Cute Baby Chelsea Blogging!

ChelseaPro Life1 Comment

This is what I looked like 29 years ago today. Kinda scary actually. I think I look much cuter now. 😉

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A Birthday Request

ChelseaAbortion5 Comments

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Our LadyDear readers, today is my birthday and on this day 18 mothers are scheduled to have their unborn children killed at the Planned Parenthood in Columbia, MO – just 25 miles from my home. A pretty unsettling thought as I celebrate the gift of my own life. If you want to give me a great birthday present, please say a prayer for a change of heart for those women. I survived Roe v. Wade. I want as many people as possible to be able to say that with me.

Our Lady of Sorrows – PRAY FOR US!

Fr. Barron comments on The “Two Minus One Pregnancy”

ChelseaAbortion, IVF, Reproductive Technology, videoLeave a Comment

Fr. Robert Barron comments on last month’s NYTimes piece about a woman who chose to kill one of the healthy unborn twins she conceived via IVF:

My comments here.

Also recommended: Rebecca Taylor’s post How Twins became Endangered

TOB Tues: A Risk Worth Taking

ChelseaLove, TOB TuesdayLeave a Comment

For today’s TOB Tuesday, I chose this passage from Called to Love: Approaching John Paul II’s Theology of the Body because, well, I’m kind of feelin’ it a little bit right now:
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It’s true, of course, that everyone who loves sooner or later gets hurt. Yet this very risk of pain has a positive side: By taking us out of ourselves, emotions are an entryway into the world of other people. By coming to share in that world, we learn to live more richly. And this is surely a risk worth taking.

The call to love resounding in our bodies invites us to go out of ourselves and to build a world together with another. God will, for the most part, influence our coming into contact with a potentially suitable partner. But, then it is up to us to take action, to go out on a limb and open ourselves up to them in order to find out if they really are the one for us. There is always a risk involved in this openness, of course, when you’re dealing with another human being. Feelings may not always be mutual and it may end up hurting in the end, but love is a risk worth taking. There is always something to be gained when we go outside ourselves and learn to share in someone else’s world, even if only for a short while.

Good advice: How God works in bringing people together

Marriage Advice from St. John Chrysostom

ChelseaLove, Marriage1 Comment

chrysostom.pngToday is the feast of St. John Chrysostom. I quite like this advice he gives to the men-folk:

young husbands should say to their wives: “I have taken you in my arms, and I love you, and I prefer you to my life itself. For the present life is nothing, and my most ardent dream is to spend it with you in such a way that we may be assured of not being separated in the life reserved for us… I place your love above all things, and nothing would be more bitter or painful to me than to be of a different mind than you.” (CCC 2365)

Life: Respect It. Protect It.

ChelseaPro LifeLeave a Comment

Lovely ad from Virtue Media commemorating the 10th anniversary of the terrorist attacks on 9/11/01:

Transcript:

“Over the years humanity has made terrible mistakes. People were treated as less than human, even killed … because they were a different skin color, because they were a different faith…because they were unplanned, unknown and helpless. But over time we are slowly learning that we are all God’s children, created in His image. And to disregard the value of human life whether through hate or indifference, is wrong.

“That all human creation, regardless of race, religion, abilities or stage of human life has an inalienable right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness … a right to love and be loved.” As Americans, let’s cherish the sanctity of life. Because we know how it feels when others treat us as less than human.”

h/t LifeNews

Anonymous Donor Daddies, The Kids Aren’t Alright

ChelseaIVF, Reproductive TechnologyLeave a Comment

The whole IVF/artificial insemination social experiment has been a process of putting the whosyodaddy.pngdesires of adults over the best interest of children. Latest case in point: this week, the New York Times reported that the grossly under-regulated and greedy fertility industry has been allowing dozens of women to use the sperm of the same donor. At least one man has fathered more than one hundred offspring through his sperm donation. 150, to be exact – that they know of – and he may not be the only one. The result is hundreds of half-siblings who not only don’t know anything about their biological father, but don’t know each other, which could cause some awkward social situations:

Now, there is growing concern among parents, donors and medical experts about potential negative consequences of having so many children fathered by the same donors, including the possibility that genes for rare diseases could be spread more widely through the population. Some experts are even calling attention to the increased odds of accidental incest between half sisters and half brothers, who often live close to one another.

“My daughter knows her donor’s number for this very reason,” said the mother of a teenager conceived via sperm donation in California who asked that her name be withheld to protect her daughter’s privacy. “She’s been in school with numerous kids who were born through donors. She’s had crushes on boys who are donor children. It’s become part of sex education” for her.

Oh, sure, now they’re concerned about the children they’ve been manufacturing. Where was this concern when the science was in its infancy? Why did no one stop to consider the fact that just because something can be done, doesn’t mean that it should be done???

But, wait. Someone did: The Catholic Church. From the outset she has opposed third-party reproduction chiefly because it infringes upon the rights of the child, namely, his right to be “born of a father and mother known to him and bound to each other by marriage” (emphasis mine). The Church’s position here is wildly unpopular, but I think stories like this one only prove her wisdom in this regard.

Whether dozens of them are sharing the same donor dad or not, donor conceived kids aren’t all right. One study by the Commission on Parenthood’s Future, “My Daddy’s Not My Donor,” surveyed 485 donor offspring and concluded they were more troubled and depression-prone than other young adults. Today thousands of donor-conceived people are growing up not knowing who they belong to, where they came from, or who they look like and they’re demanding answers to the most basic questions about their origins, their lives, and their identities. They’re also making their voices heard.

In 2006, Katrina Clark wrote an op-ed for the Washington Post describing the anger and hurt she felt about having an anonymous sperm donor for a father and calling out the hypocrisy of parents and medical professionals for assuming that biological roots won’t matter to the “products” of the cryobanks’ service, when the longing for a biological relationship is what brings customers to those banks in the first place. More recently, several others have leant their voices to a new documentary by the The Center for Bioethics and Culture raising awareness about the effect that anonymous sperm donation has on the children it produces.

Back to the Catholic Church. Because of her opposition to third-party reproduction, many have accused the Church of being anti-science and insensitive to those who suffer the pain of infertility. But actually, the Church has helped develop very effective reproductive medicine that also respects the rights of every human being. Prompted by the challenges in Pope Paul VI’s 1968 letter Humanae Vitae, Dr. Thomas Hilgers began scientific research in the applications of natural fertility regulation and opened the Pope Paul VI Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction in 1985 to answer the call for reproductive health care that fully respects life. The Institute has since networked a natural system of fertility regulation—the Creighton Model FertilityCare System (CrMS)—with a women’s health science—NaProTechnology that can and has helped women successfully achieve and maintain pregnancy without having to resort to manufacturing their children in a petri dishes or inject themselves with a stranger’s sperm. Using this technology, couples still respect and cooperate with His divine plan for the creation of human life rather than taking the matters of life in their own hands and forcing God to cooperate with them. NaProTECHNOLOGY can be used to treat male infertility as well as female and the problem of recurrent miscarriage.

For those skeptical of this kind of women’s health science, you can take a look at peer-reviewed and academic literature that supports NaProTECHNOLOGY and the scientific foundations of the CrMS System as well as read the personal testimonies of “Women Healed“.

Related:
IVF, Frozen ‘Orphans’ and the Wisdom of the Church
Story of “Selective Reduction” Illustrates the Church’s Teaching on IVF

TOB Tues.: Picking Rotten Fruit

ChelseaLove, Sex, Sexuality, Theology of the Body, TOB TuesdayLeave a Comment

Reflecting on the book of Genesis (2:25), John Paul II writes:

The human body, with its sex – its masculinity and femininity – seen in the very mystery of creation, is not only a source of fruitfulness and of procreation, as in the whole natural order, but contains “from the beginning” the “spousal” attribute, that is, the power to express love: precisely that love in which the human person becomes a gift and – through this gift – fulfills the very meaning of his being and existence. (TOB 15:1)

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Only when we learn to die to ourselves, trust in the Lord and become true gifts of self to one another can we hope to bear good, sweet and ripe fruit. What happens when sex is self-serving rather than self-giving? Jenny talks about the rotten fruit that grows on the evil tree of selfishness:

When sex ceases to be primarily about the gift of self, (and, consequently, the gift of life) it becomes primarily a means to self-gratification. And everyone deserves to be gratified. To be satisfied. To be happy. It’s one of the last remaining ‘virtues’ we seem able to agree upon as a culture: happiness. Except sometimes one person’s version of ‘happiness’ turns out to be tantamount to another person’s version of ‘hell.’

Read the rest!

By their fruits you will know them. Do people pick grapes from thornbushes, or figs from thistles? Just so, every good tree bears good fruit, and a rotten tree bears bad fruit. A good tree cannot bear bad fruit, nor can a rotten tree bear good fruit. Every tree that does not bear good fruit will be cut down and thrown into the fire. So by their fruits you will know them. -Matthew 7:16-20

Music for Your Labor Day Monday: Something More

ChelseaHope, Music, videoLeave a Comment

Rebecca Taylor called this the “theme song for the culture of life” and I have to agree. The major difference between the culture of life and that of death is one word: hope.

And since it’s Labor Day, revisit: The Liturgical Dignity of Work

Discover the Flavor of Life

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I finally got around to watching The Human Experience, which I’ve had at home from Netflix for about two months now! Very well done, wonderful movie about finding meaning in life and having a reason for living. I’ll have more thoughts on it in the coming week, but for now, it made me think of this meditation I came across recently from the March 2009 volume of Magnificat:
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Our life is not an invention, but rather a gift from God, who had the courage trust in us so much that He placed the gift of life, the gift of existence, into our hands, and gave us all the necessary tools to live it well. Maybe we have not yet taken into consideration this initiative of God and many times we think we are simply born because our parents wanted us or, in any case, for natural or human motives. This is confirmed by the fact that there are people who do not want to live, who stop at the exterior and never taste the fruit of life … Overall, we must convince ourselves that God wanted to give to you, to me, to everyone the gift of life. It is a gift to discover, to receive, to protect, and to love. If we do not discover this in ourselves, we do not even know how to welcome or defend the life of others, of our children, or of those whom we say we love …

It is a big lie to believe that life is just an accident or even that it is ours! Life is a gift from God, born from his heart, which is Love. It is a gift that we must begin to unwrap like when we receive a package and out of curiosity we desire to know what is inside. We want to know the reason for this gift that will surely make us happy. No one can enter into the heart of our life for us. It is a personal journey … Everyone loves the life that we can see, feel, and touch, but life is not only that which belongs to us. It is Someone else. We are from Someone who takes care of us and wants us to discover the flavor of life, because he knows that only in this way we can be truly happy.

MOTHER ELVIRA PETROZZI
Mother Elvira Petrozzi is foundress of ComunitĂ  Cenacolo, welcoming the lost and desperate in forty fraternities in thirteen countries.

Related: The Task of Life

Speaking of Mother Elvira and Cenacolo, I managed to get another plug for the Community in to my recent article for Catholic Lane. Check out: Why Not Sterilize Drug Addicts?