Many of
us are aware of the Christmas story, which starts from the annunciation of the
archangel Gabriel to Mary, the mother of Jesus. After some reflection, I found
out that this Christmas story, which was told to us time and again when we were
little children, and the very same Christmas story which I hope we are passing
on to our children, and their children’s children – I found out that this story
holds not one but several pro-life pointers for all of us to think about. Christmas is indeed pro-life.
1. There is no room for Christ for those whose
lives are full of worldly things. Have you ever heard of people saying something like, “I don’t want a
baby because it gets in the way of the job I want.” Or something to that
effect?
This is the queue to the gift-wrapping section. Every Christmas season. Every single year. |
2. Help, even as you need help yourself. 99% of us pro-lifers are people
in need of some sort of assistance – financial, emotional, professional, etc .Mary
went out of her way to help her cousin, Elizabeth, who was six months into her
pregnancy, even as she was pregnant of her own child as well. God rewards those
who make great effort to reach out to other people despite their own
circumstances. For some of them, however, helping others and making a
difference in their lives is a reward by itself.
So don't forget to send me some gifts! :) just kidding |
Nowadays,
being a pro-lifer means being very unpopular, going against the whims and
caprices of this anti-life society. Argentinian feminists burned an effigy of
Pope Francis, who stood firm on his pro-life, anti-abortion stand. If they
could do that to the pope, imagine what the world can do to us, ordinary
pro-lifers. The pro-life advocacy ain’t for the soft-spoken and for the
mild-mannered. The advocacy requires all of us brandish wills of steel.
4. Pro-life, Pro-poor. A lot of skeptics ask us: Why
don’t you ask your God why are there rich people who have more than enough
wealth to last until their grandchildren’s children, and why are there poor
people who don’t even have enough to buy their own meal? If I were God,
however, I would ask mankind the same thing. I gave you all the material
blessings you will ever need. Why be greedy about it to the point that you have
more and others have less?
In Argentina, these men barricaded themselves in front of a Cathedral that these angry feminists targeted to vandalize, following Pope Francis' statement against abortion. These men are awesome! |
Even the
infant Jesus did not escape this poverty. He was born in a manger, in a place
more suited for animals than human beings. This is God’s way of reminding us of
two things:
a. Our priority in our advocacy
should be to promote the culture of
life, family, and marriage especially to the poor, who are the main targets of
the anti-life movement. The RH law was intended especially for the poor to have
access to contraceptives. Ironically, they struggle to have access to a lot of
things, like food, clean water, shelter, education, and jobs, and here comes
the government telling them that these contraceptives provided to them
‘empower’ them, especially their women. What a twisted, confused world we live
in!
b. Christ tells us that there is
dignity in being alive. Period. Dignity is afforded to both the rich and the
poor, no matter how the former tries to rob the latter of it. There are two
groups of rich people: the ones who make a system that will make them rich
people richer, and the poor poorer; the other group of rich people are being
paid by the first group to sustain this corrupt system. An example of this is
the RH law, which purportedly was passed to address the needs of women and the
poor, but in reality pays lip service to them by failing to address the real
root of their problems.
On the other hand, there are
groups of people on the opposite end of the pendulum who think that wealth is
all the poor needs. I had this discussion with an atheist a few weeks ago, and
he said that the Vatican should sell its riches and give it to the poor;
moreover, the Church should stop collecting from the poor during masses. I told
him of personal encounters I had with the poor, who, despite their poverty,
have no qualms giving much of the little they have for the Church. I told this
atheist that it would be insulting for these poor folk to tell them not to give
to the Church.
Part of our work as pro-lifers is
to uphold the dignity that the poor have in themselves, and to fight the
corrupt systems that deny the poor of their rights.
Makes sense, right? |
5. Wisdom that comes from Christ’s Light – The Three Wise Men are some of
the most mysterious characters in the Bible. We do not know where they came
from, we do not know whether they knew each other prior to their journey
towards the infant Christ, we do not know how they came to know about his
birth. We do not even know why they were called wise men, but this we do know:
they tried to follow that bright star that lead them to the infant Christ, the
light that came from God Himself, and by this they deserve to be called wise.
This is
the same light that made them aware of King Herod’s ulterior motive of finding
baby Jesus and having him killed, and the same light that prompted them to go
back to their homeland through a different way. Our encounter with Christ
should lead us towards a similar change of heart. We should turn our backs
against evil and wrongdoing and turn towards the Light of Christ.This is
perhaps the best gift we can give to God this Christmas – that our lives may be shining lights that all
point towards Christ.
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