Culture of Life
“An abortionist society is unwelcoming. With time, tyranny will be the one to reinit all. It is like a contagious disease”, asserts Jutta Burggraf, professor at the University of Navarra
Two are the victims of such intervention; the mother and the child. Those who turn to and support such unnatural intervention – whether it comes from the information, education and political spheres – become damaged and devastated. In the end, they may become full of disdain.
A society that executes more than one hundred thousand abortions annually is a society full of torments, experiencing conscious and emotional shocks deep down within.
A female poet that has gone through the cruel intervention asserted the following: “I see my son in my dreams. After the abortion there are only two possibilities; either you become a witch and continue to kill or you fight in the name of life”.
When it comes to a voluntary abortion, the forced mistake appears to come with a post-abortion syndrome. William Wilke, an American psychiatrist, declares that “it is easier to take out a child from the mother’s uterus, than from his thoughts”.
Within the instant of fertilization, another human being is inside the mother’s uterus. There is a novel human being that has been brought into our universe to experience immortality. When a woman comes to get an abortion, the process implies that one out of those two mortals is forced into a trip of no return; the unborn child is forced into death.
An unnatural birth, or “non-birth”, is a slavery that yields as a result a lot of physical, psychical, and spiritual bitterness. Deity continually pushes us to change our way of life. Its indulgence produces a deep transformation within us; it rescues us from confusion and heals our deeply imbedded wounds.
The need to implement a “culture of life” is urgent. This may be achievable by guaranteeing a new way of life and giving the beauty of faith a persuasive argument. Pope Benedict XVI declares that “by having permitted abortion, not only has it not resolved the problems that strike a lot of women and families, but has further opened a bigger wound within society – a society already faces deep sufferings. (Translated by Gianna A. Sanchez Moretti)
Author and journalist Clemente Ferrer has led a distinguished career in Spain in the fields of publicity and press relations. He is currently President of the European Institute of Marketing.
clementeferrer3@gmail.com
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