By Fr. Frank Pavone
Pontifical Council for the Family
"If anyone does sin, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the
righteous one" (1John2:1). The Lord Jesus is our Advocate. "He always lives to
make intercession for us" (see Hebrews 7:25, Rom.8:34).
Yet the Lord Jesus promised on the night before He died, "I will ask the
Father, and he will give you another Advocate to be with you always, the Spirit
of truth" (John 14:16-17).
What is an advocate? An advocate pleads our cause, takes our side, conducts
our defense. When we cannot pray, the Advocate prays within us (see Rom.8:26).
When we cannot save ourselves, the Advocate saves us and lifts us up. When we
dare not approach the God we have offended by sin, the Advocate gives us
confidence by speaking words of pardon and mercy.
Our age needs an advocate more than ever, because of the culture of death,
and what the Holy Father has called a "conspiracy against life," a "war of the
powerful against the weak" (see The Gospel of Life, #12). We need an
advocate that can assure us that no sin of which we repent is beyond
forgiveness. We need an advocate, furthermore, to assure us that we can indeed
embark upon a new culture of life.
But as people filled with the Holy Spirit, we do not only have an
advocate; we become advocates. "As the Father has sent me, so I send
you," the Lord said, as He breathed the Holy Spirit upon the apostles (John)
"When the Advocate comes, ...he will testify to me. And you also testify..."(John
15:26-27).
We also testify. We also advocate. If we cry out for mercy, can we indeed
neglect the cries of others for mercy? If we know that we cannot save ourselves,
can we be indifferent to others who cannot save themselves?
Sometimes in speaking of the babies in danger of abortion, we say that we all
"were once in their position." Indeed we were. But in another way we still
are. We still need to be saved. We cannot rescue ourselves from death. We
still cannot speak for ourselves.
When the Holy Spirit came at Pentecost, He appeared as tongues of
fire. He gave speech to the apostles, whose fear had wrapped them in silence.
Despite great danger to themselves, they went forth and proclaimed Christ.
The Holy Spirit still comes, and we are still called to proclaim Christ. An
essential aspect of that proclamation is "to proclaim good news to the
poor...liberty to captives" (Is, Lk) The poor are not just those who have
little. The poor are those who have no help but God. There is no group of people
more helpless and more in need of an advocate that the children in the womb.
When we are filled with the Holy Spirit, the "father of the poor" (Sequence
of Pentecost), we advocate on behalf of the very poorest, threatened as they
are by abortion. When we are filled with the Holy Spirit, who inspires our
speech, we speak up for the pre-born. Then, indeed, we know the Advocate.
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