Faith without works is dead. We have “street theater” in our city at least 3 times a week. I’ve spent hours on the street myself. It appears that you’ve never lent a hand to that activity. Just this year alone, our sidewalk group has saved at least 6 children, that we know of. These are children who are living today – because we were there on the street, with signs.
that is not street theater. You appear to be a good bit younger than I am, as I have given examples of street theater, and you didn’t get it. Street theater is the intentional criminal acts done by certain protesters in order to get public (i.e., press) attention to their complaint. Steet Theater is a PETA member going into a store selling mink coats and jackets and spilling red ink on them to protest the death of the mink. Street Theater is a group breaking into a military area and spilling red ink on a missle silo. Street Theater is someone protesting Obama’s postion on abortion at ND, and doing so by purposely and intentionally trespassing, when they could have joined a legitimate protest that had followed the rules.
What you are doing is not within the definition of Street Theater.
You have a cynical view for some reason. Randall Terry, for one, basically invented the pro-life protest (not him alone, but he was among the founders). Joe Schiedler has saved dozens of children through his protests, as has Joan Andrews who suffered many arrests in trying to defend life.
Either you don’t know any of this, or you never cared enough to learn about the origins of the pro-life movement.
Wrong on both issues. The Church has repeatedly said that in protesting abortions, we need to follow the laws of the land. That does not mean that we cannot use the courts to protest and try to change illegal or unconstitutional laws; but neither does the Church suggest that we willy-nilly go about trespassing because we personally don’t like a law.
Or you may have some other motive for trying to demean the people who have been protesting against abortion, and directly saving children for years.
No. you simply don’t read very well. I understand you are passionate about the issue, and I applaud you for your passion. But passion is not the best base to use in which to make a rational decision. We are talking about rational decisions - the thousands at ND who chose to make a protest about Obama and followed school guidelines are those I applaud; not the few who intentionally chose to violate trespass laws. It is you who doesn’t get it.
How many children did the Notre Dame group save? You might be surprised that many activists around the country were encouraged by the protests and the arrests – those people will do the same in their own towns. Children will be saved … that’s the point.
Neither you nor I know how prayers are answered, so you are asking a question as if there was an answer that could be given in numbers. I can turn the question around and ask the same - how many children were saved by the protesters who were arrested? I am willing to bet on the work of the Holy Spirit. Are you? Do you believe that prayer is efficacious? And as to how many were influenced by the prayerful vigil as opposed to the street theater, unless and until there is a poll conducted properly, all we have are anecdotes. I don’t give anecdotes a lot of weight.
It is fine to be fired up about an issue. But you need to learn to listen without having the passion you feel distort what you hear or see. You know nothing of me, but seem extemely eager to paint me as either pro-abortion, or at best ambivilent about the issue. Just because I am not on the street with you at the clinic is not grounds for you to try to pass judgement on me. Just because you are passionate about the issue doe not mean that others are not, if they do not do as you do (sidewalk ministry).
You seem to take the position that because you believe your cause is just, that you or others who believe as you do are justified in taking the law into their own hands, picking and choosing which laws you will obey and which you will violate, and that you should be honored for breaking laws rather than punished.
The difficulty with your position is that there are others who feel the same way, but with different issues. PETA has no problem violating numerous laws in their protests about animal “rights”. White Supremiscists feel the same. The Black Panthers felt the same. The violent protesters about Viet Nam felt the same way. They all violated civil and criminal laws because they “knew” their cause was justified. And believe me, they were true believers; it was just everyone else who “didn’t get it”.
That results in anarchy. And your suggestion that someone at ND trespassing in order to protest Obama is going to save a child - that day or the next week, or month or year, is just as anarchical.
There have been heated debates ongoing since the start of protesting about abortions. The debates revolve around the efficaciousness of violating laws while protesting vs. not violating laws. And with the exception of rare test cases concerning unconstitutional laws (and the whole net sum is small), the large majority believe that laws such as trespass should not be violated. It is the small minority who feel that Street Theater is necessary. What they will not concede is that the independent observer, watching such theater, almost always sees them as “wild eyed” radicals and dismisses them and their message. Rational discourse still is the best means of convincing someone else of the correctness of your position.