Life is linked to the Eucharist 
for pro-life workers
  By Sean Gallagher
  (Editor’s note:  The Catholic Church is observing the Year of the Eucharist. This article is  part of a Criterion series exploring the importance of the Eucharist in all  facets of the life of the archdiocese.)
  The  bishops at the Second Vatican Council taught that the Eucharist is the source  and the summit of the Christian life. For many Catholics in central and  southern Indiana who serve in various pro-life ministries, this sacrament is  also the source and summit of their promotion of the sanctity of life.
  
As  a source, the Eucharist is for them a font of strength to carry on their  often-challenging ministry to mothers and their children. As the summit, they  have experienced new dimensions of their appreciation of the Eucharist emerging  through their pro-life service.
  “In  order to serve life, you must be immersed in the font of life itself. And  that’s where the Eucharist comes in,” said Servant of the Gospel of Life Sister  Diane Carollo, director of the archdiocesan Office for Pro-Life Ministry.
  One  of the ministries that Sister Diane oversees is Birthline, whose volunteers do  crisis pregnancy intervention and distribute material assistance to mothers in  need.
  Lois  Richter, a member of St. Monica Parish in Indianapolis,  has been a Birthline volunteer for five years. Once a week, she works in the  basement of the Archbishop   O’Meara Catholic   Center distributing  material assistance. Every other week, she assists with Birthline’s crisis  telephone line and schedules clients to come to the Catholic Center  to receive aid.
  She said that her ministry can be difficult at  times, but that the Eucharist helps her maintain a healthy perspective.
  
“Sometimes you don’t renew and refresh yourself,  and you’re busy down here and you get caught up with the mechanics of it,”  Richter said. “Sometimes you get a little [on] edge because it’s not easy  working with poor people. [The Eucharist] keeps you calm and patient and  sympathetic and empathetic.”
  At the same time, Richter acknowledged that her  pro-life ministry has shaped the way she approaches her participation in the  Eucharist.
  “There is never a time, not one single time, when I  go to Mass that I don’t pray particularly for the clients,” she said. “And  there’s almost never a time when I listen to the readings or a homily or a  sermon that something doesn’t strike me from my experiences with clients.  Things pop into my mind constantly about stories that I hear from the clients.”
  Another Birthline volunteer is Rosie Mitchel, a  member of Holy Rosary Parish in Indianapolis.  As a student at the then-Cathedral Grade School, she received her first  Communion at SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral more than 60 years ago, just across  the street from where she now does her pro-life ministry.
  For many years, she acknowledged that the concerns  of her own family kept her attention away from the concerns of others. But  Mitchel said that a renewal in her appreciation of the Eucharist has changed  this.
  “It opened my eyes to the world,” she said. “I was  living in my own little world.”
  However, the connection that Mitchel makes between  the Eucharist and her pro-life ministry remains a simple one.
  “I feel like if I’m here for these children, Jesus  has always been there for me,” she said.
  Many of the women that Richter, Mitchel and the  other Birthline volunteers serve have chosen to allow their babies to be born.
  Bob Rust, a member of St.  John the Evangelist Parish in Enochsburg, has ministered for years as a  sidewalk counselor to women who are on the verge of having an abortion.
  For more than 15 years, Rust has traveled from his Greensburg home two or three days a week to offer an  alternative to abortion to women going into abortion facilities in Indianapolis.
  Through it all, Rust is convinced that the  Eucharist has upheld him in his ministry.
  “I can’t imagine that I could be sustained in doing  this without the Eucharist,” he said. “It would be hard for me to imagine that  in any spiritual way …”
  Rust’s ministry can be difficult at times. He does  it in both extreme cold and heat, in snow and rain. Rust and his fellow  sidewalk counselors are often abused verbally by the people they’re trying to  serve. More than once Rust has been physically attacked.
  “All of life is a battle for salvation,” Rust said.  “So in my particular case, in what I am called upon to do, I am looking at the  strength of the Eucharist and the fact that the Lord is with me as an aid for  my soul and the souls I’m with and the souls we attend to out there.”
  After completing several hours of counseling, Rust  frequently will go to the 12:10 p.m. Mass at St. John  the Evangelist Church  in Indianapolis.  Even though discouragement can easily happen for sidewalk counselors, he said  his mind is focused on gratitude when he goes to there.
  “The Eucharist is always a sacrament of  thanksgiving, of course,” Rust said. “So when I would be going to Mass after  being there, I give thanks to God that he would allow me and the few people  that we have to be out there and to see us through. It’s a place where you need  spiritual help.”
  Over the course of the many years of his ministry,  Rust estimated that he has witnessed between 1,500 and 2,000 women who have  changed their minds and kept their babies. He admitted, however, that countless  others have ignored his offers of help and have gone through with their  abortions.
  The Church’s pro-life ministry continues to reach  out to these women after they have had abortions, many of whom suffer negative  physical, psychological and spiritual aftereffects from the procedure.
  Pam Leffler, a member of Our Lady of the Greenwood  Parish in Greenwood,  is a licensed clinical social worker who has recently become involved in  Rachel’s Compan-ions and Rachel’s Vineyard Retreats, respectively  support-group-based and retreat-based ministries to women who have had  abortions.
  However, for approximately the past 10 years in her  clinical practice, Leffler has counseled an increasing number of women who have  struggled with the negative impact that abortion has had in their lives.
  Over that same time, her life of faith has been  renewed, with a special focus on the Eucharist. Leffler sees a connection  between these two trends.
  “I could say God is probably sending more people to  me,” she said. “Or I could say because of my love of the Eucharist, I have  grown more in love, a softer heart full of love, and was able more to hear  these things in women, which, either way, it is still God working.”
  Through her experience, Leffler concluded that a  clinical approach alone was inadequate to treat the aftereffects of abortion. A  spiritual approach was also necessary.
  “It needs the clinical dimension and it needs to be  treated from a faith-based perspective,” she said, “because what I was seeing  in my clinical experience was so many women who were so angry and had just  totally turned off to God because they didn’t believe that God would forgive  them.”
  For Leffler, this is where the Eucharist is vital,  for in it she sees the embodiment of God’s mercy and forgiveness.
  “I think when you really begin to understand that  and understand that God has given us such great love through the Eucharist, you  know that you can be forgiven for such a thing that you have done and that  through this you can be healed,” she said.
  Despite the many challenges and setbacks that these  men and women experience in their ministry, they continue to be dedicated to  promoting life. And in their conviction, they echo the words of Pope John Paul  II in his 1995 encyclical letter Evangelium Vitae (“The Gospel of Life”).
  In that document, the pope wrote that the blood of  Christ in the Eucharist can be for the faithful an inspiration to continue  proclaiming the good news of life:
  “It is from the blood of Christ that all draw the strength to commit themselves to promoting  life. It is precisely this blood that is the most powerful source of hope, indeed it is  the foundation of the absolute certitude that in God’s plan life will be  victorious” (#25, emphasis in original). †