Can
you be Catholic and pro-RH, too?
Even
as the contentious RH Bill 4244 is undergoing amendment in Congress, the Church
perseveres in its fight for human life.
Increasingly virulent attacks against the Catholic Church continue to be
launched in media, especially social media, branding her as “the biggest
stumbling block” to the approval of the bill that sees population control as
the solution to poverty.
Unable
to resist the gravity of President Noynoy’s agenda, RH proponents voted to end
the debate a day ahead of schedule. They
said it was a tiresome, repetitive exercise in futility, stubbornly refusing to
see that questions had to be raised over and over again because their answers dismally
failed to deliver the truth.
Through
the RH debates, a glaring truth surfaces: central to the head-on collision is
the difference in the way the two camps regard the human being.
RH
Bill sees the person (especially the poor person) as a number in the arithmetic
of population statistics; the Church sees the person, any person, as a child of
God.
RH
Bill sees the human body as something owned, managed and used by its owner
alone; the Church teaches that the human body is created by God and to be used according
to a divine purpose.
RH
Bill believes sexual pleasure is a human right that need not result in
pregnancy; the Church maintains that sexual pleasure has its place in the
divine plan, and that a new human being (unwanted or not) is always another
gift from God.
RH
Bill asserts that a person may freely resort to all scientific gadgets, drugs, services
and devices that impede unwanted fertilization or bring pregnancy to a halt;
the Church teaches that the human body, being the temple of the Holy Spirit,
must be free from defilement brought on by inventions that interfere with
nature’s life-giving processes.
RH
Bill sees a new human being (especially if poor) only as another mouth to feed,
clothe, shelter, a burden to the country’s economy, progress, and development;
the Church maintains that the new human being should always be welcome in a
nation that runs its affairs with justice and equality for all.
RH
Bill implies that the person is an entity that can control his destiny by ordering
his reproductive system—a little more than any animate species, actually; the
Church is certain that every human being has a soul, and therefore may not be
treated as a mere pawn in a population control game.
The
above mentioned difference in thought is not readily grasped by all, as may be
observed from public reaction. If you
pay attention to the exchange of comments tailing the news reports online, you might
cringe from the fierceness with which RH supporters assault the Church. They harangue the bishops, berate the
priests, insult the ordinary anti-RH folks, and even rebuke the Pope for being
outdated, narrow-minded and “like all other Catholics, hypocritical”. For them, we are all stupid, ignorant,
self-righteous, an impediment to progress, a curse on society. Such frontal attacks are no longer the domain
of legitimate mainstream columnists or radio-TV commentators; they are all
over—Facebook, Twitter, blogs, forums of all sorts. They even divide families, while friends
avoid discussing them.
It’s
even more saddening when the critics claim to be Catholic. “I am a Catholic but I am all for RH” is
their usual battle cry, emboldened, perchance, by someone who has said not a
few times, “I am a congressman who happens to be Catholic, but I am not a
Catholic congressman.”
How
can one be Catholic and not let his faith inform his actions in the world? How can one claim to be Catholic and not
fight for the values that the Catholic Church upholds, particularly, in this
case, the right to life? How can one be
at peace as a Catholic and pass a law exposing the poor to terrible danger by keeping
them ignorant of the damage that contraception does to their health? How can one be Catholic and blind the poor to
the truth that they possess innate strength to help them overcome difficulties
without endangering their children’s future?
How can one be Catholic and rob the poor of faith in themselves, in
their fellowmen, and in a provident God?
A
Catholic and at the same time fighting for a culture of death?
If
there is one thing this brouhaha over a contentious bill is underlining, it is
that the time is ripe, indeed, for the New Evangelization. And that’s the truth.

