Archbishop Hepworth gives LifeSiteNews.com an interview
Here's an excerpt:
“If we get the life issues right, then we get the Incarnation right, the nature of God right, the nature of Christian worship right,” he explained. “This is actually an entrance issue, not a side moral issue. It's the issue on which Christianity actually defines itself against the others.”LSN spoke with Archbishop Hepworth in Halifax, the capital of the Canadian province of Nova Scotia, where he made an overnight stop to address the local TAC parish, St. Aidan's. The Australian native came to Halifax as part of a worldwide tour that he began four weeks ago to encourage TAC communities to accept the Vatican's offer to Anglicans, issued in October, to reunite with the Roman Catholic Church.
Hepworth told LSN that the TAC's commitment to life is “total.” “It's one of our founding premises,” he said.
-snip-
But he also explained that the TAC has needed to be clear on life issues as part of its efforts for unity with the Catholic Church. “Our position is not to fight the Catholic Church, it's to fully absorb its teachings,” he said.
In both his interview with LSN and his homily to the parishioners of St. Aidan's, Hepworth spoke out against the practice of embryonic stem cell research, comparing it with cannibalism. “Killing embryos in order to harvest stem cells to make drugs is simply our form of cannibalism, and it's just as wrong as cannibalism,” he told LSN.
He described the experience of a tribe in New Guinea, which can still remember when war canoes would come down the river and take a young person to eat for strength before a battle, a practice which only ended in the 1960s.
“Using stem cell drugs derived from killed human beings in order to wave off disease is no different in the human attitude,” he said. “Same temptations everywhere, we just think our temptations are more civilized.”
-snip-“Rape is a profound evil, to be totally condemned, and I say that as somebody whose ministry is in Africa as much as anywhere else, and where rape is common and often leads to death because of AIDS,” he continued.
But, he said, “should there be a child born of that violence and evil, to kill that child is actually a worse crime than the rape.”
In this circumstance, he described the child as “a great good” and “a redeeming good.” “Christianity comes to Resurrection through the Cross, we must all pass that way. And so we must believe that God constantly weaves something beautiful out of something evil.”
-snip-Archbishop Hepworth called the condemnation of the morning-after pill for rape victims “a very hard teaching,” noting that it was “the hard teachings of Jesus that people walked away from.” “The test of an apostle is whether he goes on teaching the hard teachings when people are walking away,” he said. “That for a bishop is the toughest thing he has to experience.”
He called on the Christian churches to confront rape and male dominance, which he said are still embedded in some cultures of the world. “We have been afraid to confront traditional behaviour, in just the same way as we've been afraid to confront traditional behaviour in countries like the United States and Canada and Australia within affluent middle class families, where contraception is the more thoughtless option and therefore the easier one.”



