Building a Civilization of Truth and Love         
- June 19, 2014
“BUILDING A CIVILIZATION OF TRUTH AND LOVE”
  
Archbishop Cordileone’s Talk at the March for Marriage
  
June 19, 2014; Washington, D.C.
  
In our Catholic faith tradition, young people  around the age of junior high school or high school receive the  sacrament of Confirmation, normally administered by the bishop.  At a  Confirmation ceremony I celebrated recently in a large, Hispanic parish,  two of the young people shared some reflections on what their  Confirmation meant to them.  They said that their Confirmation gave them  the grace to go forth and “build a civilization of truth and love.”  I  could not have said it better myself!  And that, my friends, is why we  are here.  Both are necessary, both, together, if we wish to have a  flourishing society: truth and love.
This is the legacy we have received from our  ancestors in faith.  To my fellow believers in Jesus Christ I would call  our attention to those first generations of Christians in the city of  Rome, who were so often scapegoated by the powerful pagan Roman  government.  But when a plague would strike the city and the well-to-do  fled to the hills for safety until the plague subsided, it was the  Christians who stayed behind to care for the sick, at great risk to  their own health and very lives.  And not just the Christian sick: all  the sick, regardless of religion, of how they lived their lives, or even  what they thought of the Christians themselves.  The historian Eusebius  noted about the Christians of his time, “All day long some of them  tended to the dying and to their burial, countless numbers with no one  to care for them.  Others gathered together from all parts of the city a  multitude of those withered from famine and distributed bread to them  all.”  Likewise, the Emperor Julian complained to one of his pagan  priests, “[They] support not only their poor, but ours as well.”  
It is this kind of love and compassion in the  service of truth, especially the truth of the human person, that has  marked the lives of the holy ones of our own faith tradition and others  as well: hospitals, orphanages, schools, outreach to the poor and  destitute – giving without concern for getting anything in return,  seeing in each human being, especially in the poor and destitute, a  priceless child beloved by God, whom God calls to turn away from sin and  toward Him, so that they might be saved.  In1839 Jeanne Jugan met one  such priceless child of God, a blind old crippled woman whom nobody  cared for.  That night, Jeanne carried the woman home to her apartment,  and put her to sleep in her own bed.  From this profound encounter was  born the Little Sisters of the Poor, who even today are loving, caring  for and providing homes for thousands of elderly who deserve dignity as  well as care.  These are the very nuns who now face the possibility of  being shut out of spreading the love of Jesus to the needy because of  their refusal to comply with a healthcare mandate that violates their  moral convictions, convictions which stand on the truth of basic human  dignity.
Let us, then, take our cue from the best our  predecessors in faith have inspired, and not humanity’s frequent  failings and sins.  Like them, we now in our own time need to proclaim  and live the truth with charity and compassion as it applies to us  today: the truth of a united family based on the union of the children’s  father and mother in marriage as the foundational good of society.   Every child comes from a man and a woman, and has a right, a natural  human right, to know and be known by, to love and be loved by, their own  mother and father.  This is the great public good that marriage is  oriented towards and protects.  The question is then: does society need  an institution that unites children to the mothers and fathers who bring  them into the world, or doesn’t it?  If it does, that institution is  marriage – nothing else provides this basic good to children. 
Yes, this is a foundational truth, and one to which  we must witness by lives lived in conformity to it, and which we must  proclaim with love.  Love for those millions of loving single mothers  and fathers who struggle to pick up the pieces of their lives and  succeed in creating loving homes for their children – they need and  deserve our love, affirmation and support.  Love for the husband  struggling with fidelity, for the woman who feels abandoned and  pressured into abortion, for the teenager struggling to believe in the  heroic vision of love that makes sense of chastity, for the single  person who cannot find a mate, for the childless couple trying to cope  with infertility, for the wife who finds herself nursing a sick husband  in her marriage bed, for the young person trying to navigate through  sexual identity issues and may feel alienated from the Church because of  it, maybe even because of the sort of treatment received from those who  profess to be believers.  To all of you, I say: know that you are a  child of God, that you are called to heroic love and that with God’s  help you can do it, that we love you and want to support you in living  your God-given call.
And let us not forget: we must also proclaim this  truth especially with love for those who disagree with us on this issue,  and most of all, for those who are hostile toward us.  We must be  careful, though, not to paint our opponents on this issue with broad  strokes.  There is a tendency in our culture to do this to groups of  people the powerful don’t know and think they don’t like.  We must not  do that.  We must recognize that there are people on the other side of  this debate who are of good will and are sincerely trying to promote  what they think is right and fair.  It is misdirected good will.  But  even those from whom we suffer retribution – and I know some of you have  suffered in very serious ways because of your stand for marriage –  still, we must love them.  That is what our ancestors in faith did, and  we must, too.  Yes, it is easy to become resentful when you are  relentlessly and unfairly painted as a bigot and are punished for  publicly standing by the basic truth of marriage as a foundational  societal good; it is tempting to respond in kind.  Don’t.  For those of  us who are Catholic, we just heard our Master command us in the gospel  proclaimed at Mass the day before yesterday: “love your enemies and pray  for those who persecute you” (Mt 5:44).  We must not allow the angry  rhetoric to co-opt us into a culture of hate.
Yes, we must show love toward all of these and  more.  Love is the answer.  But love in the truth.  The truth is that  every child comes from a mother and a father, and to deliberately  deprive a child of knowing and being loved by his or her mother and  father is an outright injustice.  That is our very nature, and no law  can change it.  Those with temporal power over us might choose to change  the definition of marriage in the law even against all that we have  accomplished through very generous participation in the democratic  process, but our nature does not change.  If the law does not correspond  to our nature, such that there is a conflict between the law and  nature, guess which will prevail?  And people will figure it out.
We can take heart from what we see happening now in  the pro-life movement.  Back in the early 1970’s, just before the Court  issued its infamous Roe vs. Wade ruling, public support for abortion  was growing rapidly.  And as with marriage redefinition today, a  generation gap opened up in the polls, leading many to predict that  opposition to abortion would literally die off.  That was the future;  before long, it would not even be an issue.  Instead, something  unexpected happened.  A relatively small band of faithful believers held  the line on the sanctity of human life in the womb, and today, two  generations later, the pro-life movement is flourishing like never  before.  We now have the most pro-life generation of young adults since  the infamous Roe decision.  People have figured out that it is a human  life that is within the mother’s womb, and that abortion, yes, really  does harm women; they’ve figured out that it’s good to cherish that  human life and surround the mother with love and support so a truly  happy choice can be made, the choice for life.
People, too, will figure out that a child comes  from a father and a mother, and it’s good for the child to be connected  to his or her father and mother.  These truths may seem obvious to us,  but they aren’t to everyone while in the heat of controversy.  They will  figure out this truth about marriage, though, because it, too, is in  our nature, and it is a key to individual and societal flourishing.  All  we have to do is look around and see that our society is broken and  hurting in so many ways; there is so much work to do to fix it and bring  healing.  Yes, it is very complex, and many different things need to be  done: we need to fix our economy; we especially need to pay a living  wage to working class families; we need to fix our broken immigration  system; we need to improve our schools, especially those that are  failing children from poorer families.  Yes, we need to do all this and  more.  But none of these solutions will have a lasting effect if we do  not rebuild a marriage culture, a culture which recognizes and supports  the good of intact families, built on the marriage between a man and a  woman committed to loving faithfulness to each other and to their  children.  No justice, no peace, no end to poverty, without a strong  culture of marriage and the family.  This noble cause is a call to love  we cannot abandon, that we will not give up on, and that in the end we  know will triumph.
So take heart: the truth spoken in love has a power  over the human heart.  We are here today to March for Marriage, to pick  up the torch, and pass on to a new generation the truth about marriage,  not just the abstract truth, but the lived reality that makes a  difference in children’s lives.  So, my friends, we must not give up:  the truth will not go away, and we will not go away.  Let us take heart  from the legacy we have received, let us place our trust in God, and let  us go forth to build a civilization of truth and love.
 
2 comments:
Here is a link to Archbp Cordileone's address, it is beautiful:
http://www.sfarchdiocese.org/about-us/archbishop-cordileone/homilies-writings-and-statements/2014/Building-a-Civilization-of-Truth-and-Love-4036/
Truth and beauty-- wish I coulda been there! Thanks, Father.
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