich
treasury of experiences they have acquired through the years, the elderly can
and must be sources of wisdom and witnesses of hope and love.
Although it is true that "the future of humanity passes by way of the
family",122 it must be admitted that modern social, economic and cultural
conditions make the family's task of serving life more difficult and demanding.
In order to fulfil its vocation as the "sanctuary of life", as the cell of a
society which loves and welcomes life, the family urgently needs to be helped
and supported. Communities and States must guarantee all the support, including
economic support, which families need in order to meet their problems in a
truly human way. For her part, the Church must untiringly promote a plan of
pastoral care for families, capable of making every family rediscover and live
with joy and courage its mission to further the Gospel of life.
"Walk as children of light" (Eph 5:8): bringing about a transformation of
culture
95. "Walk as children of light ... and try to learn what is pleasing to the
Lord. Take no part in the unfruitful works of darkness" (Eph 5:8, 10-11). In
our present social context, marked by a dramatic struggle between the "culture
of life" and the "culture of death", there is need to develop a deep critical
sense, capable of discerning true values and authentic needs.
What is urgently called for is a general mobilization of consciences and a
united ethical effort to activate a great campaign in support of life. All
together, we must build a new culture of life: new, because it will be able to
confront and solve today's unprecedented problems affecting human life; new,
because it will be adopted with deeper and more dynamic conviction by all
Christians; new, because it will be capable of bringing about a serious and
courageous cultural dialogue among all parties. While the urgent need for such
a cultural transformation is linked to the present historical situation, it is
also rooted in the Church's mission of evangelization. The purpose of the
Gospel, in fact, is "to transform humanity from within and to make it new".123
Like the yeast which leavens the whole measure of dough (cf. Mt 13:33), the
Gospel is meant to permeate all cultures and give them life from within,124 so
that they may express the full truth about the human person and about human
life.
We need to begin with the renewal of a culture of life within Christian
communities themselves. Too often it happens that believers, even those who
take an active part in the life of the Church, end up by separating their
Christian faith from its ethical requirements concerning life, and thus fall
into moral subjectivism and certain objectionable ways of acting. With great
openness and courage, we need to question how widespread is the culture of life
today among individual Christians, families, groups and communities in our
Dioceses. With equal clarity and determination we must identify the steps we
are called to take in order to serve life in all its truth. At the same time,
we need to promote a serious and in-depth exchange about basic issues of human
life with everyone, including non-believers, in intellectual circles, in the
various professional spheres and at the level of people's everyday life.
96. The first and fundamental step towards this cultural transformation
consists in forming consciences with regard to the incomparable and inviolable
worth of every human life. It is of the greatest importance to re-establish the
essential connection between life and freedom. These are inseparable goods:
where one is violated, the other also ends up being violated. There is no true
freedom where life is not welcomed and loved; and there is no fullness of life
except in freedom. Both realities have something inherent and specific which
links them inextricably: the vocation to love. Love, as a sincere gift of
self,125 is what gives the life and freedom of the person their truest
meaning.
No less critical in the formation of conscience is the recovery of the
necessary link between freedom and truth. As I have frequently stated, when
freedom is detached from objective truth it becomes impossible to establish
personal rights on a firm rational basis; and the ground is laid for society to
be at the mercy of the unrestrained will of individuals or the oppressive
totalitarianism of public authority.126
It is therefore essential that man should acknowledge his inherent condition as
a creature to whom God has granted being and life as a gift and a duty. Only by
admitting his innate dependence can man live and use his freedom to the full,
and at the same time respect the life and freedom of every other person. Here
especially one sees that "at the heart of every culture lies the attitude man
takes to the greatest mystery: the mystery of God".127 Where God is denied and
people live as though he did not exist, or his commandments are not taken into
account, the dignity of the human person and the inviolability of human life
also end up being rejected or compromised.
97. Closely connected with the formation of conscience is the work of
education, which helps individuals to be ever more human, leads them ever more
fully to the truth, instils in them growing respect for life, and trains them
in right interpersonal relationships.
In particular, there is a need for education about the value of life from its
very origins. It is an illusion to think that we can build a true culture of
human life if we do not help the young to accept and experience sexuality and
love and the whole of life according to their true meaning and in their close
interconnection. Sexuality, which enriches the whole person, "manifests its
inmost meaning in leading the person to the gift of self in love".128 The
trivialization of sexuality is among the principal factors which have led to
contempt for new life. Only a true love is able to protect life. There can be
no avoiding the duty to offer, especially to adolescents and young adults, an
authentic education in sexuality and in love, an education which involves
training in chastity as a virtue which fosters personal maturity and makes one
capable of respecting the "spousal" meaning of the body.
The work of educating in the service of life involves the training of married
couples in responsible procreation. In its true meaning, responsible
procreation requires couples to be obedient to the Lord's call and to act as
faithful interpreters of his plan. This happens when the family is generously
open to new lives, and when couples maintain an attitude of openness and
service to life, even if, for serious reasons and in respect for the moral law,
they choose to avoid a new birth for the time being or indefinitely. The moral
law obliges them in every case to control the impulse of instinct and passion,
and to respect the biological laws inscribed in their person. It is precisely
this respect which makes legitimate, at the service of responsible procreation,
the use of natural methods of regulating fertility. From the scientific point
of view, these methods are becoming more and more accurate and make it possible
in practice to make choices in harmony with moral values. An honest appraisal
of their effectiveness should dispel certain prejudices which are still widely
held, and should convince married couples, as well as health-care and social
workers, of the importance of proper training in this area. The Church is
grateful to those who, with personal sacrifice and often unacknowledged
dedication, devote themselves to the study and spread of these methods, as well
to the promotion of education in the moral values which they presuppose.
The work of education cannot avoid a consideration of suffering and death.
These are a part of human existence, and it is futile, not to say misleading,
to try to hide them or ignore them. On the contrary, people must be helped to
understand their profound mystery in all its harsh reality. Even pain and
suffering have meaning and value when they are experienced in close connection
with love received and given. In this regard, I have called for the yearly
celebration of the World Day of the Sick, emphasizing "the salvific nature of
the offering up of suffering which, experienced in communion with Christ,
belongs to the very essence of the Redemption".129 Death itself is anything but
an event without hope. It is the door which opens wide on eternity and, for
those who live in Christ, an experience of participation in the mystery of his
Death and Resurrection.
98. In a word, we can say that the cultural change which we are calling for
demands from everyone the courage to adopt a new life-style, consisting in
making practical choices--at the personal, family, social and international
level--on the basis of a correct scale of values: the primacy of being over
having,130 of the person over things.131 This renewed life-style involves a
passing from indifference to concern for others, from rejection to acceptance
of them. Other people are not rivals from whom we must defend ourselves, but
brothers and sisters to be supported. They are to be loved for their own sakes,
and they enrich us by their very presence.
In this mobilization for a new culture of life no one must feel excluded:
everyone has an important role to play. Together with the family, teachers and
educators have a particularly valuable contribution to make. Much will depend
on them if young people, trained in true freedom, are to be able to preserve
for themselves and make known to others new, authentic ideals of life, and if
they are to grow in respect for and service to every other person, in the
family and in society.
Intellectuals can also do much to build a new culture of human life. A special
task falls to Catholic intellectuals, who are called to be present and active
in the leading centres where culture is formed, in schools and universities, in
places of scientific and technological research, of artistic creativity and of
the study of man. Allowing their talents and activity to be nourished by the
living force of the Gospel, they ought to place themselves at the service of a
new culture of life by offering serious and well documented contributions,
capable of commanding general respect and interest by reason of their merit. It
was precisely for this purpose that I established the Pontifical Acad- emy for
Life, assigning it the task of "studying and providing information and training
about the principal problems of law and biomedicine pertaining to the promotion
of life, especially in the direct relationship they have with Christian
morality and the directives of the Church's Magisterium".132 A specific
contribution will also have to come from Universities, particularly from
Catholic Universities, and from Centres, Institutes and Committees of
Bioethics.
An important and serious responsibility belongs to those involved in the mass
media, who are called to ensure that the messages which they so effectively
transmit will support the culture of life. They need to present noble models of
life and make room for instances of people's positive and sometimes heroic love
for others. With great respect they should also present the positive values of
sexuality and human love, and not insist on what defiles and cheapens human
dignity. In their interpretation of things, they should refrain from
emphasizing anything that suggests or fosters feelings or attitudes of
indifference, contempt or rejection in relation to life. With scrupulous
concern for factual truth, they are called to combine freedom of information
with respect for every person and a profound sense of humanity.
99. In transforming culture so that it supports life, women occupy a place, in
thought and action, which is unique and decisive. It depends on them to promote
a "new feminism" which rejects the temptation of imitating models of "male
domination", in order to acknowledge and affirm the true genius of women in
every aspect of the life of society, and overcome all discrimination, violence
and exploitation.
Making my own the words of the concluding message of the Second Vatican
Council, I address to women this urgent appeal: "Reconcile people with
life".133 You are called to bear witness to the meaning of genuine love, of
that gift of self and of that acceptance of others which are present in a
special way in the relationship of husband and wife, but which ought also to be
at the heart of every other interpersonal relationship. The experience of
motherhood makes you acutely aware of the other person and, at the same time,
confers on you a particular task: "Motherhood involves a special communion with
the mystery of life, as it develops in the woman's womb ... This unique contact
with the new human being developing within her gives rise to an attitude
towards human beings not only towards her own child, but every human being,
which profoundly marks the woman's personality".134 A mother welcomes and
carries in herself another human being, enabling it to grow inside her, giving
it room, respecting it in its otherness. Women first learn and then teach
others that human relations are authentic if they are open to accepting the
other person: a person who is recognized and loved because of the dignity which
comes from being a person and not from other considerations, such as
usefulness, strength, intelligence, beauty or health. This is the fundamental
contribution which the Church and humanity expect from women. And it is the
indispensable prerequisite for an authentic cultural change.
I would now like to say a special word to women who have had an abortion. The
Church is aware of the many factors which may have influenced your decision,
and she does not doubt that in many cases it was a painful and even shattering
decision. The wound in your heart may not yet have healed. Certainly what
happened was and remains terribly wrong. But do not give in to discouragement
and do not lose hope. Try rather to understand what happened and face it
honestly. If you have not already done so, give yourselves over with humility
and trust to repentance. The Father of mercies is ready to give you his
forgiveness and his peace in the Sacrament of Reconciliation. You will come to
understand that nothing is definitively lost and you will also be able to ask
forgiveness from your child, who is now living in the Lord. With the friendly
and expert help and advice of other people, and as a result of your own painful
experience, you can be among the most eloquent defenders of everyone's right to
life. Through your commitment to life, whether by accepting the birth of other
children or by welcoming and caring for those most in need of someone to be
close to them, you will become promoters of a new way of looking at human
life.
100. In this great endeavour to create a new culture of life we are inspired
and sustained by the confidence that comes from knowing that the Gospel of
life, like the Kingdom of God itself, is growing and producing abundant fruit
(cf. Mk 4:26-29). There is certainly an enormous disparity between the powerful
resources available to the forces promoting the "culture of death" and the
means at the disposal of those working for a "culture of life and love". But we
know that we can rely on the help of God, for whom nothing is impossible (cf.
Mt 19:26).
Filled with this certainty, and moved by profound concern for the destiny of
every man and woman, I repeat what I said to those families who carry out their
challenging mission amid so many difficulties: 135 a great prayer for life is
urgently needed, a prayer which will rise up throughout the world. Through
special initiatives and in daily prayer, may an impassioned plea rise to God,
the Creator and lover of life, from every Christian community, from every group
and association, from every family and from the heart of every believer. Jesus
himself has shown us by his own example that prayer and fasting are the first
and most effective weapons against the forces of evil (cf. Mt 4:1-11). As he
taught his disciples, some demons cannot be driven out except in this way (cf.
Mk 9:29). Let us therefore discover anew the humility and the courage to pray
and fast so that power from on high will break down the walls of lies and
deceit: the walls which conceal from the sight of so many of our brothers and
sisters the evil of practices and laws which are hostile to life. May this same
power turn their hearts to resolutions and goals inspired by the civilization
of life and love.
"We are writing this that our joy may be complete" (1 Jn 1:4): the Gospel of
life is for the whole of human society
101. "We are writing you this that our joy may be complete" (1 Jn 1:4). The
revelation of the Gospel of life is given to us as a good to be shared with all
people: so that all men and women may have fellowship with us and with the
Trinity (cf. 1 Jn 1:3). Our own joy would not be complete if we failed to share
this Gospel with others but kept it only for ourselves.
The Gospel of life is not for believers alone: it is for everyone. The issue of
life and its defence and promotion is not a concern of Christians alone.
Although faith provides special light and strength, this question arises in
every human conscience which seeks the truth and which cares about the future
of humanity. Life certainly has a sacred and religious value, but in no way is
that value a concern only of believers. The value at stake is one which every
human being can grasp by the light of reason; thus it necessarily concerns
everyone.
Consequently, all that we do as the "people of life and for life" should be
interpreted correctly and welcomed with favour. When the Church declares that
unconditional respect for the right to life of every innocent person--from
conception to natural death--is one of the pillars on which every civil society
stands, she "wants simply to promote a human State. A State which recognizes
the defence of the fundamental rights of the human person, especially of the
weakest, as its primary duty".136
The Gospel of life is for the whole of human society. To be actively pro-life
is to contribute to the renewal of society through the promotion of the common
good. It is impossible to further the common good without acknowledging and
defending the right to life, upon which all the other inalienable rights of
individuals are founded and from which they develop. A society lacks solid
foundations when, on the one hand, it asserts values such as the dignity of the
person, justice and peace, but then, on the other hand, radically acts to the
contrary by allowing or tolerating a variety of ways in which human life is
devalued and violated, especially where it is weak or marginalized. Only
respect for life can be the foundation and guarantee of the most precious and
essential goods of society, such as democracy and peace.
There can be no true democracy without a rec- ognition of every person's
dignity and without respect for his or her rights.
Nor can there be true peace unless life is defended and promoted. As Paul VI
pointed out: "Every crime against life is an attack on peace, especially if it
strikes at the moral conduct of people... But where human rights are truly
professed and publicly recognized and defended, peace becomes the joyful and
operative climate of life in society".137
The "people of life" rejoices in being able to share its commitment with so
many others. Thus may the "people for life" constantly grow in number and may a
new culture of love and solidarity develop for the true good of the whole of
human society.
102. At the end of this Encyclical, we naturally look again to the Lord Jesus,
"the Child born for us" (cf. Is 9:6), that in him we may contemplate "the Life"
which "was made manifest" (1 Jn 1:2). In the mystery of Christ's Birth the
encounter of God with man takes place and the earthly journey of the Son of God
begins, a journey which will culminate in the gift of his life on the Cross. By
his death Christ will conquer death and become for all humanity the source of
new life.
The one who accepted "Life" in the name of all and for the sake of all was
Mary, the Virgin Mother; she is thus most closely and personally associated
with the Gospel of life. Mary's consent at the Annunciation and her motherhood
stand at the very beginning of the mystery of life which Christ came to bestow
on humanity (cf. Jn 10:10). Through her acceptance and loving care for the life
of the Incarnate Word, human life has been rescued from condemnation to final
and eternal death.
For this reason, Mary, "like the Church of which she is the type, is a mother
of all who are reborn to life. She is in fact the mother of the Life by which
everyone lives, and when she brought it forth from herself she in some way
brought to rebirth all those who were to live by that Life".138
As the Church contemplates Mary's motherhood, she discovers the meaning of her
own motherhood and the way in which she is called to express it. At the same
time, the Church's experience of motherhood leads to a most profound
understanding of Mary's experience as the incomparable model of how life should
be welcomed and cared for.
"A great portent appeared in heaven, a woman clothed with the sun" (Rev 12:1):
the motherhood of Mary and of the Church
103. The mutual relationship between the mystery of the Church and Mary appears
clearly in the "great portent" described in the Book of Rev- elation: "A great
portent appeared in heaven, a woman clothed with the sun, with the moon under
her feet, and on her head a crown of twelve stars" (12:1). In this sign the
Church recognizes an image of her own mystery: present in history, she knows
that she transcends history, inasmuch as she constitutes on earth the "seed and
beginning" of the Kingdom of God.139 The Church sees this mystery fulfilled in
complete and exemplary fashion in Mary. She is the woman of glory in whom God's
plan could be carried out with supreme perfection.
The "woman clothed with the sun"--the Book of Revelation tells us--"was with
child" (12:2). The Church is fully aware that she bears within herself the
Saviour of the world, Christ the Lord. She is aware that she is called to offer
Christ to the world, giving men and women new birth into God's own life. But
the Church cannot forget that her mission was made possible by the motherhood
of Mary, who conceived and bore the One who is "God from God", "true God from
true God". Mary is truly the Mother of God, the Theotokos, in whose motherhood
the vocation to motherhood bestowed by God on every woman is raised to its
highest level. Thus Mary becomes the model of the Church, called to be the "new
Eve", the mother of believers, the mother of the "living" (cf. Gen 3:20).
The Church's spiritual motherhood is only achieved--the Church knows this
too--through the pangs and "the labour" of childbirth (cf. Rev 12:2), that is
to say, in constant tension with the forces of evil which still roam the world
and affect human hearts, offering resistance to Christ: "In him was life, and
the life was the light of men. The light shines in the darkness, and the
darkness has not overcome it" (Jn 1:4-5).
Like the Church, Mary too had to live her motherhood amid suffering: "This
child is set ... for a sign that is spoken against--and a sword will pierce
through your own soul also--that thoughts out of many hearts may be revealed"
(Lk 2:34-35). The words which Simeon addresses to Mary at the very beginning of
the Saviour's earthly life sum up and prefigure the rejection of Jesus, and
with him of Mary, a rejection which will reach its culmination on Calvary.
"Standing by the cross of Jesus" (Jn 19:25), Mary shares in the gift which the
Son makes of himself: she offers Jesus, gives him over, and begets him to the
end for our sake. The "yes" spoken on the day of the Annunciation reaches full
maturity on the day of the Cross, when the time comes for Mary to receive and
beget as her children all those who become disciples, pouring out upon them the
saving love of her Son: "When Jesus saw his mother, and the disciple whom he
loved standing near, he said to his mother, ?Woman, behold, your son!' " (Jn
19:26).
"And the dragon stood before the woman ... that he might devour her child when
she brought it forth" (Rev 12:4): life menaced by the forces of evil
104. In the Book of Revelation, the "great portent" of the "woman" (12:1) is
accompanied by "another portent which appeared in heaven": "a great red dragon"
(Rev 12:3), which represents Satan, the personal power of evil, as well as all
the powers of evil at work in history and opposing the Church's mission.
Here too Mary sheds light on the Community of Believers. The hostility of the
powers of evil is, in fact, an insidious opposition which, before affecting the
disciples of Jesus, is directed against his mother. To save the life of her Son
from those who fear him as a dangerous threat, Mary has to flee with Joseph and
the Child into Egypt (cf. Mt 2:13-15).
Mary thus helps the Church to realize that life is always at the centre of a
great struggle between good and evil, between light and darkness. The dragon
wishes to devour "the child brought forth" (cf. Rev 12:4), a figure of Christ,
whom Mary brought forth "in the fullness of time" (Gal 4:4) and whom the Church
must unceasingly offer to people in every age. But in a way that child is also
a figure of every person, every child, especially every helpless baby whose
life is threatened, because--as the Council reminds us--"by his Incarnation the
Son of God has united himself in some fashion with every person".140 It is
precisely in the "flesh" of every person that Christ continues to reveal
himself and to enter into fellowship with us, so that rejection of human life,
in whatever form that rejection takes, is really a rejection of Christ. This is
the fascinating but also demanding truth which Christ reveals to us and which
his Church continues untiringly to proclaim: "Whoever receives one such child
in my name receives me" (Mt 18:5); "Truly, I say to you, as you did it to one
of the least of these my brethren, you did it to me" (Mt 25:40).
"Death shall be no more" (Rev 21:4): the splendour of the Resurrection
105. The angel's Annunciation to Mary is framed by these reassuring words: "Do
not be afraid, Mary" and "with God nothing will be impossible" (Lk 1:30, 37).
The whole of the Virgin Mother's life is in fact pervaded by the certainty that
God is near to her and that he accompanies her with his providential care. The
same is true of the Church, which finds "a place prepared by God" (Rev 12:6) in
the desert, the place of trial but also of the manifestation of God's love for
his people (cf. Hos 2:16). Mary is a living word of comfort for the Church in
her struggle against death. Showing us the Son, the Church assures us that in
him the forces of death have already been defeated: "Death with life contended:
combat strangely ended! Life's own Champion, slain, yet lives to reign".141
The Lamb who was slain is alive, bearing the marks of his Passion in the
splendour of the Res- urrection. He alone is master of all the events of
history: he opens its "seals" (cf. Rev 5:1-10) and proclaims, in time and
beyond, the power of life over death. In the "new Jerusalem", that new world
towards which human history is travelling, "death shall be no more, neither
shall there be mourning nor crying nor pain any more, for the former things
have passed away" (Rev 21:4).
And as we, the pilgrim people, the people of life and for life, make our way in
confidence towards "a new heaven and a new earth" (Rev 21:1), we look to her
who is for us "a sign of sure hope and solace".142
O Mary, bright dawn of the new world, Mother of the living, to you do we
entrust the cause of life Look down, O Mother, upon the vast numbers of babies
not allowed to be born, of the poor whose lives are made difficult, of men and
women who are victims of brutal violence, of the elderly and the sick killed by
indifference or out of misguided mercy. Grant that all who believe in your Son
may proclaim the Gospel of life with honesty and love to the people of our
time. Obtain for them the grace to accept that Gospel as a gift ever new, the
joy of celebrating it with gratitude throughout their lives and the courage to
bear witness to it resolutely, in order to build, together with all people of
good will, the civilization of truth and love, to the praise and glory of God,
the Creator and lover of life.
Given in Rome, at Saint Peter's, on 25 March, the Solemnity of the Annunciation
of the Lord, in the year 1995, the seventeenth of my Pontificate.
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