« Remembering Fr. Robert Drinan: A lawyer who knew the limits of the law | Main | Former PM Blair converts to Catholicism »

Make peaceful revolution possible

Fr. Drinan's Tribute to Speaker Nancy Pelosi

Robert F. Drinan, S.J.
Mass Honoring Speaker-Elect Nancy Pelosi

January 3, 2007 in Notre Dame Chapel at Trinity University, Washington DC

Today is a new epiphany for all of us, for our country and for the world.

Epiphany brought the three Magi to worship the new born child. We are here to venerate that child and to pledge that the message of this infant Jesus will be followed in our country and throughout the universe.

This is a new and wonderful moment for all of us.

The new Congress has 16 percent women and for the first time the Speaker is a mother.

We re-pledge our lives to the love of children. In this regard the Holy See has shown us the way. In 1981 the Vatican was the fifth nation of the Earth to ratify the United Nations Covenant on the Rights of the Child. That magnificent treaty has now been ratified by all of the 192 nations in the world -- except Somalia and, we say it with shame, the United States.

The children protected by the U.N. Covenant now number some three billion, almost one-half of the 6.4 billion in the world.

Today we re-pledge ourselves to pray and work for those children. We must continue to be shocked that 31,000 of those children will die today and every day from diseases and malnutrition that are clearly preventable.

Imagine what the world would think of the United States if the health and welfare of children everywhere became the top objective of America's foreign policy! It could happen -- and it could happen soon -- if enough people cared.

Today at this moving and unforgettable Mass we gather to pray, to reflect and once again commit our lives to carrying out the faith we have that the needs of every child are the needs of Jesus Christ himself. The tragedies of the children of Darfur and the victims of Katrina have made us feel guilty for the neglect of the young people in these nations. That guilt has to be developed so that the United States and other developed countries will use their resources to help the 800 million people in the world who are chronically malnourished.

We must also remember the 100 million children who are not enrolled in any school -- and that 70 percent of these children are girls.

In addition, children are still being injured by land mines placed by the United States in Nicaragua, El Salvador, Vietnam, Kuwait and elsewhere.

We have come to this beautiful place to pray for our new leaders and for ourselves. We are ashamed that we have been so careless and thoughtless about the rights of children.

We cannot forget Christ's personal love of children and his affirmation that "whatsoever you do for the least of my brethren you do for me."

We are increasingly aware that the world -- especially the 48 Islamic nations -- have the deepest doubts about the intentions and activities of the United States. They know that the United States has less than five percent of the world's total population but consumes 40 percent of its resources.

We pledge again before the Blessed Sacrament that we will deepen our love for all children. It is depressing to realize that only 18 percent of America's children are registered in Head Start and that an appalling number do not graduate from high school.

We are aware at this holy place of the weakness of our faith and the fragility of our love.

Let us reexamine our convictions, our commitments and our courage. Our convictions and our commitments are clear and certain to us. But do we have the courage to carry them out?

God has great hopes for what this nation will do in the near future. We are here to ask for the courage to carry out God's hopes and aspirations.

Let us not disappoint our redeemer.

We learn things in prayer that we otherwise would never know. Let us pray now and always.

If a plane crashed this afternoon at Dulles with 310 children aboard, the whole world would cry and cry and cry.

But a tragedy like that happens 100 times each day -- 31,000 children every day -- needlessly die because the heedlessness of all of us.

President Kennedy once said that those who "make peaceful revolution impossible make violent revolution inevitable."

We pray here today and ask God's help in our ardent desires to "make peaceful revolution possible."

Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Bookmark and Share

"My idea of self, of family, of community, of the wider world comes straight from my religion."

Joe Biden, "Promises to Keep" (2007)



© 2004-2020 CatholicDemocrats.org. All rights reserved.
Not authorized by any candidate or candidate committee.
Website issues? See the Webmaster.