Posted on 01/17/2014 2:40:17 PM PST by NYer
This year, Benedictine College will be leading the March for Life in Washington, D.C., thanks to a mother who refused to abort a bishop.
My favorite argument against abortion is the George Bailey argument. Bailey is the character in Its a Wonderful Life who gets a glimpse of what the world would be like if he never existed.
What George Baileys are we missing because of abortion? What kind of world would we have if they had lived?
One near miss: The Ravens Respect Life group leading the March for Life this year would have gotten aborted away, if one doctor had his way.
Bishop Andrew Cozzens of St. Paul-Minneapolis told me the story. I was interviewing him for my day-job at Benedictine College. In October, Pope Francis named him a bishop, making him the seventh Raven Bishop (Benedictine alum bishop) in the 21st century.
Growing up, he said, his mother would tell him, God saved your life because he has a plan for you and your job is to find out what that plan is, said the bishop. Thats true of everyone but this story made that impressed on me in a deeper way.
One of the things that God created him to do was to cofound Ravens Respect Life at Benedictine College, apparently. We were the first group to organize trips to the March for Life to Washington, D.C., said Bishop Cozzens. We took a couple of buses back then.
But he almost wasnt there to start it.
When my mom was 20 weeks pregnant with me, her water broke and she went immediately to the hospital, he said. She and my father spent a night in prayer that they would not lose the baby. The next morning, the doctor came in after running some tests.
The doctor said, I need to tell you that your child is severely deformed and I recommend that we induce labor in other words, end the childs life prematurely.
Mrs. Cozzens said, Absolutely not.
The doctor answered, You dont get it this child is a freak.
I dont care what you say, she answered. She was determined to keep her baby and to get a new doctor.
A second doctor was sent and he said the baby would be fine, If youre willing to lie in bed for the rest of this pregnancy.
The parents were happy to do just that. But How will we pay? they asked. Insurance wouldnt cover a months-long hospital stay.
The new doctor said not to worry. He had made a bet with the first doctor that she would deliver a healthy and normal child. If the baby was normal, Doctor 1 would pay for her $1,200 hospital stay. If not, Doctor 2 would pay.
When the second doctor delivered me he told the nurse to go get the other doctor and tell him to see his little freak, laughed Bishop Cozzens.
The freak would later help start the March for Life, and another student a few years behind him would take up the slack: James Albers, who is now Abbot James of St. Benedicts Abbey on our campus.
Abbot James will be riding one of our eight buses on the 1,000 mile-plus trip to lead the March for Life this year along with faculty, staff and 386 students, nearly 25% of our student body.
It is no coincidence that the pro-life leaders in college become leaders in the world later on.
Bishop Cozzens said: The pro-life issue has been in a certain way the key issue in the cultural battles that we are deeply immersed in in the United States. It was the first dividing point for the future. We had to decide: Would we be willing to live sacrificially for another, or not? Being involved in the pro-life movement is a key to those who support the founding dream of the United States. College students need to be involved in that, if they will be involved in building a culture of life, which is one of the great tasks of this generation.
Ping!
Just wow.
FYI:
A Catholic, Benedictine, residential liberal arts college in Atchison, Kansas sponsored by the monks of St. Benedict’s Abbey and the sisters of Mount St.
Benedictine College is a co-educational university in Atchison, Kansas, United States, founded in 1971 by the merger of St. Benedict’s College for men and ...
Benedictine College of Atchison is near and dear to my heart— my grandfather attended the High School Seminary there, in the early 1900s. (Lucky for his descendants, he did not pursue a priestly vocation). I would dearly love to have a child of mine attend it, but it is very expensive.
Awesome!
this article gave me a chill.
Aren't you glad your mother didn't have an abortion?
Mount St. Scholastica.
My brothers also attended it.
And one of my sister attended Mount St. Scholastica.
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