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TRÁI TIM
MẸ: NƠI CON NƯƠNG NÁU - ĐƯỜNG ĐẾN VỚI CHÚA |
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"Chúa Giêsu muốn dùng con để làm
cho Mẹ được nhận biết và yêu mến" |
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June 25, 2009 -
Thursday of the Twefth Week of Ordinary Time
LITURGICAL/THEME MEDITATION:
"Like a foolish man who built his house upon the sand"
UNIVERSAL CHURCH/WORLD EVENT(S):
Pope On the Year for Priests
SAINT OF THE DAY
Blessed Jutta of
Thuringia
GENERAL
MARIOLOGY
THE DIVINE
HISTORY AND LIFE
OF THE
VIRGIN MOTHER OF GOD
Book Four -
Chapter IV
CHRIST OUR SAVIOR IS BORN OF THE
VIRGIN MARY IN BETHLEHEM, JUDA.
DIVINE MERCY
Divine Mercy in My Soul
Notebook I V
TEACHING/TESTIMONY/CONVICTION:
Testimony of Dr. McArthur
Hill, former Abortion Provider

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DAILY LITURGICAL MEDITATION |
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Thursday (6/25): "Like a foolish man who
built his house upon the sand"
Scripture: Matthew 7:21-29
21 "Not every one who says to me, `Lord, Lord,' shall enter the
kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of my Father who is in
heaven. 22 On that day many will say to me, `Lord, Lord, did we not
prophesy in your name, and cast out demons in your name, and do many
mighty works in your name?' 23 And then will I declare to them, `I
never knew you; depart from me, you evildoers.' 24 "Every one then who
hears these words of mine and does them will be like a wise man who
built his house upon the rock; 25 and the rain fell, and the floods
came, and the winds blew and beat upon that house, but it did not fall,
because it had been founded on the rock. 26 And every one who hears
these words of mine and does not do them will be like a foolish man who
built his house upon the sand; 27 and the rain fell, and the floods
came, and the winds blew and beat against that house, and it fell; and
great was the fall of it." 28 And when Jesus finished these sayings, the
crowds were astonished at his teaching, 29 for he taught them as one who
had authority, and not as their scribes.
Meditation: If you could forsee a threat to your life and the
lose of your home and goods, wouldn't you take the necessary precautions
to avoid such a disaster? Jesus' story of being swept away by flood
waters and wind storms must have caught the attention of his audience
who knew that terrific storms did occasionally sweep through their dry
arrid land without any warning signs. When Jesus described the builders
who were unprepared for such a life-threatening storm, he likely had the
following proverb in mind: When the storm has swept by, the wicked
are gone, but the righteous stand firm for ever (Proverbs 10:25).
What’s the significance of the story for us? The kind of foundation
we build our lives upon will determine whether we can survive the storms
and trials of life that are sure to come. Builders usually lay their
foundations when the weather and soil conditions are at their best. It
takes foresight to know how a foundation will stand up against adverse
conditions. Building a house on a flood plain, such as a dry river-bed,
is a sure bet for disaster! Jesus prefaced his story with a warning: We
may fool one another with our words, but God cannot be deceived. He sees
the heart as it truly is – with its motives, intentions, desires, and
choices (Psalm 139:2). There is only one way in which a person’s
sincerity can be proved, and that is by one’s practice. Fine words can
never replace good deeds. Our character is revealed in the choices we
make, especially when we must choose between what is true and false,
good and evil. Do you cheat on an exam or on your income taxes,
especially when it will cost you? Do you lie, or cover-up, when
disclosing the truth will cause you pain or embarrassment? A true person
is honest and reliable before God, neighbor, and oneself. Such a
person's word can be taken as trustworthy.
What can keep us from falsehood and spiritual disaster? If we make
the Lord and his word the rock and foundation of our lives, then nothing
can shake us nor keep us from God's presence and protection. Is the Lord
and his word the one sure foundation of your life?
"Lord Jesus, you are the only foundation that can hold us up when
trials and disaster threaten us. Give me the wisdom, foresight, and
strength of character I need to do what is right and good and to reject
whatever is false and contrary to your will. May I be a doer of your
word and not a hearer only."
Psalm 79:1-5,8-9
1 O God, the heathen have come into thy inheritance; they have
defiled thy holy temple; they have laid Jerusalem in ruins.
2 They have given the bodies of thy servants to the birds of the air for
food, the flesh of thy saints to the beasts of the earth.
3 They have poured out their blood like water round about Jerusalem, and
there was none to bury them.
4 We have become a taunt to our neighbors, mocked and derided by those
round about us.
5 How long, O LORD? Wilt thou be angry for ever? Will thy jealous wrath
burn like fire?
8 Do not remember against us the iniquities of our forefathers; let thy
compassion come speedily to meet us, for we are brought very low.
9 Help us, O God of our salvation, for the glory of thy name; deliver
us, and forgive our sins, for thy name's sake!
www.dailyscripture.net
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UNIVERSAL CHURCH/WORLD EVENTS |
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Pope On the Year for Priests
"The Priest Is a Slave of Christ"
VATICAN CITY, JUNE 24, 2009 ( Zenit.org).- Here is a translation of the address Benedict XVI gave today during the general audience in St. Peter's Square.
* * *
Dear brothers and sisters,
Last Friday, June 19, the solemnity of the Sacred Heart of Jesus and the day traditionally dedicated to pray for the sanctification of priests, I had the joy of inaugurating the Year for Priests. The year was proclaimed on the occasion of the 150th anniversary of the "birth into eternal life" of the Curé d'Ars, St. Jean-Baptiste Marie Vianney. Entering into the Vatican basilica for the celebration of vespers, almost as a first symbolic gesture, I paused in the Choir Chapel to venerate the relic of this saintly pastor of souls: his heart. Why a Year for Priests? Why particularly in memory of the holy Curé d'Ars, who apparently did nothing extraordinary?
Divine Providence has ordained that this personage would be placed beside that of St. Paul. As the Pauline Year is concluding, a year which was dedicated to the Apostle of the Gentiles, the epitome of an extraordinary evangelizer who made various mission trips to spread the Gospel, this new jubilee year invites us to gaze upon a poor farmer turned humble pastor, who carried out his pastoral service in a small town.
If the two saints are quite different insofar as the life experiences that marked them -- one traveled from region to region to announce the Gospel; the other remained in his little parish, welcoming thousands and thousands of faithful -- there is nevertheless something fundamental that unites them: It is their total identification with their ministry, their communion with Christ. This brought St. Paul to say: "Yet I live, no longer I, but Christ lives in me" (Galatians 2:20). St. John Vianney liked to repeat: "If we had faith, we would see God hidden in the priest like a light behind glass, like wine mixed with water."
The objective of this Year for Priests, as I wrote in the letter sent to priests for this occasion, is to support that struggle of every priest "toward spiritual perfection, on which the effectiveness of his ministry primarily depends." It is to help priests first of all -- and with them all of God's people -- to rediscover and reinvigorate their awareness of the extraordinary and indispensable gift of grace that the ordained ministry is for he who receives it, for the whole Church, and for the world, which would be lost without the real presence of Christ.
Undoubtedly, the historical and social conditions in which the Curé d'Ars lived have changed, and it is justifiable to ask oneself how it's possible for priests living in a globalized society to imitate him in the way he identified himself with his ministry. In a world in which the customary outlook on life comprehends less and less the sacred, and in its place "useful" becomes the only important category, the catholic -- and even ecclesial -- idea of the priesthood can run the risk of being emptied of the esteem that is natural to it.
It is not by chance that as much in theological environments as in concrete pastoral practice and the formation of the clergy, a contrast -- even an opposition -- is made between two distinct concepts of the priesthood. Some years ago, I noted in this regard that there is "on the one hand a social-functional understanding that defines the essence of the priesthood with the concept of 'service': service to the community in the fulfillment of a function. … On the other hand, there is the sacramental-ontological understanding, which naturally does not deny the servicial character of the priesthood, but sees it anchored in the being of the minister and considers that this being is determined by a gift called sacrament, given by the Lord through the mediation of the Church" (Joseph Ratzinger, Ministry and Life of the Priest, in Principles of Catholic Theology).
The terminological mutation of the word "priesthood" toward a meaning of "service, ministry, assignment" is as well a sign of this distinct understanding. The primacy of the Eucharist is linked to the sacramental-ontological conception, in the binomial "priest-sacrifice," while to the other [conception] would correspond the primacy of the word and service to the proclamation.
Considered carefully, these are not two opposing understandings, and the tension that nevertheless exists between them should be resolved from within. Thus the decree "Presbyterorum Ordinis" from the Second Vatican Council affirms: "Through the apostolic proclamation of the Gospel, the People of God are called together and assembled. All belonging to this people … can offer themselves as 'a sacrifice, living, holy, pleasing to God' (Rom 12:1). Through the ministry of the priests, the spiritual sacrifice of the faithful is made perfect in union with the sacrifice of Christ. He is the only mediator who in the name of the whole Church is offered sacramentally in the Eucharist and in an unbloody manner until the Lord himself comes" (No. 2).
We then ask ourselves, "What exactly does it mean, for priests, to evangelize? What is the so-called primacy of proclamation?" Jesus speaks of the proclamation of the Kingdom of God as the true objective for his coming to the world, and his proclamation is not just a "discourse." It includes, at the same time, his actions: His signs and miracles indicate that the Kingdom is now present in the world, which in the end coincides with himself. In this sense, one must recall that even in this idea of the "primacy" of proclamation, word and sign are inseparable.
Christian proclamation does not proclaim "words," but the Word, and the proclamation coincides with the very person of Christ, ontologically open to the relationship with the Father and obedient to his will. Therefore, authentic service to the Word requires from the priest that he strains toward a deep abnegation of himself, until being able to say with the Apostle, "It is not I who lives, but Christ who lives in me."
The priest cannot consider himself "lord" of the word, but rather its servant. He is not the word, but rather, as John the Baptist proclaimed, (precisely today we celebrate the birth of John the Baptist), he is the "voice" of the Word: "A voice of one crying out in the desert: 'Prepare the way of the Lord, make straight his paths'" (Mark 1:3).
Now then, to be the "voice" of the Word doesn't constitute for the priest a merely functional element. On the contrary, it presupposes a substantial "losing oneself" in Christ, participating in his mystery of death and resurrection with all of oneself: intelligence, liberty, will, and the offering of one's own body as a living sacrifice (cf. Romans 12:1-2). Only participation in the sacrifice of Christ, in his kenosis, makes the proclamation authentic! And this is the path that should be walked with Christ to the point of saying with him to the Father: Let it be done, "not what I will but what you will" (Mark 14:36). The proclamation, therefore, always implies as well the sacrifice of oneself, the condition so that the proclamation can be authentic and effective.
Alter Christus, the priest is profoundly united to the Word of the Father, who in incarnating himself, has taken the form of a slave, has made himself a slave (cf. Philippians 2:5-11). The priest is a slave of Christ in the sense that his existence, ontologically configured to Christ, takes on an essentially relational character: He is in Christ, through Christ, and with Christ at the service of man. Precisely because he belongs to Christ, the priest is radically at the service of all people: He is the minister of their salvation, of their happiness, of their authentic liberation -- maturing, in this progressive taking up of the will of Christ, in prayer, in this "remaining heart to heart" with him. This is therefore the essential condition of all proclamation, which implies participation in the sacramental offering of the Eucharist and docile obedience to the Church.
The holy Curé d'Ars often repeated with tears in his eyes: "What a frightening thing to be a priest!" And he added: "How we ought to pity a priest who celebrates Mass as if he were engaged in something routine. How wretched is a priest without interior life!"
May this Year of the Priest bring all priests to identify themselves totally with Jesus, crucified and risen, so that in imitation of St. John the Baptist, we are willing to "decrease" so that he increases; so that, following the example of the Curé d'Ars, they constantly and deeply understand the responsibility of their mission, which is sign and presence of the infinite mercy of God. Let us entrust to the Virgin, Mother of the Church, this Year for Priests just begun and all the priests of the world.
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DAILY LITURGICAL SAINT |
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June 25, 2009
Blessed
Jutta of Thuringia
(d.
1264?)
Today's
patroness of Prussia began her life amidst luxury and power but died the
death of a simple servant of the poor.
In
truth, virtue and piety were always of prime importance to Jutta and her
husband, both of noble rank. The two were set to make a pilgrimage
together to the holy places in Jerusalem, but her husband died on the
way. The newly widowed Jutta, after taking care to provide for her
children, resolved to live in a manner utterly pleasing to God. She
disposed of the costly clothes, jewels and furniture befitting one of
her rank, and became a Secular Franciscan, taking on the simple garment
of a religious.
From that point her life was utterly devoted to others: caring for the
sick, particularly lepers; tending to the poor, whom she visited in
their hovels; helping the crippled and blind with whom she shared her
own home. Many of the townspeople of Thuringia laughed at how the
once-distinguished lady now spent all her time. But Jutta saw the face
of God in the poor and felt honored to render whatever services she
could.
About the year 1260, not long before her death, Jutta lived near the
non-Christians in eastern Germany. There she built a small hermitage and
prayed unceasingly for their conversion. She has been venerated for
centuries as the special patron of Prussia.
Comment:
Jesus once said that a camel can pass through a needle’s eye more easily
than a rich person can enter God’s realm. That’s pretty scary news for
us. We may not have great fortunes, but we who live in the West enjoy a
share of the world’s goods that people in the rest of the world cannot
imagine. Much to the amusement of her neighbors, Jutta disposed of her
wealth after her husband’s death and devoted her life to caring for
those who had no means. Should we follow her example, people will
probably laugh at us, too. But God will smile.
http://www.americancatholic.org/Features/SaintofDay
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GENERAL
MARIOLOGY |
THE DIVINE HISTORY AND
LIFE
OF THE
VIRGIN MOTHER OF GOD
BOOK FOUR
Describing
the Anxieties of Saint Joseph on Account of the Pregnancy of
Most Holy
Mary,the Birth of Christ our Lord, His Circumcision,the
Adoration
of the Kings, the Presentation of the Infant Jesus
In the
Temple, the Flight into Egypt, the Death of the
Holy
Innocents, and the Return to Nazareth.
CHAPTER IV.
CHRIST OUR SAVIOR IS BORN OF
THE VIRGIN MARY IN BETHLEHEM, JUDA.
Saint Joseph, mindful of the majesty of his heavenly
Spouse (which, it seemed to him, She was forgetting in her ardent
longing for humiliation), besought Her not to deprive Him of this work,
which he considered as his alone; and he hastened to set about cleaning
the floor and the corners of the cave, although the humble Queen
continued to assist him therein. As the angels were then present in
visible forms, they were (according to our mode of speaking) abashed at
such eagerness for humiliation, and they speedily emulated with each
other to join in this work; or rather, in order to say it more
succinctly, in the shortest time possible they had cleansed and set in
order that cave, filling it with holy fragrance. Saint Joseph started a
fire with the material which he had brought for that purpose. As it was
very cold, they sat at the fire in order to get warm. They partook of
the food which they had brought, and they ate this, their frugal
supper, with incomparable joy of their souls. The Queen of heaven was so
absorbed and taken up with the thought of the impending mystery of her
divine delivery, that She would not have partaken of food if She had not
been urged thereto by obedience to her spouse.
After their supper they gave thanks to the Lord as
was their custom. Having spent a short time in this prayer and
conferring about the mysteries of the incarnate Word, the most prudent
Virgin felt the approach of the most blessed Birth. She requested her
spouse saint Joseph to betake himself to rest and sleep as the night was
already far advanced. The man of God yielded to the request of his
Spouse and urged Her to do the same; and for this purpose he arranged
and prepared a sort of couch with the articles of wear in their
possession, making use of a crib or manger, that had been left by the
shepherds for their animals. Leaving most holy Mary in the portion
of the cave thus furnished, saint Joseph retired to a corner of the
entrance, where he began to pray. He was immediately visited by the
divine Spirit and felt a most sweet and extraordinary influence, by
which he was wrapt and elevated into an ecstasy. In it was shown him all
that passed during that night in this blessed cave; for he did not
return to consciousness until his heavenly Spouse called him. Such was
the sleep which saint Joseph enjoyed in that night, more exalted and
blessed than that of Adam in paradise (Gen. 21, 2).
The Queen of all creatures was called from her
resting-place by a loud voice of the Most High, which strongly and
sweetly raised Her above all created things and caused Her to feel new
effects of divine power; for this was one of the most singular and
admirable ecstasies of her most holy life. Immediately also She was
filled with new enlightenment and divine influences, such as I have
described in other places, until She reached the clear vision of the
Divinity. The veil fell and She saw intuitively the Godhead itself in
such glory and plenitude of insight, as all the capacity of men and
angels could not describe or fully understand. All the knowledge of the
Divinity and humanity of her most holy Son, which She had ever received
in former visions was renewed and, moreover, other secrets of the
inexhaustible archives of the bosom of God were revealed to Her. I have
not ideas or words sufficient and adequate for expressing what I have
been allowed to see of these sacraments by the divine light; and their
abundance and multiplicity convince me of the poverty and want of proper
expression in created language.
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DIVINE MERCY
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Divine Mercy In my soul
The Mercy of the Lord I will sing Forever.
Divine Mercy in my soul.
Sr. Faustina, Diary
Notebook IV
September 10, 1937. I learned in the course
of meditation that the purer the soul, the greater her communion with God on
the spiritual level. She pays little heed to the senses and their protests.
God is a Spirit, and so I love Him in spirit and in truth.
When I heard how dangerous it was to be at the gate these days because of
revolutionary disturbances and how many evil people have a hatred for
convents, I went in and had a talk with the Lord and asked Him to so arrange
it that no evil person would dare come to the gate. Then I heard these
words:
My daughter, the moment you went to the gate I set a Cherub over it to guard
it. Be at peace.
After returning from my conversation with
the Lord, I saw a little white cloud and, in it, a Cherub with his hands
joined. His gaze was like lightening, and I understood how the fire of God’s
love burns in that look…
September 14, 1937. Exaltation of the Holy Cross.
Today I saw what great opposition this priest [Father Sopocko] is
experiencing in regard to this whole matter. Even devout souls who are
zealous for God’s glory are opposing him. That he is not discouraged by all
this is due to a special grace of God.
Jesus:
My daughter, do you think you have written enough about my mercy? What you
have written is but a drop compared to the ocean. I am Love and mercy
itself. There is no misery that could be a match for My mercy, neither will
misery exhaust it, because as it is being granted – it increases. The soul
which will trust in My mercy is most fortunate, because I myself take care
of it.
I
experience great torments of soul when I see God offended. Today I
recognized that mortal sins were being committed not far from our door. It
was evening, I prayed earnestly in the chapel, and then I went to scourge
myself. When I knelt down to pray, however, the Lord allowed me to
experience who a soul rejected by God suffers. It seems to me that my heart
was torn to pieces, and at the same time I understood how much such a soul
wounds the most merciful Heart of Jesus. The poor creature does not want to
accept God’s mercy. The more God has pursued a soul with His mercy, the more
just will he be towards it.
My
secretary, write that I am more generous toward sinners than toward the
just. It was for their sake that I came down from heaven; it was for their
sake that My Blood was spilled. Let them not fear to approach Me; they are
most in need of My mercy.
September 16, 1937. I wanted very much to make a Holy hour before the
Blessed Sacrament today. But God’s will was otherwise. At eight o’clock I
was seized with such violent pains that I had to go to bed at once. I was
convulsed with pain for three hours; that is, until eleven o’clock at night.
No medicine had any effect on me, and whatever I swallowed I threw up. At
times, the pains caused me to lose consciousness. Jesus had me realize that
in this way I took part in His agony in the garden, and that He himself
allowed these sufferings in order to offer reparation to God for the souls
murdered in the wombs of wicked mothers. I have gone through these
sufferings three times now. They always start at eight o’clock in the
evening and last until eleven. No medicine can lessen these sufferings. When
eleven o’clock comes, they cease by themselves, and I fall asleep at that
moment. The following day, I feel very weak.
This happened to me for the first time when I was at the sanatorium. The
doctors couldn’t get to the bottom of it, and no injection or medicine
helped me at all or did I myself have any idea of what the sufferings were
about. I told the doctor that never before in my life had I experienced such
sufferings, and he declared he did not know what sort of pains they are. But
now I understand the nature of these pains, because the Lord himself has
made this known to me… yet when I think that I may perhaps suffer in this
way again, I tremble. But I don’t know whether I’ll ever again suffer in
this way; I leave that to God. What it pleases God to send, I will accept
with submission and love. If only I could save even one soul from murder by
means of these sufferings!
On the day after these sufferings, I can sense the condition of souls and
their disposition towards God; I am pervaded with true knowledge.
I receive Holy Communion in the manner of the angels so to speak. My soul is
filled with God’s light and nourishes itself from Him. My feelings are as if
dead. This is a purely spiritual union with God; it is a great predominance
of spirit over nature.
The Lord gave me knowledge of the graces which He has been constantly
lavishing on me. This light pierced me through and through, and I came to
understand the inconceivable favors that God has been bestowing on me. I
stayed in my cell for a long act of thanksgiving, lying face down on the
ground and shedding tears of gratitude. I could not rise from the ground
because, whenever I tried to do so, God’s light gave me new knowledge of His
Grace. It was only at the third attempt that I was able to get up. As His
child, I felt that everything the heavenly Father possessed was equally
mine. He himself lifted me from the ground up to His Heart. I felt that
everything that existed was exclusively mine, but I had no desire for it
all, because God alone is enough for me.

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CATHOLIC TEACHING/CONVICTION/TESTIMONY |
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Testimony of Dr.
McArthur Hill, former Abortion Provider
(This testimony was originally given
at a "Meet the Abortion Providers" workshop sponsored by the Pro-life
Action League of Chicago, directed by Joe Scheidler. Priests for Life
offers their video, "Inside the Abortion Industry," containing excerpts
of the testimonies of many former providers.
Contact us for more details.)
(continued)
When I looked to the Christian Life
Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention for materials to use for
our Life Awareness Sunday, I discovered that their pamphlet dealing with
abortion reflected more of a pro-choice view than a Pro-Life one. There
was not one single Biblical quotation and the references included the
research arm of Planned Parenthood (The Alan Gutmacher Institute), and
the general counsel for Planned Parenthood was also listed. One of the
pamphlets which the Christian Life Commission of the Southern Baptist
Convention was distributing was even entitled, "Planned Parenthood." I
was crushed to find out that the Christian Life Commission executive
director and several ethicists from Southern Baptist seminaries had
signed a letter of concern for the Religious Coalition for Abortion
Rights in 1977.
About the same time I also discovered a
quotation in the February 1973 issue of Christianity Today which said:
"I have always felt that it was only after a child was born and had life
separate from its mother that it became an individual person, and it has
always therefore seemed to me that what is best for the mother and for
the future should be allowed." This statement was made by none other
than Dr. W. A. Crisswell of First Baptist Church, Dallas, Texas, the
largest church in the Southern Baptist Convention. This pro-choice
statement crushed me.
Have you ever turned onto a highway,
pushed down on the accelerator, reached a cruising speed, and then saw
something just a little unfamiliar and thought you were going in the
wrong direction? Well, suddenly I thought just that. I had to be going
in the wrong direction. If the executive director of the Christian Life
Commission, several Southern Baptist ethics professors and Dr. Crisswell,
who is known throughout the Southern Baptist Convention as the pastor,
felt that abortion was okay with God, who was I, as a newborn in Christ,
to challenge that? Could it be that they were right and I was wrong?
So what I did at that time was pull off
the highway and survey the surroundings. I reread many of the books that
I had read earlier. I read in Dr. Paul Brown's book, Fearfully and
Wonderfully Made, "Our brains can be so occupied sorting through the
blizzard of information that our response is helpless inactivity." Well,
I felt that helpless inactivity. But Dr. Brown then goes on to say: "For
this reason, I think the Bible encourages us to ground ourselves in
contact with God and His Word so thoroughly that our Christian actions
become like reflexes to us."
I'd been reading my Bible and I turned to
it again for guidance. I looked for something like: I am the Lord God
and I detest the shedding of innocent blood. Thou shalt not kill unborn
children within their mothers, wombs. The punishment of Sodom and
Gomorrah will fall upon any nation which allows abortion, but if you
choose life I will bless you.
That's what I wanted to find. But I could
never find it in one place in that way. In seeking God's prohibition of
abortion in the Scriptures, I made an amazing discovery, and that is the
word "abortion" is never mentioned in the Bible. But then again, neither
is nuclear war, AIDS, pornography, and a whole host of other evils which
befall modern man. I was drawn to the Sixth Commandment in Exodus 20:13,
Thou Shalt Not Kill, which in the new international version reads: Thou
Shalt Not Murder.
What evidence do we have that this
applies to the unborn? I returned to the Scriptures and I read in Psalm
139:13-16: As David sings before the Lord, for you created my inmost
being, you knit me together in my mother's womb. I praise you because I
am fearfully and wonderfully made. Your works are wonderful. I know that
full well. My frame was not hidden from you when I was made in the
secret place. When I was woven together in the depths of the earth, your
eyes saw my unformed body. All the days ordained for me were written in
your book before one of them came to be.
What a beautiful description of fetal
development! Your eyes saw my unformed body and you knit me together
in my mother's womb.
(to be continued)
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