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Living the Gospel of Life
by Michael Hahn
From the Jan/Feb 2006 Issue of Lay Witness Magazine
Barely a week after the 10th anniversary of
Evangelium Vitae (“The Gospel of
Life”), its author, our beloved Holy Father,
Pope John Paul II, surrendered his spirit,
saying, “Let me go to the house of the
Father.” While he will certainly be
remembered for this encyclical, what strikes
so many is how heroically he lived out its
call, which is the call of the Gospel
itself.
John Paul II issued Evangelium Vitae
largely in response to “the extraordinary
increase and gravity of threats to the life
of individuals and peoples, especially where
life is weak and defenseless.” Although
specific focus is given to the grave evils
of abortion and euthanasia, the encyclical
also has much to say regarding the Christian
perspective on human life, both in the
Church’s understanding and in the practice
of her faithful. It is to these that we
turn.
“That They Might Have Life”
There is a quip attributed to writer Oliver
Wendell Holmes that is often used to
caricature and reproach Christians: “Some
people are so heavenly minded that they are
no earthly good.”
The form of this world is passing
away, and, as Christians, our citizenship
is in heaven. However, all mankind is
“entrusted to the maternal care of the
Church” (EV, no. 3) and, as members of that
Church, we are called by Christ to be
disciples to all nations. For this reason,
John Paul II highlights the need for the
Gospel of Life to be proclaimed. He says,
“The Church knows that this Gospel of Life,
which she has received from her Lord, has a
profound and persuasive echo in the heart of
every person—believer and non-believer
alike” (EV, no. 2).
Living, as we do, in the midst of a culture
in which life is given little more than a
utilitarian price tag, our affirmation of
the dignity of the human person is, indeed,
a radical witness. But a witness to what?
Earthly life isn’t our final goal, so why
emphasize it?
The answer, it seems, is threefold. First,
although man is called to the supernatural
end of heaven, life on earth is a necessary
stage of that journey, one that is imbued
with its own innate goodness. In
Evangelium Vitae, we read, “The
loftiness of this supernatural vocation
reveals the greatness and the
inestimable value of human life even in
its temporal phase” (no. 2, emphasis in
original). Second, the Church cherishes
natural human life because it is the
condition in which man is able to respond to
grace and turn to God. Third, fostering
reverence for life presents the opportunity
for others to recognize this valuable
character of natural life, hopefully leading
them to Christ. Thus, the Church also
cherishes human life because her witness
helps to bring the world to conversion.
It is in no small part because Jesus’
kingdom—our ultimate destination, God
willing—is not of this world that the Church
so strongly affirms the value of human life.
Our life on earth is truly good.
Furthermore, it has been given to us as the
means through which we are brought to
something infinitely better. Finally, this
truth is affirmed for its own sake, but also
for the purpose of leading others to life in
Christ.
In other words, Holmes had it backwards: Not
only is the Church of the utmost benefit to
the world (as its only means for salvation),
it is specifically her heavenly mindedness
that calls Christians who remain in the
world to witness to life so as to bring all
men to Christ.
Spreading the Gospel
The duty of respecting life is shared among
all members of Christ’s Church, for “she
exists to evangelize” (Evangelii
Nunciandi, no. 14). It must be asked,
then, in what concrete ways are we to live
out this somewhat abstract notion of the
value of life? John Paul II lists three
distinct but inseparable ways in which we
are to witness: preaching, celebration, and
the service of charity.
Preaching
is the fruit of reflecting on God’s gift of
life, which should cultivate in our hearts a
burning fire of joy and gratitude that
cannot be held in. It can take the form of
catechesis, educational activity, and,
especially for the laity, “personal
dialogue.” For while most of us will never
give a homily, we must nonetheless preach
the Gospel of Life, proclaiming the “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” (EV,
no. 81).
The celebration of the Gospel of Life
takes place primarily in the liturgy
—especially the sacraments—and secondarily
in our daily lives. Although we are called
to rejoice always, liturgical celebration
presents a unique opportunity to give thanks
to God for offering us the eternal life in
which our natural life receives its
significance. Furthermore, because it is
through the sacraments that Christ deigns to
make us partake in His divine life, we honor
Him greatly by receiving the spiritual
strength that the sacraments provide.
Indeed, this strengthening enables us to
continue the celebration of the Gospel of
Life in our daily living, “which should be
filled with selfgiving love for others” (EV,
no. 86). In his praise of “everyday
heroism,” John Paul II makes particular note
of the unique role of mothers, who bear a
special witness to the Gospel of Life in
their sacrificial love of their families.
It is precisely this service of charity
that makes up the third component of the
Christian response to the Gospel of Life.
The Church expresses great encouragement at
the many “positive signs at work in
humanity’s present situation” (EV, no. 26).
These include: the openness to life on the
part of many married couples; the generosity
of families in taking in the abandoned, the
handicapped, or the aged; the increase of
organizations that offer alternatives to
abortion; and the growing presence of
movements that lead society to a greater
respect for life. Finding expression through
personal witness, volunteer work, social
activity, and political commitment, the
service of charity directs us to
consistently aid those brothers and sisters
most in need, especially those who are
unable to defend themselves.
Passionately Loving the World
John Paul II lived what he wrote, but it was
his suffering and death that proved to be
his most powerful witness to the Gospel of
Life. In the midst of a self-serving world
that shuns hardship and inconvenience even
to the point of welcoming abortion,
euthanasia, and other elements of the
culture of death, John Paul II, like Christ,
strove “not to be served but to serve,”
laying down his life for love of Christ and
His Church, and loving them to the end. Not
only did he show us how to live, suffer, and
die, he rejoiced in those sufferings for our
sake, completing in his flesh what is
lacking in Christ’s afflictions (cf. Col.
1:24).
As Christians, we are the salt of the earth,
a city set on a hill. As Christ said during
the Sermon on the Mount, “You have heard
that it was said, ‘You shall love your
neighbor and hate your enemy.’ But I say to
you, Love your enemies and pray for those
who persecute you, so that you may be sons
of your Father” (Mt. 5:43–45). Indeed, this
love is shown by living the Gospel of Life,
for it “is not for believers alone: it is
for everyone” (EV, no. 101). We are
called to draw men to Christ, loving the
world in imitation of God, who “so loved the
world that he gave his only Son, that
whoever believes in him should not perish
but have eternal life” (Jn. 3:16).
It is to this hope that John Paul II
witnessed, both in his life and in his
death. We must be imitators of him, as he
was of Christ, living the Gospel of Life and
passionately loving the world, so that we,
along with those to whom we witness, can
together “go to the house of the Father.”
Copyright © 2006, Lay Witness
Magazine. All Rights Reserved. Used with
permission. To subscribe to Lay Witness
Magazine please visit:
www.cuf.org
Michael Hahn is the associate editor of
Lay Witness. He resides in Steubenville, OH, where he
is a graduate student in theology at
Franciscan University of Steubenville.
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