''a concrete and detailed appeal to all, especially in the West, where abortion is 'considered a right and a sign of modernity' that should ensure the presence and freedom 'of women in societies' democratic''.
Cosi 'Lucetta Scaraffia, Osservatore Romano,''defining the speech on Saturday by Pope Benedict XVI to the members of the Pontifical Academy for Life. The pontiff, emphasizes the historical,'' speaks especially to women, particularly those who have had abortions, and speaks of discomfort that so often hidden, that which is hidden suffering post-abortion syndrome''.
And it does, the author adds,'' with the courage to name the unnamable in a society 'secular as ours: the voice of conscience. Defined according to the Catholic tradition not as a result of external influences or internal emotions as many prefer to believe, but just like voice that illuminates the human being on good and evil, and therefore evidence of the connection of each creature with God'' .
On the one hand, there '''a society' that wants to establish the citizenship rights of women on the cancellation of a new human being the other,'' a pope who has the courage to simply and clearly remember that within each of us there is 'a voice that speaks clearly, and that it' difficult or impossible to silence it 'cause speaks to everyone, not only to believers, and it' irrepressible voice, even if you do not want to hear''.
0 comments:
Post a Comment