| A Pastoral
Letter To The People Of The Diocese Of Stockton -
October 1, 2005
From Bishop Stephen Blaire
(To be read on the weekend of October 1-2)
Commemorating the 10th Anniversary of the Encyclical
of Pope John Paul II “The Gospel of Life”
How lovely is the dwelling of God who lives
not in buildings made by hand but in every human heart and
in all the wonder of the created heavens and earth! All is
a gift of the Creator. All is a reflection of God. Every heart
beat pounds out the image of God in the dignity of the human
person. Every sun rises and sets over the whole earth; over
the just and the unjust. The unfathomable mystery of God sustains
creation in being and has sent a Savior to restore all creation
to its original goodness. God has loved the world so much
that He sent His own Son to be our redeemer and savior –
so precious is the gift of life and the sacredness of the
human person.
John Paul II’s great encyclical “The
Gospel of Life” was written to unfold the glory of creation
and to promote and defend the dignity of every human life.
He wrote: “The Gospel of God’s love
for man, the Gospel of the dignity of the person and the Gospel
of life are a single and indivisible Gospel.”
All the attacks on life threaten this human
dignity: “Poverty, hunger, endemic diseases, violence
and war… murder, abortion, euthanasia, torture, coercion
of the will, sub-human living conditions, slavery, prostitution,
trafficking in women and children.” “They poison,”
he said “human society.” He mentioned as particularly
sinister the evils of abortion and euthanasia which are “becoming
socially acceptable.”
To be pro-life is not to be an enemy of freedom.
We honor the creator by respecting life. As the encyclical
clearly teaches: When we “respect, protect, love and
serve life, every human life” we find “justice,
development, true freedom, peace and happiness.”
During October, the month dedicated to respect
life, in our diocese we will focus our attention on two end
of life issues: Euthanasia and abortion; on the Church’s
opposition to the death penalty; and on new attention to the
quality of life and to ecology through environmental justice.
Life is not a thing, a commodity, or a
piece of property to be controlled. Life is God’s gift
to us. We are the stewards entrusted with this precious gift.
We will live life fully if we keep our eyes on Jesus Christ,
who is the Way, the Truth and the Life. It is Christ who gives
us the fullness of life.
Last Update February 28, 2007
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