The number one trusted online resource for Catholic values
Menu
A+ A A-

Preaching To Children About Abortion

  • REV. FRANK A. PAVONE

Teaching children about abortion is not as difficult as many think.


pavone3.jpg

Children are particularly receptive to the message of the equality of all people, and to the truth that might does not make right. They have a keen sense of justice and fairness. They know what it means to need protection from dangers they can neither withstand nor understand. They know what a baby is, and they know it is wrong to kill a baby. Furthermore, they have not been around long enough to practice the mental gymnastics and exercises in denial that are necessary for developing and maintaining a pro-choice position.

At the start of the homily, I asked for a volunteer from among the youngest, smallest members of the congregation. Sharon, who was about six, came forward. I had her stand next to me facing the people and asked her, Sharon, are there people out there who are bigger than you? Yes! she exclaimed. Are there people out there who are older than you? Yes! she exclaimed. Are there people out there who are stronger than you? Yes! she exclaimed. Are there people out there who are more important than you? No! she declared, with even more conviction in her voice. All the other children understood the same thing.

And thus they understood the key problem in the abortion tragedy. Abortion builds on the lie that the smallest and weakest among us have less value and can even be discarded.

Teaching children about abortion is not as difficult as many think. Children are particularly receptive to the message of the equality of all people, and to the truth that might does not make right. They have a keen sense of justice and fairness. They know what it means to need protection from dangers they can neither withstand nor understand. They know what a baby is, and they know it is wrong to kill a baby.

Furthermore, they have not been around long enough to practice the mental gymnastics and exercises in denial that are necessary for developing and maintaining a pro-choice position.

It is not necessary to teach children the details of reproduction before they learn that abortion is a bad thing. The basis for teaching about abortion is not the reproductive system, but the dignity and worth of every human person, whether that person is big or small, young or old, healthy or sick, wanted or unwanted, convenient or inconvenient.

The basis for teaching young people about abortion is the same basis on which we teach that the commandment Thou shalt not kill applies to any other category of people.


Overcoming concerns

Some may be afraid to use the word abortion with children, reasoning that, as someone recently told me, they dont understand all the aspects of it. Lets face it: nobody does. We do not aim to teach them all the aspects. The key point with children is that when they hear the word abortion, they know it is something bad, something that kills, something to be avoided. Education is not just concepts. We influence children not only in how they think about abortion, but in how they feel about it. They should be trained to reject it, and to see it as part of the list of injustices and evils in the world rather than part of the list of rights, freedoms, and choices.


A paradoxical attitude

Some express a concern that children will be traumatized if we tell them that abortion kills babies. I once sat in on a staff meeting at which a proposal was made to set up a sign on parish property that said, Abortion Kills Children. The staff voted down the proposal on the basis that it would give nightmares to the school children who would see it. A few days later I was in that same school, and in the corridor of the first and second grade students I saw posters on the wall, made by the students themselves. The posters had skeletons coming up from the grave, people falling off an abyss, and various other nightmare scenes, with the message: DRUGS KILL. SAYING YES TO DRUGS IS LIKE SAYING YES TO MR. DEATH.

Where is our consistency? Is it only the politically incorrect messages that will give our children nightmares?

The pro-life message will not harm our children. What will harm them, however, is the pro-choice mentality, which will train them to think that human life is a disposable item, and which, if unchallenged, may lead them to an abortion mill someday.

If parents sometimes object to my pro-life preaching because their children are present, I gently point out to them that I share their concern for their childrens welfare. I then tell them that it is better that they hear about abortion from me, in the presence of their parents who can discuss their questions and calm their fears, than if they hear about abortion from pro-choice people who will tell them the false and dangerous lie that abortion is no big deal. It is worse yet, of course, if the first time they hear anything substantial about abortion is from the counselor who is trying to sell them one.


Allowing children to learn the truth

Parents are the primary educators of their children. This requires that priests and other educators co-operate closely with them. It does not mean, however, that either the parents or other educators have the right to keep their children from the truth. In one instance when I spoke to seventh graders about how abortion harms women, one set of parents objected because I had not received their permission to bring up the topic in class. I assured them that I had no intention of bypassing their parental authority and that, in fact, I welcomed their input. I pointed out that people differ on which matters require special parental approval and which do not. I then invited them to be at least equally upset over the fact that their daughter can actually obtain an abortion and be harmed by it without their knowledge or consent, as they were upset that their daughter had heard about abortion and its harmful effects without their knowledge or consent. Public health records in New York State show 231 abortions on thirteen-year-old girls in 1990.

I know of another case in which parental permission was obtained for all the students in the class, except one, to see a photo of an aborted baby. After school the student whose parents had denied permission insisted that her friend let her see the picture. On returning home she passionately challenged her mom, Why did you not want me to see what is really happening to these babies? Why was I not allowed to see the truth?


Compassion for their peers

It is particularly appropriate that children share our concern about abortion. After all, they are closer in age to those who are being killed. Furthermore, they were considered non-persons in the sight of the law during the first nine months of their existence! If I were born after the Roe v. Wade decision, I would take that as a personal insult! What a loss todays children have sustained from abortion! Those aborted would have been their classmates, their friends, their husbands and wives! Psychological research is being done on the impact of this tragedy on those whose lives might have been taken, had they not been wanted. What does this do to their sense of self-worth, especially in other settings when certain people do not want them?

I recently spoke at a cemetery service at a grave containing the aborted bodies of several hundred babies. At the end of the service, each person present placed a rose on the grave and departed. Most people missed the scene at the very end. A very young girl, just able to walk, took a rose to the grave by herself and placed it there. She was, indeed, closest to her brothers and sisters in that grave. The youngest had compassion on her peers, who might have seen the sun that day as she did.

I have often seen the truth in the words of the Second Vatican Council, true living witnesses of Christ among their companions (Decree on the Apostolate of Lay People #12). They will respond actively to the pro-life message, as did the two who wrote me and said, Hi! Id like to begin this letter by thanking you for last weeks homily. I was deeply moved and so was my younger brother. Although we are both young, Im 17 and hes 12, weve been taught about how precious life is. But we did not fully understand what goes on in abortion till your homily. We both would like to get on the mailing lists of pro-life organizations.

Children particularly like to wear the Precious Feet pin, showing the exact size and shape of a babys feet at 10 weeks. It was a childs idea to put those feet on top of pink and blue ribbons. A major pro-life organization then made the combination into a pin!


The witness of youth

I once met a 7-year-old named Nick, among a group of young people peacefully demonstrating outside an abortion mill. This must be your first time taking part in something like this, I said to him. Oh no, Father, he exclaimed. Ive protested abortion in New York, Chicago, Atlanta, and other places. . . .

A group of summer campers I once served, ages 8-10, sent a joint letter to the local paper to speak up for unborn children.

These and many other projects can be organized in parishes and schools, or as part of confirmation service projects. Preaching and teaching will lead even the young to action. Silence will only allow the killing to continue.

I will allow a fourth-grade girl to finish this article with her letter to us.

Dear Christians,

I was so excited about coming into the world. I thought about all the things I would do like playing with toys, riding a bike, going to the zoo, and having a dog. I wanted to see movies, go to school, make friends, and go the park and the circus. I wanted to celebrate Christmas and receive Jesus in Holy Communion. I looked forward to listening to music, dancing, swimming in a pool, playing soccer and having dolls.

I am very sad that I never got to do any of these things. My mother did not let me be born. I just dont understand one thing why didnt any one of you help me? I wish you had. No one heard my crying voice.

From, An unborn baby

This is Meaghen Gonzalez, Editor of CERC. I hope you appreciated this piece. We curate these articles especially for believers like you.

Please show your appreciation by making a $3 donation. CERC is entirely reader supported.

dividertop

Acknowledgement

Pavone, Reverend Frank A. Preaching To Children About Abortion. Homiletic & Pastoral Review (January, 1996): 57-60.

Published with permission of The Homiletic and Pastoral Review.

The Homiletic & Pastoral Review, 86 Riverside Dr., New York, N.Y. 10024, (212) 799-2600.

The Author

Reverend Frank A. Pavone serves in full-time pro-life ministry as National Director of Priests for Life. He received his M.Div. and M.A. in theology from St. Josephs Seminary, Yonkers, and was ordained in New York in 1988. Fr. Pavone has taught Scripture and Dogma in the Permanent Diaconate Formation Program and the Institute for Religious Studies in New York.

Copyright © 1996 Homiletic & Pastoral Review

Interested in keeping Up to date?

Sign up for our Weekly E-Letter

* indicates required