Monday, May 28, 2018

Irish Bishop delivers message as Ireland votes to legally kill babies

Ireland: Bishop Kevin Doran Reacts to Pro-Abortion Vote
Two-Thirds of Voters Favored Lifting Restrictions

Bishop Kevin Doran of the Diocese of Elphin on May 26, 2018, stressed in a pastoral message that: “Every human being without exception has an inherent right to life which comes from God, in whose image we are all made.”
His message came in the wake of the May 25 referendum in Ireland in which two-thirds of voters approved the repeal of the 8th amendment to the Irish Constitutions, which prohibited abortion except when necessary to save the mother’s life.
Bishop Doran, who chairs the Irish Bishop’s conference committee on bioethics, encouraged Catholics to have hope in the proclamation of the Gospel of Life. He reminded readers that in countries with liberal abortion laws, Christians continued to bear witness to the truth.
Bishop Doran’s Full Message
As we awake to the reality that Irish people have voted by a significant majority for abortion, my thoughts go out to the thousands of good people, across our Diocese and across the nation, who worked so hard to protect the right to life both of women and their unborn children. I include among them our clergy who have sought to offer pastoral leadership. Huge numbers of you, motivated by real compassion, also voted No. I share your sadness.
There will be plenty of time for analysis in the days ahead. For now, I want to encourage you with the thought that what was true yesterday remains true today. Every human being without exception has an inherent right to life which comes from God, in whose image we are all made.
In many countries where abortion has been legal for years, Christians continue to bear faithful witness. That hope must inspire us now as we proclaim anew the Gospel of Life, both in the political arena and in the renewal of our pastoral outreach. As Church, we will continue to explore effective ways to support women and their unborn children, families in difficulty and women who have had an abortion. I will be inviting people to actively engage in conversation about the shaping of that pastoral outreach in the coming months. We also need to find new ways of helping Irish women and men in this generation to rediscover the dignity of human life from conception to natural death.
St John speaks of Jesus as “a light shining in the darkness; a light that the darkness cannot overcome” (Jn. 1). My prayer for you is that the light of Christ will fill your hearts, especially in these days, so that you in your turn may be “a light to the world”. (Mt. 5)

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