Pro-life activist encourages witnessing in difficult situations
Witnessing to the Catholic faith can be done in a variety of ways, depending on the situation, but they all must be founded on authenticity, love and prayer, pro-life advocate Jeanne Monahan said in a talk for Theology on Tap.
Building on an idea proposed by Pope John Paul II, Monahan explained that Catholics “don’t have to manipulate God’s plan,” lying and cajoling people into accepting it.
“Because when it’s taught in its authenticity, it’s inherently attractive,” she said. “It’s inherently beautiful, and people want to live it.”
“And so all we need to do, essentially, is to learn it and to live it ourselves,” she stated.
Monahan, who was recently elected as interim president of the March for Life Education and Defense Fund, spoke on Oct. 15 before a gathering of young adults for Theology on Tap in Arlington, Va.
Drawing on the examples of holy men and women, along with her own experiences working for the federal government and as the current director of the Center for Human Dignity at the Family Research Council, she discussed different approaches to witnessing to the faith in a hostile environment.
“My own personal experiences are that most hostile environments with regard to the Church have to do with the Church’s teachings on marriage and family and sexuality,” Monahan said.
These environments are often unfriendly “because people are uncomfortable with those teachings, which can be highly, highly misunderstood,” she explained.
While she acknowledged that it can be tempting to keep quiet or even go along with a lie under the pressure of a challenging situation, she stressed that “we’re called to speak the truth,” in a loving and authentic manner and “it’s a disservice to the people around us when we don’t.”
“How this is going to be lived out in different scenarios is a matter of sensitive discernment,” Monahan said, emphasizing that there “is no cookie cutter approach” because each situation and set of individuals is unique.
And while Catholics must always be loving, this is sometimes expressed in tough love and other times in more gentle love, sometimes through words and other times through actions, she said.
It is important to keep in mind that the goal “is not necessarily to win the fight” but “to win souls” through acts of love, she noted.
She pointed to the examples of John the Baptist becoming a “martyr of marriage” for speaking the truth about Herod and Herodius; Pope John Paul II bringing hope to the oppressed people of Poland; and Mother Teresa speaking out against abortion in front of U.S. President Bill Clinton and Vice President Al Gore at the 1994 National Prayer Breakfast. [More]
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Many Catholics are aware of major problems in their church’s dogmatic stances on marriage, family and sexuality (including annulments, contraception, same-sex marriage) which do not lend themselves to easy solutions.
Meanwhile, militant Catholics, lay and clerical, strive to impose “Catholic solutions” on the general population as binding by reason of the immutability of the moral order and natural law.
These are truly sensitive areas, where “witnessing Catholics” must tread with all due discretion, if at all. ‘Twould be fair to say that Catholics have plenty to learn from the other side (including ex-Catholics and dissenting Catholics) when it comes to “family values.”