Kansas Outline Title





THE PROTECTION OF LIFE


The Knights of Columbus is irrevocably committed to life. All of our programs and activities are geared in some way to improve the quality of life, both spiritually and materially, especially among the dispossessed and marginalized of our society. Moreover, wherever life itself is threatened, the Knights stands firm.  In accordance with the teachings of the Catholic Church, the Knights of Columbus defend human life from the moment of conception until natural death.  Why?  Read the brochure published by the National Conference of Catholic Bishops titled "The Catholic Church Is Pro-Life. " Read also the "amicus" brief, written by the late Mother Teresa of Calcutta, and filed with the United States Supreme Court.

The Kansas Knights promote life with its many programs, including our newest state program "Evangelium Vitae Award - Gospel of Life." Another program includes our annual baby shower program in January. Also, many councils plan a Pro-Life celebration on the 21st of January, the sad anniversary of the Supreme Court's Roe v. Wade decision allowing unlimited abortions in the United States. Many parishes have a pro-life memorial on their parish or cemetery grounds.  A listing of those memorials is kept by the Knights.




Why the Church Is Pro-Life!


The following is reprinted from a brochure titled "The Catholic Church is a Pro-Life Church, " published by the National Conference of Catholic Bishops; Secretariat for Pro-Life Activities


Why is the Catholic Church such a strong pro-life voice?

The reasons are not difficult to understand. One official Church document on the subject puts it this way:

The first right of the human person is his life ...It does not belong to society, nor does it belong to public authority in any form to recognize this right for some and not for others; all discrimination is evil...

Any discrimination based on the various stages of life is no more justified than any other discrimination. ...In reality, respect for human life is called for from the time that the process of generation begins. From the time that the ovum is fertilized, a life is begun which is neither that of the father nor of the mother; it is rather the life of a new human being with his own growth.




All persons, not just Catholics, can know from the scientific and medical evidence that what grows in a mother's womb is a new, distinct human being. All persons can understand that each human being -- without discrimination -- merits respect. At the very least, respecting human life excludes the deliberate and direct destruction of life -- and that is exactly what abortion is.

Catholics are also pro-life because our Christian tradition is pro-life. As Pope John Paul II says, Christians believe that "all human life is sacred, for it is created in the image and likeness of God." Aborting an unborn child destroys a unique creation which God has called specially into existence.

Christian teaching also obliges us to follow in the footsteps of Jesus Christ, who spoke and acted strongly and compassionately in favor of the most despised and vulnerable persons in society. Jesus touched lepers, spoke with prostitutes, and showed special mercy and tenderness to the sick, the poor and children. Our society today has many vulnerable persons -- including women in crisis pregnancies as well as unborn children whose lives may legally be ended at any time during pregnancy, and for any reason. In the tradition of Jesus Christ, Catholics have a responsibility to speak and act in defense of these persons. This is part of our "preferential option" for the poor and powerless.

The Church's mission to defend human life applies over the entire course of life, from conception to natural death. And so the Catholic Church has been a strong supporter of the civil rights movement and a leader in international relief and development efforts. Catholic hospitals and other healthcare facilities form the largest network of private, not-for-profit healthcare providers in the United States. Catholic Charities USA -- one of a number of Catholic charitable groups -- is currently the single largest private provider of social services to all Americans, regardless of race, creed or national origin.

The Catholic Church strives to be a prophetic voice, speaking out to protest injustices and indignities against the human person. Catholics will continue in this work, whether our words are popular or unpopular.

Since its beginnings, Christianity has maintained a firm and clear teaching on the sacredness of human life. Jesus Christ emphasized this in his teaching and ministry. Abortion was rejected in the earliest known Christian manual of discipline, the Didache.

Early Church fathers likewise condemned abortion as the killing of innocent human life. A third century Father of the Church, Tertullian, called it " accelerated homicide." Early Church councils considered it one of the most serious crimes. Even during periods when Aristotle's theory of " delayed ensoulment" led Church law to assign different penalties to earlier and later abortions, abortion at any stage was still considered a grave evil.

When biologists in the 19th century learned more about the process of conception, the Church altered its legal distinction between early and late abortions out of respect for reason and biology.

Since that time, science has only further confirmed the humanity of the child growing in the womb. Official Church teaching insists, to the present day, that a just society protects life before as well as after birth.




Church Documents Over the Years Upholding the Sanctity of All Life
The SECOND VATICAN COUNCIL
Pastoral Constitution On The Church In The Modern World ("Gaudium et Spes").Para 27

"Whatever is hostile to life itself, such as any kind of homicide, genocide, abortion, euthanasia and voluntary suicide; whatever violates the integrity of the human person...; whatever is offensive to human dignity, such as subhuman living conditions, arbitrary imprisonment, deportation, slavery, prostitution and trafficking in women and children; degrading conditions of work which treat laborers as as mere instruments of profit... all these and the like are a disgrace..."

 
 
TERTULLIAN
3rd Cent.

"For us, killing and murder being forbidden once and for all, it is not permitted to destroy what is conceived in the mother's womb. To hinder the birth of a child is a faster way to murder. It makes little difference whether one destroys a life already born or prevents it from coming to birth. It is a human being, for the whole fruit is already present."

The letter of BARNABAS
2nd Cent.

"You shall not murder a child by abortion, nor kill it after birth."

The DIDACHE
2nd Cent.

"You shall not commit murder. You shall not commit adultery. You shall not corrupt the young. You shall not commit fornication. You shall not steal. You shall not kill an unborn child or murder a newborn infant. "

There are over Seventy memorials to LIFE erected by Knight's Councils and parishes throughout the State of Kansas. Does your Council have one erected? See the list:

Kansas Knights of Columbus Memorials to Life




Pro-Life Memorials In Kansas

Sponsored totally or in part by the Kansas State Knights of Columbus Councils

Click here to see list of Kansas Councils who have erected Pro-Life Monuments and/or Roadsigns listed by Council Number.


Click here to see list of Kansas Councils who have erected Pro-Life Monuments and/or Roadsigns listed by City.




Recalling America -- by Mother Teresa


This "amicus" brief, written by Mother Teresa, was filed before the U.S. Supreme Court on behalf of the cases of Loce v. New Jersey & Krail et al. v. New Jersey.

I hope you will count it no presumption that I seek your leave to address you on behalf of the unborn child. Like that child I can be called an outsider. I am not an American citizen. My parents were Albanian. I was born before the First World War in a part of what was not yet, and is no longer, Yugoslavia. In many senses I know what it is like to be without a country. I also know what it is like to feel an adopted citizen of other lands. When I was still a young girl I traveled to India. I found my work among the poor and the sick of that nation, and I have lived there ever since.

Since 1950 I have worked with my many sisters from around the world as one of the Missionaries of Charity. Our congregation now has over four hundred foundations in more than one hundred countries, including the United States of America. We have almost five thousand sisters. We care for those who are often treated as outsiders in their own communities by their own neighbors - the starving, the crippled, the impoverished and the diseased, from the old woman with a brain tumor in Calcutta to the young man with AIDS in New York City. A special focus of our care are mothers and their children. This includes mothers who feel pressured to sacrifice their unborn child by want, neglect, despair and philosophies and governmental policies that promote the dehumanization of inconvenient human life. And it includes the children themselves, innocent and utterly defenseless, who are at the mercy of those who would deny their humanity. So, in a sense, my sisters and those we serve are all outsiders together. At the same time, we are supremely conscious of the common bonds of humanity that unite us and transcend national boundaries.

In another sense, no one in the world who prizes liberty and human rights can feel anything but a strong kinship with America. Yours is the one great nation in all of history that was founded on the precept of equal rights and respect for all humankind, for the poorest and weakest of us as well as the richest and strongest. As your Declaration of Independence put it, in words that have never lost their power to stir the heart: "We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men are created equal; that they are endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness..." A nation founded on these principles holds a sacred trust: to stand as an example to the rest of the world, to climb ever higher in its practical realization of the ideals of human dignity, brotherhood, and mutual respect... Your constant efforts in fulfillment of that mission, far more than your size or your wealth or your military might,... have made America an inspiration to all mankind.

It must be recognized that your model was never one of realized perfection, but of ceaseless aspiration. From the outset, for example, America denied the African slave his freedom and human dignity. But in time you righted that wrong, albeit at an incalculable cost in human suffering and loss of life. Your impetus has almost always been toward a fuller, more all-embracing conception and assurance of the rights that your founding fathers recognized as inherent and God-given. Yours has ever been an inclusive, not an exclusive society. And your steps, though they may have paused or faltered now and then, have been pointed in the right direction and have trod the right path. The task has not always been an easy one, and each new generation has faced its own challenges and temptations. But in a uniquely courageous and inspiring way, America has kept faith.

Yet there has been one infinitely tragic and destructive departure from those American ideals in recent memory. It was in this Court's own decision in Roe v. Wade (1973) to exclude the unborn child from the human family. You ruled that a mother, in consultation with her doctor, has broad discretion, guaranteed against infringement by the United States Constitution, to choose to destroy her unborn child. Your opinion stated that you did not need to " resolve the difficult question of when life begins." That question is inescapable. If the right to life is an inherent and inalienable right, it must surely obtain wherever human life exists. No one can deny that the unborn child is a distinct being, that it is human, and that it is alive. It is unjust, therefore, to deprive the unborn child of its fundamental right to life on the basis of its age, size, or condition of dependency. It was a sad infidelity to America's highest ideals when this Court said that it did not matter, or could not be determined, when the inalienable right to life began for the child in its mother's womb.

America needs no word from me to see how your decision in Roe v. Wade has deformed a great nation. The so-called right to abortion has pitted mothers against their children and women against men. It has sown violence and discord at the heart of the most intimate human relationships. It has aggravated the derogation of the father's role in an increasingly fatherless society. It has portrayed the greatest of gifts - a child - as a competitor, an intrusion, and an inconvenience. It has nominally accorded mothers unfettered dominion over the independent lives of their physically dependent sons and daughters. And, in granting this unconscionable power, it has exposed many women to unjust and selfish demands from their husbands or other sexual partners.

Human rights are not a privilege conferred by government. They are every human being's entitlement by virtue of his humanity. The right to life does not depend, and must not be declared contingent, on the pleasure of anyone else, not even a parent or a sovereign. The Constitutional Court of the Federal Republic of Germany recently ruled that "the unborn child is entitled to life independently of acceptance by its mother; this is an elementary and inalienable right that emanates from the dignity of a human being." Americans must feel justly proud that Germany in 1993 was able to recognize the sanctity of human life. You must weep that your own government, at present, seems blind to this truth.

I have no new teaching for America. I seek only to recall you to faithfulness to what you once taught the world. Your nation was founded on the proposition - very old as a moral precept, but startling and innovative as a political insight - that human life is a gift of immeasurable worth, and that it deserves, always and everywhere, to be treated with the utmost dignity and respect. I urge the Court to take the opportunity presented by the petition in these cases to consider the fundamental question of when human life begins and to declare without equivocation the inalienable rights to which it possesses.




Mother Teresa was the founder and Mother Superior of the Order of the Missionaries of Charity, based in Calcutta, India. She died on September 5, 1997 and was declared Blessed by the Church on October 19, 2003.

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