<http://www.lifeisaprayer.com/articles/religion/waldman-homily.html>A 
Profile In Courage
Homily by Rev. Noah Waldman

Our Lord asks us to follow him not only in word 
and promise, but in deed and action, even when 
that action requires heroic courage. In this 
regard I would like to speak about a hero of 
mine: Michael Cardinal von Faulhaber, the Roman 
Catholic Archbishop of Munich from 1917 to his 
death in 1952. (As an interesting side note, the 
last man Faulhaber was to ordain to the 
priesthood was one Joseph Ratzinger, our present Holy Father.)

As you might imagine, the years between 1933 and 
1945, marked by the reign of Hitler, were 
especially difficult for Faulhaber. However, 
rather than choose to remain quiet out of fear of 
the Nazis, Faulhaber instead chose courage. At 
every opportunity, he spoke out against the 
crimes of the Nazis, on occasion risking his own life to do so.

His Advent sermons of 1933, delivered in the vast 
Munich Cathedral, the Frauenkirche, drew 
thousands of Munich citizens­standing room 
only­who came to listen to the Cardinal 
fearlessly challenge National Socialism, to 
assert the rights and freedoms of the Catholic 
Church, and to call for the protection of the Jewish People.

By the 1940s when Hitler’s final solution became 
clear to all, Faulhaber ordered yellow armbands 
with the Star of David to be placed on the 
statues of Christ and Mary throughout his 
archdiocese, in specific response to the Nazi 
treatment of Jews. Faulhaber’s courage made the 
Nazis cower. No one in the Gestapo dare take 
these yellow arm bands down. So, Munich, the 
birthplace of the Nazi movement, became the 
center of Nazi resistance. And although Dachau 
was located just ten miles outside Munich’s city 
limits, within Munich Hitler and his policies 
were weakened severely by the courage of a single man.

It remains one of the perplexing questions of 
history, how it could be that a great people such 
as the Germans could have been fooled by a man 
with such a diabolical political agenda? 
Especially Germany, the country of Frederick the 
Great the philosopher-king, which was arguably 
the most enlightened and free nation in Europe. 
Because of reparations which Germany had to repay 
as a result of the Treaty of Versailles, 
Germany’s economy was in free-fall. (If you think 
the current crisis in the Unites States is a 
problem, what we are enduing is nothing by 
comparison.). The German currency of the time, 
the Reichsmark which was introduced in 1924, was 
worth less than the paper it was printed on. 
Hyperinflation was so pronounced that it was 
cheaper to burn money than firewood.

So when Hitler came to power he fulfilled much of 
his agenda. He did revive the German economy, 
almost miraculously. Hitler also reestablished 
the order to a society falling into disarray, and 
he gave Germans a new sense of pride. So, in a 
sense, Hitler “saved” Germany­or so it seemed to many in 1934.

But Hitler’s plan to "save" Germany was founded 
upon of principles of utmost evil: The killing of 
the innocent; genocide of neighboring peoples and 
the plundering of nations; eugenic activity on 
handicapped, the infirm and the aged, all in the 
name of progress toward a "master race"­a utopian 
ideal to create a society which would last not for 1,000 but for 10,000 years.

Hitler wanted the Church to remain quiet in the 
face of all this, and to ultimately replace the 
Church with what amounted to a new religion based 
on German identity. Hitler’s desire for the 
Church was a cry many of us hear today: The 
Church should not interfere with policies of the state.

----------
We see through the lens of history, that there 
are times when the Church must speak out against 
the state to defend the rights of those who have 
no voice. When the matter at hand is the killing 
of the innocent, or the manipulation of human 
life for the purpose of a national agenda to 
create a master race of people who will never 
succumb to sickness and be as beautiful as the 
models and stars on the television and Internet, 
or the objectification of women­the Church must speak out.

History has not looked with any kindness on 
members of the Catholic clergy or hierarchy 
which, during Nazi domination, did little or 
nothing to help the plight of the Jewish people. 
History has condemned them, and rightly so.

We as members of the Church are the hands of 
Jesus, our mouths are the instruments of his 
voice. Jesus, who always spoke out against 
injustice and oppression, asks and requires us to 
be agents of change in the world, to bring about 
policies in our own nation and in the world that 
will defend human life, most especially for the 
innocent and weak who have no one to speak for them.

As a Jew who became Catholic in my early 20s, one 
of the most painful issues I have had to deal 
with in my own soul and with speaking with my own 
family is how to answer the question: Why didn't 
the Church do more to stop Hitler and to help the 
Jews? Frankly, we know the Church did a great 
deal, probably more than any other institution in 
the world to help the Jewish people.

But questions remain. How could so many German 
Christians at the time have supported Hitler? How 
could they have viewed their economic prosperity, 
the strengthening of their public institutions 
and army, and the pride of their own nation as 
being of greater value than the killing of the 
innocent? Is there any way to defend that? Is 
economic prosperity more important that life? Is 
the right to a particular quality of life more 
important than the right to life itself? Who will 
define that quality? Is mass murder allowable if 
the state is feeding the hungry?

----------
Looking back at the Third Reich, I think all of 
us in this church today, and probably everyone in 
the United States of America would agree that 
there is no excuse for what happened in Germany.

But then I ask you: When we go to the polls on 
November 4, why will so many Catholics not 
support the overturn of Roe vs. Wade? Yes, there 
are many issues facing our country, many of them 
serious. War is serious, and so is the matter of 
immigration, economic reform, taxation, the need 
for health care, and so on. But we must keep in 
mind that since 1973 when the Supreme Court 
decided that a human being in the womb was not 
protected because of property and privacy rights 
implied in the 14th amendment, we have as a 
nation aborted nearly 50 million people.

Let us also not forget the 30-40 million women 
whose lives have been scarred because they were 
told that this procedure would be good for them 
and help them, and who day after day have to 
convince themselves somehow that they are forgiven.

Before I conclude this long homily­and I thank 
you for your attention today­I want to say to 
anyone here affected by abortion that Jesus has 
the power to make all things new: It is Jesus’ 
job to forgive sinners. God understands the pain 
of loss and human frailty, which is why his 
forgiveness and mercy towards those who have 
suffered through abortion is so abundant. The 
Father forgives as soon as you ask. But emotional 
healing takes many, many years, and it hurts terribly.

Thank God that today, the pro-life movement has 
greatest love and sympathy for women and those 
who have gone through abortion. Project Rachel 
here in St. Louis is a place of tremendous 
comfort and peace. Thank God also that the 
pro-life movement and the Catholic Church has in 
place real programs to help women who choose not 
to have an abortion, so that they can survive 
financially and medically through such difficult times.

We must never forget that our goal to stop 
abortion, while necessary, is only the first part 
of our call. The second part is for us to support 
with love and financial assistance the women and 
families who will struggle to raise their 
children in the face of seemingly insurmountable 
struggles. It takes strength to choose life in 
our world today, and for us to be effective 
ministers of the love of Jesus, not only must we 
protect life, we must be present and willing to 
help nurture that new life into adulthood; we 
must be there especially for the poor and for single mothers.

Moreover, the Church does not condemn those who 
have suffered through the abortion experience. 
Rather, the Church stands by such people to offer 
them forgiveness, compassion to know their sins 
are forgiven, and that God loves them dearly. The 
Church, however, does condemn those who willfully 
have made abortion the law of the land, who 
support its spread, and who propagate this 
terrible lie­this "big lie"­that causes death and personal loss.

I pray that, when historians looks back at the 
late 20th and early 21st century and the Catholic 
Church, they will be able to say that it was our 
Church that stopped the brutal killing of the 
innocent; that it was our Church that was the 
true voice of women’s rights; that it was our 
Church that never abandoned young mothers and 
young children; that it was our Church that shone 
the light of Jesus’ love in the world’s darkness.

You and I have the obligation, therefore, to 
speak out against the lie that abortion is not 
killing; the lie that abortion is good for women.

We do this primarily by praying to end abortion; 
we do this by supporting women who have endured 
abortions; we do this by assisting women who 
courageously choose to endure difficult 
pregnancies; we do this by refraining from 
investing in companies that promote abortion and 
human manipulation; we do this by abstaining and 
opposing anything in the entertainment industry 
that treats women as objects whose feelings and 
personal worth are disregarded; and, finally, we 
do this according to our votes.

I will close this long homily now with two 
questions. First: If every Catholic in Germany 
had opposed Hitler, would there have been a 
Holocaust? The answer requires some nuance. Many 
Christians were under compulsion to join the Nazi 
Party, lest they experience utter loss of 
livelihood, and often the abduction and murder of 
family remembers. However, Cardinal Faulhaber’s 
courage and the example of Munich demonstrates 
the triumph of human dignity in the face of 
tyranny: If every diocese in Germany had a man as 
brave as Cardinal Faulhaber, I do not think the 
Holocaust could have happened. No tyrant, however 
brutal, can carry out any program without the 
consent of the governed; the power of a leader is 
proportionate to people’s willingness to be led.

The second and final question, therefore, is 
this: If every Catholic in the United States 
showed the courage of Cardinal Faulhaber, and 
voted only pro-life, what do you think would happen?

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Given Sts. Joachim and Ann Church, St. Charles,
Saturday, Sept 27, 5:00 pm Mass, and
Sunday Sept 28 7:15 am and 10:30 am Mass
(This homily, with few alterations, was also delivered
at St. Clement of Rome, Des Peres, Respect Life Sunday 2007).

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Lord, may everything we do begin with Your 
inspiration and continue with Your help,
so that all our prayers and works may begin in You and by You be happily ended.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.
Amen.


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