- Archbishop Martin: “Many mothers in crisis have felt supported – sometimes at the very last minute – by a sensitive offer of practical help to find a way out of their crisis other than by ending the life of their unborn baby.”
Background
Tomorrow Seanad Éireann will debate the second stage of the Health (Termination of Pregnancy Services) (Safe Access Zones) Bill 2023. See below the statement of Archbishop Eamon Martin (pictured) in response to this bill.
Statement
The imposition of so-called “safe” abortion zones will further silence the voice of the innocent unborn. Given that the law already prevents harassment and intimidation, I believe the new legislation represents a disproportionate response with potentially wide implications for freedom of religion and speech.The discussions about abortion in recent years have made us much more aware of the pressures that women can be under during pregnancy and how so many can feel isolated, neglected and alone in their distress. Tragic, and sometimes desperate, situations like these will not go away just because abortion centres are ‘sealed off’ from peaceful vigils.
Over the years many mothers in crisis have felt supported – sometimes at the very last minute – by a sensitive offer of practical help to find a way out of their crisis other than by ending the life of their unborn baby. It is perfectly reasonable to want to reach out in compassion to help vulnerable women and to be free to protect the life and well-being of both a mother and her unborn child.
Harassment laws are already in place to prevent intimidation. The introduction of these zones increases fears that freedom of religion, belief, expression and association are being undermined and open to attack. The introduction of punitive sanctions will undermine the Common Good as they disproportionately shut down the rights of those who wish to peacefully and prayerfully offer support and alternative options and to save the lives of innocent unborn children.
What next? How long before it is deemed unlawful to openly express in Ireland the reasonable opinion that there are two lives in every pregnancy worth protecting – the life of a mother and the life of her unborn child?
Will those who believe that the ending of unborn life is of the utmost moral significance, and who have sincerely held beliefs that every human life is sacred from the first moment of conception, be told that they are not free to express these beliefs anywhere in a public forum?
It has never been more important to courageously witness to the inviolable dignity of every human life. The Gospel of Life is, quite literally, Good News for our world in which there is, sadly, so much violence, destruction and unnecessary death. It is Good News for the world to hold that every human life is a precious gift from God – including the lives of all mothers and their unborn children. This remains true, always and everywhere.
Yesterday Catholics celebrated the beautiful Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe. In her apparition there, Mary was pregnant, carrying within her the unborn Jesus. She said to Saint Juan Diego: “Am I not here who am your Mother? Are you not under my shadow and protection? Am I not your fountain of life?” Our Lady of Guadalupe is patroness of the unborn and of the culture of life. She inspires us to want to protect all human life from the first moment of conception until the moment of natural death and all of the moments in between – to protect life from the threat of violence and war, from addictions, from despair, and from the culture of aggression, anger and abuse of power and authority that seem to be so prevalent in today’s world.
The right to life is not conferred by any human law; rather, it is God’s most precious gift to us. The innocent life in the womb is not a “something”; it is a “someone.” Science confirms that it is, in reality, a little girl or boy at a very early stage in her or his life. To hold this truth, and to express it openly, is not something to be ashamed of, or to be excluded from public discourse, censored from newspaper columns, shut down in debates, or kept out via ‘safe access zones’! It is something we should be able to shout from the rooftops: All human life is sacred and precious! Choose life!
ENDS
•Archbishop Eamon Martin is Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland