Fr. Frank Pavone
There is a universality about Christmas.
"Behold, I proclaim to you good news of great joy that will be for all the
people…A Savior has been born for you" (Luke 1:10-11).
Christ the Savior becomes man precisely for all who share human nature. He
excludes nobody. The good news of Christmas is for all people of all times and
places. "Joy to
the world."
In fact, so universal is this joy, that even nature shares in it: "Then the
wolf shall be a guest of the lamb, and the leopard shall lie down with the kid;
the calf and the young lion shall browse together, with a little child to guide
them" (Isaiah 11:6).
All of this leads to an inescapable conclusion: Christmas is also for the
unborn.
The Savior has come also for the children yet living in their mothers' wombs.
The Gospel message is addressed also to our youngest brothers and sisters.
In fact, we can say it is addressed especially to them, because they
are the most helpless. It is true that none of us can save ourselves. Yet most
of us can at least pray for salvation, and we can know where it is found. Our
youngest brothers and sisters, on the other hand, can't even pray, and may very
well be destroyed by abortion before they ever hear the good news.
That good news was announced first precisely to the lowly, not to the great
and powerful. The ministry of the One who was born for us continued to follow
that pattern: He consistently sought out those who were on the outskirts of
society.
His Church does the same today, not failing to take a preferential option
for the poor. The "poor" are not simply those deprived of material goods.
The poor are those who have no defense, those who cannot help themselves, those
who have only God…and God's people.
To welcome the Savior means to welcome the obligations which His mission
places on us. He is, in the words of the Prophets, one who will establish
"justice" on the earth. In Biblical terms, this indicates He will intervene for
the helpless, bringing deliverance to those held in bondage.
That's all of us, of course, subject to the bondage of sin and death, unable
to save ourselves.
But it's especially our brothers and sisters in the womb, subject to the
additional bondage of a Court decision that said, "The word person…does
not include the unborn." (Roe vs. Wade, 1973).
In the beautiful Christmas hymn, "O Holy Night," we sing these words. "Truly
He taught us to love one another; His law is love, and His Gospel is Peace.
Chains shall he break, for the slave is our brother, and in His Name all
oppression shall cease."
Our Christmas cannot be complete until we join in the great effort to end the
oppression of the unborn once and for all, and let them hear that for them, too,
a Savior has been born.