B
BasiaGirl
Guest
I suffer from scruples; as a result, I know a lot about Canon Law (unfortunately). I feel that if I don’t correct people, I am responsible for their sins. At the same time, I don’t want to turn them off. For example, I have a Church friend who is a Eucharistic minister. Today at Mass, she mentioned that she is pro-choice. This really freaked me out. I thought about it and finally, at the end of Mass, I said, “Isn’t being pro-choice a mortal sin.” She went on to tell me that she has to be pro-choice because she once had an abortion. She went on to say that she had it before she became Catholic and that she confessed it, but she still believes that abortion should be an option in some cases like in hers: her unborn child had a high risk of a hereditary disease. Her first child was born with the disease–he has breathing problems and is confined to bed and has been wasting away for the last thirty years. Anyway, she said she couldn’t deal with another child like that, so she had the abortion. She started sounding a bit snippy, so I just said, “Oh.” Then we hugged goodbye. Now I’m freaking out like I should have made it more clear to her that her pro-choice beliefs aren’t compatible with Christianity, and here she is a Eucharistic minister. At the same time, I don’t want to belabor the issue because she gets snitty, and she’s a convert, so I don’t want to turn her away from the Church. Maybe I can just leave a bumper sticker on the seat where she sits in church that reads “You can’t be pro-choice and Catholic.” She’d probably guess it was from me because I have an anti-abortion sticker on my car. It’s eating away at me. Am I sinning if I don’t hammer this home to her? Am I responsible because here is a pro-choice Eucharistic minister giving and receiving Communion every week at Mass? I feel like I’m sinning. Help! 