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On
the Passion of Theresa Marie Schiavo
Rev.
Francis M. de Rosa, STL
Delivered at the Poor Clare Monastery
Alexandria, Virginia on Good Friday 2005
Today as we remember the Passion and
death of our Lord Jesus Christ, I feel compelled to
place our meditation within the context of the heart-wrenching
drama that has unfolded in our nation since last Friday.
In fact it has saturated my spirit and has made this
Holy Week for me personally the most painful one in
my entire life. I know that I am not the only one
with these sentiments, as many have asked the question
why in the mystery of God’s plan this tragedy
has happened this of all weeks.
If
it is true that in Christ we live and move and have
our being, and if it is true that by baptism we are
made members of His Mystical Body; and if it is true
that this new status enables us to make up what is
lacking in the sufferings of Christ; if we are to
see Christ in other people, especially those who are
helpless, then it is absolutely impossible to fail
to contemplate what can justly be called the Passion
of Theresa Marie Schiavo.
The
parallels with the Passion of Our Beloved Lord are
striking to consider. It is as if Jesus, present in
this poor sister of ours, bore again the opprobrium
of the world. It is as if in the mystery of Divine
Providence our nation has acted out during this Holy
Week its own “passion play.” It is as
if our nation, through its destruction of this innocent
life, were crying out for her blood to be upon us
and upon our children.
It
is impossible in these events not to detect the spirit
that drove Judas to betray Christ: Judas the thief
into whose heart the Scriptures tell us Satan entered;
Judas the traitor in the person of Terri’s husband
who handed her over to evil men to be killed. In a
sense the greatest calamity in all this is the one
which has befallen him, for sin resides in and possesses
the sinner in a most horrible way. Jesus said: “Truly,
truly, I say to you, everyone who commits sin is a
slave to sin” (John 8:34). So it is a strange
irony that schiavo is the Italian word for “slave.”
And as much as it may go against our emotions at this
time we must pray for him as well, for our true enemies
are not flesh and blood but principalities and powers.
If
we consider the courts in Florida and Atlanta and
even the United States Supreme Court, it is clear
that they played the part of the evil judges of the
Sanhedrin, Pilate and Herod quite capably. For the
sake of the “law” they confounded the
very purpose of the law which is to serve and protect
us and not to kill us.
They
preserved their law; they argued about it and discussed
it. They wrung their hands and pitied the tragedy
(and I find this a particularly egregious insult).
But in the end they upheld the law of man, their statutes
and rules of the game and condemned an innocent child
of God the Father to death as the whole world watched.
They felt very satisfied that they had done the right
thing. They talked about respecting her rights even
as they strove to end her life. They followed procedure
with great skill and knowledge. Professors
from important universities concurred that the judges
“played by the rules.” They condemned
Terri Schiavo to death legally.
And just as our blessed Savior had armed guards sent
out to apprehend Him, so too our sister Terri had
armed policemen standing guard outside her nursing
home to guarantee the decision of the judges who condemned
her to death at the request of her adulterous husband.
I cannot but think also of the parents of Terri and
how they have stood at the foot of her cross just
as Our Lady did watching her Son die. We know that
the Passion of Christ is also called the Compassion
of Mary. It is as if Mary were crucified with her
Divine Son.
What a terrible sword of pain is piercing the hearts
of Terri’s parents this week! The news reported
yesterday that Terri’s mother upon entering
her dying daughter’s room to visit her reeled
in agony
upon seeing her desiccated and tortured face and fell
sick. Terri’s siblings tell of how the she looks
like a victim of Auschwitz.
Yet Terri’s brother-in-law declared on national
television that she in fact looks peaceful! Opinion
polls show a sizable percentage of Americans calling
this mercy and not murder.
This is unspeakable. What morally sane person would
say such an outrageous thing about a starving person?
These indeed are momentous days for America. The demon
of the culture of death has bloated and swelled exponentially
as it slakes its thirst with this fresh blood. It
is appalling to consider that countless Americans
have weighed in on the side of Michael as he starved
his wife Terri. They are the frenzied mob that preferred
the criminal Barabbas. Just as they said of Jesus,
“Crucify Him! Crucify Him!” so they have
said of Terri, “Let her die! Let her die!”
The Holy Father has said that we are in fact faced
with what he calls “an objective conspiracy
against life.” Was not Terri the subject of
a conspiracy – involving corrupt elements in
the legislature, the
executive branch and the judiciary, not to mention
her traitorous husband? What about the doctor who
removed the tube? They all worked together to block
any help from coming to her. They are coconspirators
and agents of the culture of death.
The situation, my friends, is grave indeed. Pope John
Paul II has written of this with pertinence, and I
quote:
“The
panorama described needs to be understood not only
in terms of the phenomena of death which characterize
it but also in the variety of causes which determine
it. The Lord's question [to Cain after his murder
of Abel]: "What have you done?" (Gen 4:10),
seems almost like an invitation addressed to Cain
to go beyond the material dimension of his murderous
gesture, in order to recognize in it all the gravity
of the motives which occasioned it and the consequences
which result from it.
“Decisions that go against life sometimes arise
from difficult or even tragic situations … But
today the problem goes far beyond the necessary recognition
of these personal situations. It is a problem which
exists at the cultural, social and political level,
where it reveals its more sinister and disturbing
aspect in the tendency, ever more widely shared, to
interpret the above crimes against life as legitimate
expressions of individual freedom, to be acknowledged
and protected as actual rights.
“In this way, and with tragic consequences,
a long historical process is reaching a turning-point.
The process which once led to discovering the idea
of "human rights" - rights inherent in every
person and prior to any Constitution and State legislation-is
today marked by a surprising contradiction. Precisely
in an age when the inviolable rights of the person
are solemnly proclaimed and the value of life is publicly
affirmed, the very right to life is being denied or
trampled upon, especially at the more significant
moments of existence: the moment of birth and the
moment of death.”1
In
the movie The Passion of the Christ there is a well-done
and emotional scene depicting Veronica slipping through
the hostile crowd to wipe the face of Jesus. As she
holds out a cup of cool water to assuage the burning
thirst of Our Lord, a Roman soldier suddenly appears
and slaps away the cup from her hands just as it reaches
Our Lord’s lips.
In a scene that will never be effaced from my imagination,
I saw on television footage from outside Terri’s
nursing home showing police officers arresting people
who tried to enter the nursing home
with cups of cool water to moisten Terri’s parched
lips and mouth.
Three of those arrested were children. They had driven
all the way from Texas with their father to stand
heroically at the foot of Terri’s cross. I saw
children handcuffed and forced into police cars because
they dared to see Christ thirsting in Terri Schiavo.
These brave Christian children didn’t need to
ask the question posed by Our Lord’s disciples,
“Lord when did we see you hungry and feed you
or thirsty and give You to drink?”
Outside the nursing home where Terri is being slowly
murdered there has been kept a constant vigil of people
praying. These to me represent the women of Jerusalem
who wept for Our Lord. But of
course Jesus’ words to them apply very well
to us: “Weep not for Me but for your children.”
These words are particularly applicable, because this
murder was not done in secret but in broad daylight
with the complicity of our judges and legislators.
The evil is now deeply infused into our system. It
will haunt us and our children.
Yet Terri Schiavo is not simply being killed, she
is being mocked. Just as Jesus was challenged to come
down from the Cross if He were truly the Messiah,
so too was Terri challenged – by talk show hosts,
newscasters, neurologists, politicians, attorneys
and judges - to prove herself to be a human if indeed
she were human and not a vegetable.
On Wednesday night I sat dumbstruck as a US Congressman
- one claiming to be a Catholic - declared on national
television that when one loses one’s cognitive
ability one is no longer a human person.
Yet he said it not calmly but in a fit of unprofessional
rage that left me wondering why the network didn’t
clip him off. It was if her innocence provoked him
all the more to the point of losing his own his cognitive
ability.
1 Pope John Paul II, Encyclical Letter,
Evangelium Vitae (March 25, 1995), no. 18.
Terri Schiavo has undergone a humiliation before the
whole world and with her our entire nation has been
degraded and disgraced. Her human dignity has been
scourged and mocked and spat upon - not
by rough and uncouth Roman soldiers - but by modern
civilized people with college degrees and high paying
jobs; educated people, intelligent people, but evil
people.
Our Blessed Savior told His disciples that as He was
despised, so they would be despised. Yet still we
are Christians, and ultimately nothing can separate
us from the love of Christ. We know what really happened
on that Hill of Golgotha 2000 years ago. We know that
this was not a true victory for the devil. We know
that the crucifixion of Our Lord brought about the
great outpouring of grace into the sinful world. We
know as only Christians can know that the gibbet of
the Cross is in fact the throne of the King of Kings.
And we know also that in order to be His true disciples
we must take up that Cross and follow Him. Placed
in this context we understand in a way how the passion
of our sister Terri Schiavo was a
participation in that of Jesus’ own passion
and death.
We must not take these events lightly. The powers
of darkness are mighty, as was proved by our helplessness
before the frightening onslaught of evil this past
week. All of our imperial might was confounded and
shown impotent to save this one innocent woman who
was condemned to death by corrupt judges and lawmakers.
As Americans we must not be indifferent to what has
happened, for our republic cannot last under such
terms.
But as Christians and especially as Catholics we know
that our true citizenship is in another Kingdom –
a Kingdom that will never crumble; a Kingdom against
which the gates of Hell will not prevail: the Kingdom
of God established by our Lord Jesus Christ, Who reigns
victorious from the throne of the Cross whose blessed
wood we will kiss today.
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