Massacre of the Innocents - Giotto Di Bondone (c1300)
The massacre of the Innocents ordered by King Herod shortly after Christ's birth, never ceases to horrify all decent minded people.Yet this was just a foretaste of the horrors currently inflicted on literally millions of unborn children throughout the world. In the USA alone it is estimated that there are one million abortions each year - this includes the estimated abortions induced by the 'morning after' abortifacient pill. Add to this the countless numbers of abortions every year in Western Europe, Russia, China, Asia, and the rest of the world, and it is easy to give way to despair and a feeling of helplessness in the fight against such widespread evil. We see governments throughout the world endorsing the killing of the unborn, and going even further by authorising scientific research entailing the destruction of vast numbers of human embryos.
Yet we must not give up the fight against such evil, for God created man in His own image and likeness, and He was pleased; and God is good and God's creation is good. God is Life and the Light of Men. Evil is the dark world of Satan, the antithesis of all that brings us peace in this life and eternal happiness in the next; the antithesis of good, the antithesis of God. We can do nothing without God, and He has no need for us, yet we are the instruments He uses in His Divine plan - we are His soldiers and we must carry the fight to the enemy.
Below is an article I recently found on the C-Fam website, which I don't remember seeing before, and which is reproduced below for the information of others who also may not have seen it. It incorporates a Petition - the 'One of Us' petition, which if sufficiently endorsed, could force the European Parliament to consider a ban on funding research that destroys human embryos. So far it has obtained over 850,000 signatories, but it needs another 150,000 by November 1. Overall this Petition is doing really well, but the numbers of signatories from the UK so far are disappointingly low. I have now signed it, and if you have not already done so, ask that you sign it too. A successful outcome to this initiative will be a victory for good over evil, life over death; a victory for the God of love, over Satan, the apotheosis of hate.
Please see the article reproduced below, and forward the Petition (link included in article) to family, friends, and like-minded people; thank you. PS. Don't forget to sign it! When authenticating your signature I recommend the aural version, as I tried probably a dozen times on the visual - on every occasion unsuccessfully. The aural system worked but I suggest to write down the numbers before entering them on the Petition. Excuse me for labouring this, but it was a bit of a nightmare!
*********************
The “One of Us”
petition got a boost in May when Pope Francis endorsed it.
BRUSSELS, August 16 (C-FAM)
'Europe's most audacious effort to protect life is a few thousand signatures away from forcing the European Parliament to schedule a debate on protecting every human life from conception'
Written by Stefano Gennarini, J.D.
Every person, no matter how young, “deserves respect” according to the One of Us initiative that has garnered over 850,000 signatures. If it gathers 1 million signatories by November 1, the European Parliament may have to consider a ban on funding research that destroys human embryos.
The European Commission, the executive branch of the European
Union (EU), would have to respond to the sponsors of One of Us under a new
procedure created by the Lisbon Treaty. The Commission would table the item for
discussion in the European Parliament.
Proponents say One of Us is about protecting the “dignity, the
right to life and the integrity of every human being” including embryos. This
is consistent with the European Court of Justice’s decision in the famous Brüstle v. Greenpeace case that, under EU directives, the
results of research that destroys human embryos cannot be patented.
The Court reasoned that human embryos constitute the beginning of
the development of human life and such patents would not be compatible with
human dignity.
Not everyone in Europe looks forward to a debate about human life and dignity at the European Parliament. Earlier this summer an Austrian youth
organization tried to host an event at the European Parliament to draw
attention to the One of Us initiative, but Irish EU official Jim Higgins
refused their application. He reportedly told them their display was “too controversial”
without specifying what was controversial about it. The organization was not
allowed to hold their event despite the youth organization’s willingness to
change whatever Higgins found offensive.
While abortion is legal in most of Europe , research that destroys
human
embryos is widely frowned upon. In many quarters it is
reminiscent of brutal
scientific experiments on humans.
One of Us would be the second EU citizen’s initiatives to succeed.
The other seeks to declare water a human right and has gathered 1.3 million
signatures in Germany and 400,000 elsewhere in Europe .
For a petition to come before the European Commission, 1 million
signatures must be collected within a year of being launched and come from
seven or more of the 28 EU countries, with established quotas for each.
Obtaining the required signatures in the timeframe is no simple
feat. Nine other initiatives that expire this year are likely to fail,
including one chosen by the European Commission as the first citizen’s
initiative. Fraternite2020, about more funding for the popular Erasmus student
exchange program, could not muster 100,000 signatures.
One of Us has
already reached the necessary quota in 10 countries, and now looks to bulk up
the total volume. Surprisingly, it is short on signatures from countries that
are traditionally pro-life and have laws that protect the unborn like Ireland and Malta .
One of Us has been endorsed by several European pro-life organizations.
Prior to his retirement in February, Pope Benedict XVI gave a nod to its
proponents in one of his last public appearances at a Sunday Angelus.
(ack. C-Fam)
No comments:
Post a Comment