St Agnes K Of C Council 14202

          Message from The Suprem Knight  Carl A. Anderson

                               A Civilization of Love

Supreme Knight Carl Anderson discusses A Civilization of Love at a news conference at Vatican Radio in Rome. 

 

You’ve probably noticed by now that earlier this year, I borrowed a phrase used often by Pope John Paul II and used it as the title of a book. A Civilization of Love is really about you and your families, because it describes the way in which Knights have long chosen to live their lives, with charity, unity and fraternity.

On the very first page, I quote Pope Benedict, who has taken up the phrase with enthusiasm. In his message to World Youth Day last year, he said,

“May the Holy Spirit make you creative in charity, persevering in your commitments, and brave in your initiatives, so that you will be able to offer your contribution to the building up of the ‘civilization of love.’ The horizon of love,” the Pope said, “is truly boundless: it is the whole world!”

It may seem too ambitious to talk about transforming the world, much less doing so by trying to create a civilization that is very different from the one in which we now live. But the earliest Christians did precisely that: they did so by their example, by holding out the possibility of a life that was higher, more beautiful, and above all more authentic than the vulgarity, violence and greed of the ancient pagan world. Today we have the same opportunity.

Gentlemen, we have the power – given us by the Holy Spirit – to transform the world in the same way. Let us join with our great popes John Paul II and Benedict XVI in “Building a Civilization of Love through Charity, Unity and Fraternity.”

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Things We Can All Agree On

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6/30/2009
 
Americans are increasingly at odds with the regime of Roe v. Wade.

 

by Supreme Knight Carl A. Anderson

Of all the U.S. Supreme Court decisions of the 20th century, two are perhaps the

best known: Brown v. Board of Education (1954) and Roe v. Wade (1973).

So important are these two cases that it was no accident that in a recent speech to

 graduates at Notre Dame University, President Barack Obama based many of his

remarks on their legacies.

But the legacies of these two decisions, and their level of acceptance by the

 American people, couldn’t be more different.

In 1990, as a member of the U.S. Civil Rights Commission, I had an opportunity to

gauge the degree to which Americans had embraced the legacy of Brown v. Board

of Education–the case that ended the legal sanction of racial segregation in the

United States.

At the time, three and a half decades after the case, acceptance of the ideal of

racial equality had grown steadily, and it was clearly embraced by the vast

 majority of Americans. This is even more the case today.

Yet, if Brown was almost universally accepted by the American people, the

opposite is true of Roe v. Wade – the decision that legalized abortion.

More than three and a half decades after Roe, Americans are increasingly – and

 overwhelmingly – opposed to its legacy. As much as Americans have embraced

Brown, they have moved further and further away from Roe, which has since been interpreted to allow abortion without restrictions.

Just how do Americans feel about Roe? Beyond just agreeing on ancillary issues

 like adoption or help for women in crisis pregnancies, recent surveys have

found common ground on the issue of abortion itself.

In April, a Pew survey found that only 18 percent favored legalized abortion “in all

 cases.” Twentyeight percent said it should be legal in “most cases,” 28 percent

said it should be “illegal in most cases,” and 16 percent said it should be illegal

in all cases.

In short, 72 percent of Americans oppose unrestricted abortion; only 18 percent

are in favor. An even more recent Gallup poll (May 2009) found that a majority of

Americans now identify themselves as “pro–life.” It confirmed the results of the

Pew survey, finding that 76 percent of Americans disagree with the Roe regime of

unrestricted abortion, while only 22 percent agree.

Taken together, these polls show that Americans, by a ratio of almost 3–to–1,

 want at least some restrictions on abortion – a remarkable, if largely unnoticed

consensus.

A more detailed survey of Americans’ opinions on abortion last October revealed

just how deep this consensus runs. A Knights of Columbus–Marist poll was

conduct ed when the number of those who identified themselves as “prochoice”

 was still slightly greater than those who called themselves “pro-life.”

Looking back, the poll accurately predicted the growing consensus we see today

by asking very specific questions. By giving a wide range of options on the subject,

 here’s what the survey found: Only 8 percent of Americans agreed with abortion

 “any time during a pregnancy,” and another 8 percent supported abortion only

during the first six months. But 84 percent of Americans wanted more significant restrictions.

In the future, there will doubtless be those who push for a proabortion political

litmus test for key positions in government. They should remember that the legacy

 of Roe v. Wade is fundamentally at odds with the moral sense of the American

people. Moreover, clinging to an anachronistic litmus test also fails both to capture

the moment and to build real common ground on abortion.

Moving beyond Roe’s limitless breadth in law and politics makes both political and

 moral sense, and is also something that the vast majority of U.S. citizens agree on.

 As members of an organization that from its earliest days stood for the

 marginalized, we, as Knights, must continue our tireless work for the dignity of

every human person – born and unborn, young and old, regardless of race or

creed. Our faith and the principles of our Order require no less.

Vivat Jesus!

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