What do you know of Mexico’s struggle for religious freedom? Have you ever been told about the Cristero War? Would you be surprised to learn that Margaret Sanger, founder of Planned Parenthood, supported this war against people of faith?
Here in the U.S., many people of faith are asking: “What is the price of religious liberty?” During the 1920s, people of faith in Mexico knew the answer: Life itself.
I had never heard about the Cristero War until the movie “For Greater Glory” was released in 2012. I purchased the DVD and companion book by Ruben Quezada (Ignatius Press) as gifts for my husband. We have shown this epic film three times to family members and plan to show it again… and again. How fitting that this movie made its debut the same year that our federally mandated health care made its.
Please. Rent or, better yet, purchase this DVD. Host a movie night and invite your Bible study, youth, or parent group. Hear young people raise their voices as one, proclaiming: “Viva Crista Rey!” (“Long live Christ the King!”) Understand that what happened in Mexico was an aggressive war on the Catholic Church which resulted in the death of 200,000 people of faith. But, recognize that what is happening here in the U.S. is an insidious and, thus, potentially more devastating assault on those who seek to follow the Lord and Savior Jesus Christ rather than man.
Mexico was the original cradle of Christianity in the New World. Missionaries were dispatched from Mexico to North and South America. Yet, this deeply Catholic country was repressed by an atheist-socialist regime. Following the revolution in 1917, the government vowed to free the people from “fanaticism and prejudices.” President Calles, clever with his language, spoke of defending “Mexican dignity” against “foreign intruders” (the Holy Roman Catholic Church). Public displays of faith were outlawed. Churches, seminaries and convents were desecrated. Catholic schools and newspapers were shut down. Priests were tortured and killed, many shot while celebrating Mass. But, so were fathers, mothers, grandparents, and young people.
Cristiada, the name given to the Cristero movement, was a response to the direct attack on the Catholic faith by the Mexican president and his “Calles Law.” The Cristiada movement was organized by the National League for the Defense of Religious Liberty. (Does this name bring to mind our own Alliance Defending Freedom or Becket Fund for Religious Freedom?) Initially, the League advocated peaceful resistance to the Calles Law in the form of boycotting taxes and nonessential goods. Petitions were signed, but refused by the Mexican Congress. It soon became evident that Catholics would have to fight back or surrender their religious freedom. The Cristero War was costly. Relative peace may have come after the bloody years between 1926 and 1929, but practice of the Catholic faith in a predominately Catholic country has never been the same.
Margaret Sanger, the founder of Planned Parenthood, supported the Mexican dictator’s war against Catholic people of faith. Sanger, writes Maureen Walther and Jennifer Daigle, “praised Calles’ campaign against the Church as a strike against intolerance and a step toward making her work easier: ‘With the yoke of medievalism thus thrown off we can anticipate a splendid development of the government work for birth control already begun in Mexico.’” (www.kofc.org “The Voice for Religious Freedom” 4/26/12)
Sanger was a devout advocate of eugenics and a society of the “most desireable.” She worked tirelessly to promote birth control, most curiously in Hispanic and African American communities. We should not be deceived. Birth control has its roots in the eugenic movement. Sanger, the mother of eleven living children, was a believer in eugenics or a “race of thoroughbreds.” Her original organization, the American Birth Control League, was quickly renamed Planned Parenthood Federation of America. Birth control may be masked as a “woman’s reproductive freedom,” but can you tell me why advocates of eugenics would join forces with those promoting birth control?
“Religious persecution,” writes Carl Anderson of the Knights of Columbus, “rarely begins with blood. It begins with redefinition – redefinition of the religion’s role in personal lives, in ministers, in churches, in society and in government. In Mexico’s case, the clergy were the state’s first target. It began with a simple statement: all priests must register with the state. The problem was that by this law, the state gave itself the authority to determine who was a minister and who was not. A state that can decide ministers can also decide what doctrines it will permit to be preached. Priests and [the] religious were forbidden from criticizing the government.” (“For Greater Glory,” p. 95)
President Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton remind us that we, in the U.S., enjoy “freedom of worship.” But, this is deception. It is a redefinition. This is not what was guaranteed in the Bill of Rights. Correctly stated, American citizens enjoy “freedom of religion.” Freedom of religion means more than just being able to “go to church.” It means being able to speak and live the faith; to set up schools, hospitals, and agencies of servanthood in the name of Jesus Christ.
Oh fellow frogs in the boiling pot! Know your history! Learn from our neighboring people of faith in Mexico while we have opportunity. Resist evil. Guard liberty. Teach the faith.
We Want Free Chocolate
Posted in Biblical manhood & womanhood, Commentaries of others, Life issues, tagged abortion, birth control, contraceptives, health care, Hobby Lobby, Karee Santos, pro-choice, reproductive rights on July 18, 2014| 3 Comments »
The Supreme Court decision in Hobby Lobby allowing corporations not to pay for abortifacient contraceptives on conscience grounds infuriated many. Some activists responded by rearranging the goods on Hobby Lobby shelves to spell out slogans such as “Pro-Choice” and “All Women Deserve Birth Control” in order to demonstrate their
mature femininity fitness as sexual partners political savvyanger. The battle cry seemed to be “we want our non-procreative sex and we want it for free!”“There is this new attitude that ‘if my pleasure is something I deem good, then you should pay into it and enable me as well,'” commented one of my friends on Facebook. With utterly inescapable logic, she concluded that, based on this reasoning, the government should subsidize her daily ration of dark chocolate as well. The argument is as follows:
1. Many people want dark chocolate.
2. Eating dark chocolate every day has proven health benefits, such as decreasing the risk of high blood pressure and heart disease.
3. Decreased risk of high blood pressure and heart disease leads to lower medical costs to be borne by individuals and the healthcare system.
4. The government should therefore provide dark chocolate for free.
The social, medical, and economic benefits of such a scheme are clear. Politicians would be wise to start a political party based on these principles, or at least incorporate these ideas into the plank of an already-existing party platform. Not only would chocolate-for-free garner even more popular support than contraception-for-free, it would also encounter less opposition. Consider this:
1. Chocolate appeals to men, women, and children of all ages, whereas contraception would only arguably be beneficial for men and women of child-bearing age.
2. Chocolate does not contain synthetic hormones that may raise the risk of cancer and harm the environment by polluting our streams.
3. Chocolate does not cause a small but real risk of increased blood pressure, blood clots, heart attack, and stroke.
4. No one (as far as I know) has a religious objection to eating chocolate or providing free chocolate to others.
So I say, forget free sex. We want free chocolate. Are you with me?
Karee Santos is a happily married mother of six. She blogs in English at Can We Cana? and in Spanish at Comencemos en Caná. This article was originally published at Can We Cana?
The Supreme Court decision in Hobby Lobby allowing corporations not to pay for abortifacient contraceptives on conscience grounds infuriated many. Some activists responded by rearranging the goods on Hobby Lobby shelves to spell out slogans such as “Pro-Choice” and “All Women Deserve Birth Control” in order to demonstrate their mature femininity fitness as sexual partners political savvy anger. (For more equally emotional responses, click here.) The battle cry seemed to be “We want our non-procreative sex and we want it for free!”
“There is this new attitude that ‘if my pleasure is something I deem good, then you should pay into it and enable me as well,'” commented one of my friends on Facebook. With utterly inescapable logic, she concluded that, based on this reasoning, the government should subsidize her daily ration of dark chocolate as well. The argument is as follows:
– See more at: http://www.mercatornet.com/articles/view/why_we_all_deserve_free_yummy_dark_chocolate#sthash.GHEbMBzN.dpuf
The Supreme Court decision in Hobby Lobby allowing corporations not to pay for abortifacient contraceptives on conscience grounds infuriated many. Some activists responded by rearranging the goods on Hobby Lobby shelves to spell out slogans such as “Pro-Choice” and “All Women Deserve Birth Control” in order to demonstrate their mature femininity fitness as sexual partners political savvy anger. (For more equally emotional responses, click here.) The battle cry seemed to be “We want our non-procreative sex and we want it for free!”
“There is this new attitude that ‘if my pleasure is something I deem good, then you should pay into it and enable me as well,'” commented one of my friends on Facebook. With utterly inescapable logic, she concluded that, based on this reasoning, the government should subsidize her daily ration of dark chocolate as well. The argument is as follows:
– See more at: http://www.mercatornet.com/articles/view/why_we_all_deserve_free_yummy_dark_chocolate#sthash.GHEbMBzN.dpuf
Read Full Post »