Breaking the Law
Fr. Frank Pavone
National Director, Priests for Life
March 28, 2005
I have never broken the law. I have never been arrested.
Yet
I often think of Bishop Austin Vaughan, auxiliary bishop of
New York,
who in the last years of his life of faithful service to the
Church, was
arrested and imprisoned many times for rescuing unborn babies.
He saw what Christians
were doing across the country as they peacefully blocked the
doors of abortion
mills to put their bodies between the babies and the instruments
of death. Then one
day he looked at his Episcopal ring, and realized that the three
figures on it --
St. Peter, St. Paul, and the Lord Jesus -- had all been arrested
and imprisoned! He no
longer hesitated to do so too, if it was the price to pay for
saving lives.
Human reason, Scripture, and history teach us that while we
are called to be
law-abiding citizens, breaking the law is not always wrong.
Take, for example,
someone who breaks down the door of a neighbor's apartment to
put out a
fire, or jumps over a fence past the "no trespassing"
sign into a neighbor's yard to
save a child drowning in a swimming pool. Those cases make it
clear that saving
life takes precedence over laws the preserve less important
values.
Lessons from Scripture abound. The apostles were given strict
orders not to
teach in the name of Jesus (see Acts 4 and 5). Should they have
obeyed? If they
had, we would not know the Gospel. Would we obey if that order
were given to us?
What exactly would we say to the assembled crowd on Sunday morning
if such a law
had been passed on Friday?
In Exodus, we read, "The king of Egypt said to the Hebrew
midwives...'When
you help the Hebrew women in childbirth ... if it is a boy,
kill him; but if it
is a girl, let her live.' The midwives, however, feared God
and did not do what the king of
Egypt had told them to do; they let the boys live" (Ex.
1:15-17). They
disobeyed the king's order because it conflicted with a higher
law, God's command
never to kill the innocent. Daniel went to the lion's den because
he disobeyed a law
prohibiting prayer (Daniel 6).
History shows us Christians martyred for disobeying Caesar,
people rescuing
slaves, protecting Jews from the Holocaust, and resisting segregation
-- all
in violation of the law but in support of justice. The list
of examples fills
many volumes.
We risk failure if we ignore the lessons of history and the
principles of
Scripture. It's easy to look back at those who broke the law
in these cases and praise
them. But when the same challenges that they faced face us,
we find it difficult
to acknowledge that sometimes the law must be broken. That's
because now, the
sacrifices will be made by us.
I have never broken the law. I have never been arrested. But
I simply cannot
guarantee that I never will.
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