Friday, September 14, 2007

Final Meeting

Our final planned 40 Days for Life Meeting will be held at St. John the Baptist Church in Waunakee, located on 209 South Street. The meeting is Sunday from 4:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. If you have not had the chance to come to any of our other meetings, please join us! We will once again air Being Human, and will talk about praying outside an abortion center.

If your Church or pro-life organization would like any of the 40 Days for Life Madison Team come to speak to you, please contact us at 40daysforlifemadison@gmail.com and we will be happy to do so!

Thursday, September 13, 2007

40 Days for Life in Aurora

For those interested in following the ongoing 40 Days for Life in Aurora, Jill Stanek has an excellent blog, following the vigil.

In her most recent blog, she quotes an email from Planned Parenthood CEO Cecile Richards sent to her supporters.

Planned Parenthood is under attack.

To be absolutely clear: the largest anti-choice protest we've seen in a very long time is happening at a Planned Parenthood clinic in Aurora, Illinois, at this very moment.

It's easy to ignore if you don't live there or aren't a woman trying to seek health care services at the clinic. But I hope you won't ignore it, because what's happening in Aurora is what's happening to all of us who care about choice in America.

We are facing no less than the most emboldened protest by the most radical anti-choice people I've ever encountered. They've made our brand new health center in Aurora ground zero in their fight against women's access to health care. And they are determined to keep our clinic from ever opening.

If there was ever a time for us to ask for help from our pro-choice friends and family - this is it.

First, take a simple action that demonstrates how much support Planned Parenthood and the women we serve have from all over the country. Click here to tie a hot-pink ribbon at the clinic - one ribbon for every supporter.

Then, tell your circle of friends and family what's happening in Aurora and what it means for access to reproductive health care and choice for all of us.

If you know people in the Chicago area, encourage them to put up a lawn sign or volunteer.

The protesters are determined to stop us, it's true. But we're taking this battle into our own hands - and into YOUR own hands. We're determined to open this clinic any day now, and with more warmth, more strength, and more solidarity with our supporters across the country than ever before.

Thank you for doing your part today.

Sincerely,


Cecile Richards
President, Planned Parenthood Federation of America

P.S. Thank you for your action today - if you can, we'd be grateful for your financial support as well. Any amount will help.


Planned Parenthood is taking 40 Days for Life very seriously. Their fear alone should be enough of an incentive to get involved here in Madison, or at any other of the 89 vigil sites for that matter.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

40 Days for Life starts September 26th



Great article by Gordon Govier from allgodspeople.com. The article talks about the Madison vigil, and also our fearless leader.

Amy Hying, an accountant for a local trucking company, uses a lot of spreadsheets. But one in particular is very important in her life right now. It's the one she's using for the 40 Days for Life campaign that begins September 26th.

The spreadsheet has 960 spaces, one for each hour of each day between September 26th and November 4th. At least two volunteers will be signing up for each of those hours, to pray in front of the Planned Parenthood abortion clinic at 3706 Orin Road on Madison's east side. Madison is one of 89 cities in 33 states involved in the 40 Days for Life campaign. Milwaukee, Green Bay, and Appleton vigils are the other Wisconsin cities involved.

Amy says the campaign has the backing of both Wisconsin Right to Life and ProLife Wisconsin. And Madison churches are starting to get behind the movement. "It's a big thing to bring all the denominations together," she says.

Madison was once the home of at least three abortion clinics, and the scene of some large-scale prolife demonstrations two decades ago. Now with only one clinic, there have been fewer demonstrations in recent years. There are still people who go to pray in front of the clinic though, something that Amy has done on a weekly basis for the past several years. "It isn't always easy," she says.

Sidewalk counseling is not part of the plan for the 40 Days for Life campaign. In fact volunteers are being asked to sign a "statement of peace" that includes the assertions:

I understand that graphic images and profanity are not allowed on any clothing or signs.
I will not threaten, physically contact, or verbally abuse the employees, volunteers, or customers or anyone using the facility
"It's all about prayer and fasting," Hying says. So far about 30 volunteers have signed up for shifts of varying links. Right now she is trying to connect with some men's ministries, who might be interested in taking night shifts.

The leaders of the campaign note that 40 days is a significant time period for major changes to take place.

Noah experienced a transformation during 40 days of rain.
Moses was transformed by 40 days on Mount Sinai
The spies were transformed as a result of 40 days in the Promised Land
David was transformed by Goliath’s 40 day challenge
Elijah was transformed when God gave him 40 days of strength from one meal.
The city of Nineveh was transformed when God gave them 40 days to get their act together.

The disciples were transformed after 40 days with Jesus following His resurrection.
An organizational/training meeting will be held tonight (Sept. 10th) at Madison's International House of Prayer, 1714 Eagan Road. Another meeting will be held on the west side Thursday night, Sept. 13th, at St. Thomas Aquinas Church, 602 Everglade Drive. For more information, contact Amy Hying: 40DaysForLifeMadison@gmail.comThis e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it or 698-3877. And check out the local website at http://www.40daysforlife.com/madison/.


Of course, it is very beautiful to see those spreadsheets filled by people committing to come out and pray, so please check out our calendar and let Amy know if you can come for an hour or more!

Monday, September 10, 2007

Meetings This Week

Just a reminder, 40 Days for Life Madison will have two meetings this week, one on the east side and one on the west side of Madison. No need to come to both.

The first will be Monday, September 10th from 6:30 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. at the House of Prayer, located at 1714 Eagan Road, near the Princeton Club next to West Towne Mall. We'll be talking about our mission of prayer and will be showing the documentary 'Being Human'.

The next meeting will occur at St. Thomas Aquinas Church on Thursday, September 13th from 6:30 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. St. Thomas Aquinas is located at 602 Everglade Dr.

Yes, we know it is the first Monday Night game tonight, but it is a double header, so it is okay to miss one game.

Saturday, September 8, 2007

So How Much is One Human Life Worth?

Very Tragic...here are the prices for abortions at our local Planned Parenthood. Seems it costs a little more the older the baby. Very sad.

Medical Abortion: RU486- $495.00, Methotrexate- $495.00

Surgical Abortion:
Pre-Abortion Counseling/Ultrasound- $100
up to 12 weeks LMP- $395
13 & 14 weeks LMP- $495
15 & 16 weeks LMP- $650
17 & 18 weeks LMP- $825
19 & 20 weeks LMP- $1050
21 & 22 weeks LMP- $1350
23 weeks LMP - $1750
More than 23 weeks LMP- $2250


Let us pray that, through this vigil, the Holy Spirit softens the hearts of all those working in the abortion industry.

Extremist protesters are on the horizon!



It seems as if 40 Days for Life is causing no small amount of consternation for abortion rights supporters, as evidenced by this notice put out by the Houston area Planned Parenthood, which has already experienced one 40 Days for Life Vigil.

At least one can say that Planned Parenthood is never boring!

Tuesday, September 4, 2007

Pro-life vigil: Shows importance of praying in spirit of peace



Bishop Robert C. Morlino talks to the crowd gathered on the sidewalk outside the Planned Parenthood Clinic on Madison's east side during the pro-life vigil for an end to abortion. (Catholic Herald photo by Kat Wagner)

The following article appeared in the August 30, 2007 edition of the Madison Catholic Herald, regarding the Diocese of Madison Seminarian's annual Respect Life Vigil.

MADISON -- The vigil outside the eastside clinic where abortions are performed was as peaceful a witness to the desire to end abortion as the silent reminder on the billboard opposite the clinic that reads "Defend Life."

People entering the Planned Parenthood Clinic either stared at those gathered for the vigil, especially during the talk by Bishop Robert C. Morlino and the rosary that followed, or they avoided eye contact. Occasionally passing drivers would heckle, beep their horns, or offer crude gestures.

But those at the vigil, some sitting in lawn chairs and others standing or kneeling, simply held their beads or pro-life signs and continued in the spirit of prayer.

"We're not here in a spirit of human combat," Bishop Morlino said. "We're here in a spirit of spiritual combat, which from our point of view is always a spirit of peace."

The vigil was organized by intern Scott Emerson with the Diocese of Madison Office of Vocations and associate director Tom Nelson of the Office of Justice and Pastoral Outreach.

The prayer outside the clinic off of Stoughton Rd. was held simultaneous with Eucharistic Adoration at nearby St. Peter Parish and a prayer walk from Holy Redeemer Parish downtown, which was organized by pro-life members of that parish.

Still solidly pro-life
This year is the fourth year the vigil was held, but, unlike previous years when the vigil would span the course of the night, it was planned for the daylight hours over two days.

The crowd was at least 40 thick for more than an hour during the second day and included not only 12 priests and several seminarians but also laypeople of all ages from around the diocese. They squeezed onto the public space of the sidewalk and the grass beside the road in order to hear the bishop's talk and pray the rosary with him.

At other times the vigil crowd was sparser, though there were always at least two seminarians present to carry on the prayer.

The vigil, said Msgr. Jim Bartylla, director of the Office of Vocations, was an opportunity not only to be faithful, but also to bring the crime against the unborn at Planned Parenthood and the Catholic belief in the dignity of life to the forefront of people's thoughts.

Especially with the bishop present, it provided a symbol to strengthen people to continue the fight, he said: "I think it helps people to know the church is still solidly pro-life, and we're going to remain visibly committed to that."

The vigil also served as an opportunity to train the seminarians, he said. "The concrete nature of watching people go in and come out of the clinic . . . it's a very pastoral moment for seminarians to see the pain and death that goes on daily in society."

Society of violence
"More and more people are tending to solve their anger or their disappointment of the failure in their life by killing somebody," Bishop Morlino said in his talk. "When we do that, we create a society of incredible violence."

"I really believe that it all started with abortion," he said. "Because death was invisible, because the massacre was invisible and we didn't see it, we took it for granted and that's the start of the slippery slope."

Abortion, the bishop said, hurts women because it turns the womb into a tomb.

"It's death-dealing to the baby, but it's also death-dealing to the mother, insofar as she is a woman, because it deprives her of her womanhood and creates a mind-body split," he said.

"So let's pray for the women who are tempted to abortion and who have abortions today in a special way," the bishop said, "not seeking to condemn, but hoping that they would be invited to grow in truth of their own womanhood and hoping that, if they have had an abortion, they would never hesitate to turn to the loving mercy of God."


Members of 40 Days for Life Madison participated in the Vigil, covering the night hours when the Seminarians were not present.

It would seem the Vigil had some positive fruits. A couple of the 40 Days for Life crew were present at the abortion center before it opened during the 7:00 a.m. hour on August 16th. Although no signs were being held and vigil participants did not aggressively engage the young women entering the Planned Parenthood, one couple did stop by the center before it opened, as they had a morning appointment to schedule an abortion.

After about 15 minutes of waiting, the young man who drove to Planned Parenthood with his girlfriend left his car and came up to those of us who were praying outside the abortion center, asking about why we were out there. After talking with the young man for a few minutes, he revealed that they had drove from out of town to schedule an abortion. He did not really want to go through with the abortion, but his girlfriend thought they should.

Although we were a little unprepared, we did have a good conversation with young man, and we talked to him about the nearby CareNet Pregnancy Center. He seemed excited to hear about alternative care that was available outside of an abortion, so he and his girlfriend left the facility, apparently intending to go to CareNet for service instead. We later received confirmation that a young couple did stop by CareNet that morning.

Of course, it may not be possible to know the ending of this story. But we trust in the love and mercy of God. We hope there will be many more stories like this during the 40 Days for Life throughout the country. Sometimes, just being there for someone to talk to in a peaceful and non-judgemental way, can make a huge difference in helping a young couple handle what is certainly a very difficult situation, and not make a decision they will later regret.