THE
PURPOSE OF LIFE
By
Joseph P. Wall
FORETHOUGHTS
Before World War II, our Catholic people, with some
exceptions, were working class or lower middle class; decent, hardworking, the
backbone of the nation. They had, however, very little influence on how it was
run, on its culture. That was the province of the (mainly Protestant) upper
middle class. As a result of the GI Bill, passed for the benefit of World War
II veterans, millions of Catholics were able to attend colleges and
universities and then graduate into the ranks of the upper middle class—the
people who run the country.
The bright promise of the forties and fifties was
that these newly-empowered Catholic members of the upper middle class, now able
to influence American culture, would move it in the direction of a Catholic
Christian civilization with immense implications for the future of the world.
They failed. Although they now had the skills, the power, the money, and the
contacts to make things happen, they did not come through. They did not put
their supposed Catholic beliefs into action. They were seduced, bought off,
scared off.
This present generation of upper-middle-class
Catholics, recently emerged from the ranks of the working class, the lower
middle class, are simply terrified of going back. They fear that if they did
anything to oppose, to offend the prevailing secular-humanist ethos that rules
America, they would lose the hard-won material and social gains achieved over
the past fifty years. To put it in another way, they might be sent back to that
shabby row-house on the grimy backstreet where they grew up. Our
college-educated upper-middle-class Catholics fear this above all else and will
do anything to avoid it.
This is what lies behind, I believe, their refusal
for the most part to take part in the titanic struggle against the American
Abortion Holocaust. They are obsessed with the fear that if they did, they
might lose their well-paid positions, their stocks and bonds, their lovely
homes in the suburbs, their soft pleasant life. They have made a choice;
instead of converting the milieu, they have been converted by it. They have
made their choice; but what do they tell their children?
Following is an imaginary conversation
between a father and his son illustrating what they are indeed telling their
children, not in words like these but far more effectively by their actions,
their life-style.
THE
CONVERSATION
"Well then son, you've raised a really
interesting question: what is the purpose of life, what's it all about? This tells
me that, since you'll soon be entering high school and are no longer a child,
you aren't satisfied with the usual off-hand answers your mother and I have
given you so far. You are starting to think about things. Hey, that's great;
now we can sit down and really talk together, man to man.
"You have asked me 'what is the purpose of
life, what's it all about?' Okay then, here's the answer.
"Right now, the purpose of life is for you to
get into a good prep school, say St. Joe's or Malvern; better yet, if we can
swing it, Episcopal Academy or Perm Charter. Then, one of the first-rate
colleges like Harvard or any of the Ivy League schools. Failing that, one of
the better (former) Catholic colleges like Villanova or Notre Dame.
"After graduation, get a well-paying job with a
large corporation or a government bureaucracy, or master a lucrative profession
like law or medicine, or start a profitable business. In any case, make a lot
of money and invest it wisely.
"Buy a large home on a sizeable piece of ground
in the swankier outer suburbs. Fill it with costly furniture and rugs, making
sure there are plenty of closets to hold the huge collection of fashionable,
expensive clothing you will accumulate. Of course, you will have all the latest
appliances and gadgets including large-screen TVs, state-of-the-art computers,
sports equipment and anything else that strikes your fancy. Be sure your house
has a large driveway to accommodate your late-model up-scale car as well as
your wife's similar vehicle. You will also need room for your boat and trailer
as well. Don't worry about keeping up the grounds; hire a landscaping outfit to
do that.
"Join a fashionable country club where you can
meet the right kind of people. That is, those who will be good, not only for
your social life, but also for your business or profession. The important thing
is to associate with those who share your view of 'the purpose of life.' The
same holds true for other groups; stick with charitable organizations that are
'respectable' so that you don't have to constantly explain why you are
associated with them.
"What about kids, you say. Have two; preferably
a boy and a girl. Any more might cramp your lifestyle. Hey, why do you think
birth control was invented? True, kids can be a bother but there are ways of
handling that. When they are young, you can hire a 'nanny,' maybe an illegal
immigrant from Latin America who will work cheap, fearing deportation. When
they get old enough, send them off to boarding school. If it was good enough
for the Kennedys, why not you? In any case, put them into expensive private
schools. If you feel guilty because you are neglecting them, load them down with
toys, gadgets, TVs, clothing, computers, HiFis, anything you can think of to
pretend that you 'care' about them. Of course, sometimes reality breaks through
and they fall into drugs, promiscuity, even suicide. Hey, that's life; try not
to think about it.
"You ask about this 'pro-life' business you've
been hearing about recently; people protesting, rescuing, being arrested.
What's it all about? Look, I am 'pro-life'; I do not believe in abortion
unless, of course, it's necessary. As for the pro-lifers they mean well, their
hearts are in the right place, but they are breaking the law. We simply cannot
permit that! The law is the law and it MUST be obeyed! Much as I sympathize
with them—they are, as I say, well-meaning people—they must accept the fact
that you cannot break the law, no matter what the reason.
"Religion. You ask me how does religion—God,
sin, heaven, hell—fit into all this? Let me set you straight. It's kind of like
Fire Insurance. Sure you hope your house or business never burns down but you
still pay your monthly premiums, just in case. Okay, it's annoying to write
that check, month after month, but if you ever have a fire you'll be mighty
glad you did. Same thing; go to church once in a while, contribute, say the
right things, don't perform the grosser sins. Hey, you don't have to be a
fanatic about it; do the minimum, that's all. The Bible says that you can' serve
both God and Mammon. My answer to that is; sure you can!
"Now you know what it's all about. Brian. Oh
yes, say hello to your girlfriend Amy for me. She's a sweet kid."
AFTERTHOUGHTS
"Then He said to them, look well and keep
yourselves clear of all covetness. A man's life does not consist in having more
possessions than he needs.'
"Then He said to His disciples, 'I say to you, then,
do not fret over your life, how to support it with food; over your body, how to
keep it clothed.' "
"You should not be asking, then, what are you
to eat or drink, and living in suspense of mind; it is for the heathen world to
busy itself over such things; your Father knows well that you need them. No,
make it your first care to find the kingdom of God, and all these things shall
be yours without the asking.
"Sell what you have, and give alms, so
providing yourselves with a purse that time cannot wear holes in, an
inexhaustible treasure laid up in heaven, where no thief comes near, no moth
consumes. WHERE YOUR TREASURE IS, THERE
YOU HEART IS TOO” (Luke 12).
The late Joe
Wall was a long-time pro-life activist from Philadelphia, PA who had been
involved in every aspect of the pro-life movement.
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