Mass for Life 2016

The Most Reverend Paul J. Swain
Bishop of Sioux Falls
Cathedral of St. Joseph
January 22, 2016
Day of Prayer for the Legal Protection of Unborn Children

The first reading from Colossians speaks the truth clearly: “You are God’s chosen ones”. Every person is God’s chosen ones. The opening prayer sets forth clearly what ought be our response to being so chosen: give thanks and defend life:

God our Creator, we give thanks to you, who alone have the power to impart the breath of life as you form each of us in our mother’s womb; grant we pray that we, whom you made stewards of creation, may remain faithful to this sacred trust and constant in safeguarding the dignity of every human life.1

It is important to remind ourselves of this sacred trust on this the 43rd anniversary of the US Supreme Court decision to allow abortions essentially for any reason and at any time. It is the law of the land that the unborn are not persons even though God formed them and are therefore disposable or as Pope Francis has noted they are considered as throwaways. Today we pray for a change of heart and law that protects all life from conception to natural death.

Less than a month ago we celebrated a birth, the birth of the Christ child. Yet we know even then that government leaders sought the child’s death. The culture of death is not of recent invention.

Pope Francis has written:

In a frail human being, each one of us is invited to recognize the face of the Lord, who in his human flesh experienced the indifference and solitude to which we so often condemn the poorest of the poor . . . Every child who, rather than being born, is condemned to unjustly being aborted, bears the face of Jesus, bears the face of the Lord, who even before he was born and then just after his birth experienced the world’s rejection2.

Our Mass intention today and at Masses throughout the country, is in penance for the violation of the dignity of the human person committed through acts of abortion. It is estimated that over 58 million little ones3 created by God with unique looks, gifts and capacity to love and be loved have, by human hands, not been allowed to live, to breathe, to learn, to give and to love. We miss those potential parents and friends, farmers and teachers and so many more who God created for a purpose but were not allowed to attain that purpose. While we know they are in the hands of their loving God, their absence makes our hearts ache.

Yet we do so with hope. Our Mass intention today also is to pray for the legal protection of the unborn children to come. We do so in thanksgiving for all those in the pro-life movement who have come forward often in hostile environments to protect the unborn by prayer, by practice, by protesting and by presenting the Gospel of Life to prick consciences and encourage conversion of hearts. Especially gratifying is the witness of the young who are grateful for their gift of life and who seek to nourish the culture of life.

We also pray in penance today for ourselves as individuals and as Church for not having been adequately present and welcoming to so many mothers dealing with dizzying choices in troubled times. Yet here too there is hope. We in our diocese, especially through Catholic Family Services, offer support through counseling programs, the Mother Teresa Fund that offers financial assistance, adoption services and grief and healing outreach programs. No one should have to make agonizing life choices alone or bear unintended consequences alone. “Come to me,” Jesus said, “and I will give you rest.” Come to His Church and as his instrument she will give you rest. God’s love and mercy are ever available to everyone.

We pray in penance today also for the bad fruit that has resulted from this sad Supreme Court decision. I speak especially about the derogation of our national psyche where violence in the womb has spread to violence in the home, in the school and on the streets. I speak of the view of children as collateral to be marketed in human trafficking or as body parts to be sold.

I speak of the tragedy of gender selection abortions, in the taking of a twin because only one child is wanted, and in the destruction of those little ones suffering some seeming physical defect before we got to know their personalities. I speak also of the attack on religious liberty and freedom of conscience to shut down the courageous call for life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness for all. Indeed there is much for which we need God’s forgiveness, all of us.

Yet there is hope reflected in each of you and those who march this week. Let us all whatever our age, station or vocation stay the course. Let us recommit to be witnesses for life from conception to natural death. How powerful witness can be.

I have told this story before but it seems especially appropriate on this anniversary of law gone astray: “There were forty soldiers in the revered Twelfth Legion of Rome who professed faith in Jesus Christ. One day the Emperor ordered that all soldiers offer a sacrifice to pagan gods. They as one responded, “you can have our armor and even our bodies but our hearts allegiance belong to Jesus Christ.” As a result they were marched out onto a frozen lake in the middle of winter and stripped of their clothes. At any time they could renounce Christ and be spared from freezing to death. Instead they huddled closely and sang a song of victory, “Forty martyrs for Christ.” That night 39 of them fell to icy graves. The last one stumbled to the shore and renounced Christ. The officer in charge of guarding the men was so moved by the witness of the others that he ran out onto the icy lake, threw off his clothes and confessed his faith in Jesus Christ. At sunrise the Roman soldiers found forty men who had given their all for the cause of Christ, Savior and Lord of Life.

Grateful to the Creator for our lives, let us pray for conversion of hearts and for the strength to witness our faith as did the Forty Martyrs. As we pray in penance and pray for the unborn yet to come, may we do so with integrity, with humility and with hope being true as God’s chosen ones to our sacred trust to safeguard the dignity of every human life.

St. Joseph, our patron, protect us and the unborn. Mary, Mother of Life, pray for us.

________
1 – Collect, Roman Missal, Mass for Life
2 – Pope Francis, Address to the International Federation of Catholic Medical Associations, Sept. 20, 2013
3 – http://www.lifenews.com/2015/01/21/57762169-abortions-in-america-since-roe-vs-wade-in-1973/

Solemnity of the Epiphany

Happy new year to you all. At the end of each calendar year we reflect on the past year and with grateful hearts thank God for the blessings we have received. Among the special blessings of the past year is the opening of the Bishop Dudley Hospitality House which carries the beacon of hope which is this Cathedral out into the broader community, sharing the love and mercy of Christ with those who need a helping hand. Another great blessing was the Legacy event at which we thanked God for the 125 years of our diocese. Thank you to all who helped make these two significant happenings possible. Now we begin a new calendar year filled with mystery and uncertainty, yet also a Jubilee Year of Mercy. May we use it well.

Today is the Solemnity of the Epiphany. It offers us the opportunity to take the time amidst the complicated and busy lives we lead to discover and reflect on the simplicity of the message and reality of Christmas. Jesus Christ, the son of God, broke into the world to save us and to encourage us to break out of the world.

Soon the trees, the decorations, the special music and celebrations will end. Next week we return to Ordinary Time where we spend most of our lives. Before we go there, let us rest in this sacred Epiphany moment to reflect and prepare for the New Year.

Isaiah in the first reading prophecies this simple reality with the words: “darkness covers the earth and thick clouds cover the peoples, but upon you the Lord shines.” Darkness surely covers the earth today with violence, terrorism and disrespect for life in all its phases. Thick clouds cover the peoples living in poverty, sickness, unfaithfulness, injustice. Yet today upon us the Lord shines if we see in that darkness the star that leads us to the Christ child and then bow in humility and hope in homage before Him as did the Magi.

The inspired scripture with the beautiful images of the Magi contains an encouraging affirmation of inclusiveness. Christ is here for us all. Those who came were outsiders yet they bowed in worship before the Lord of us all. St. Paul in the 2nd reading underscores this truth. He wrote that the Gentiles were coheirs, members of the same body, and sharers of the same promise. Jesus is a Christmas gift open to all, regardless of status, age, economic standing, education, gender, ethnic background or any artificial separation enacted by man.

This gospel also is reassuring because it identifies the fullness of the power of Jesus Christ, reflected in the gifts presented. As one writer put it: Gold was the symbol for divinity. “This Child, who would be betrayed for silver, comes to transform our perspective of wealth to treasure again the things of God – compassion, forgiveness, and peace are the coin of the realm of the new born King.”

Frankincense is an all-purpose medicine. “This Child comes to restore and heal not just the physical ailments of those he will meet in his gospel journey, but to heal humankind of our fears and doubts, to bridge the chasms that separate us from one another and from God.”

Myrrh is used to embalm the dead. “This Child comes to re-create us in the life of God: his death will be the defeat of death, his cross with be his – and our – glory. (Cormier)

This time of year I recall an experience I had in my first years as a priest which I have shared before. I was at a Christmas party in the Diocese of Madison sponsored by the Apostolate to the Handicapped, a ministry to those with special needs. Over 1,000 were there including frail elderly, others in wheelchairs requiring assistance. Mass was prayed then healthy high school students served a festive holiday meal.
At the front of one long table was a young man, likely in his twenties, blond hair and beard. He was in a wheelchair, a quadriplegic. I later learned that he was a victim of a motorcycle accident. With him was a woman who looked on him with such love. She was his sister. She held his hand throughout Mass. The chair was fitted with a special brace on which his head could rest. Every once in a while his head would fall forward. His sister would so gently lift it back up. I could not help but look at those siblings and so many more struggling in so many ways wondering how they could handle what they must each day. How when the festive lights are darkened and the routine of ordinary time takes over do people cope, from where comes their hope. At the end of Mass the answer was given. With the final blessing the sister stood up, took the arm of her brother and helped him make the sign of the cross – in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Simple yet profound.

The Christ born in Bethlehem, to whom the shepherds and the Magi paid homage was with them, is with us all every day. That sister was the Christmas star leading the way.

Darkness still covers the earth and thick clouds still cover the peoples and yet as Isaiah predicted upon us the Lord shines. Christ broke into the world to save us and to encourage us to break out of the world. That is the simple message of Christmas. May in the darkness and clouds of ordinary time we keep close to the star that leads to Christ – His Church.