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Illinois Pro-Life March attracts thousands of joyful people in downtown Springfield – LifeSite


SPRINGFIELD, IL (LifeSiteNews) – The Illinois Pro-Life March took place this past Tuesday.

A scene of hate versus love and anger versus joy played out there. On the street corner of Capitol Avenue and Second Street in downtown Springfield on March 25, under the shadow of the Illinois Statehouse, stood about a dozen pro-abortion protesters shouting lies into a megaphone, wearing Halloween style masks, and promoting abortion as “healthcare” despite the fact that a baby dies during every abortion. Their faces showed scowls, their voices carried hate, and their message was one of selfishness.  

Perhaps this group of protesters did not anticipate what would stand in front of them this day: a sea of more than 2,000 people, mainly teenagers and young adults, cheering, dancing, singing, smiling, laughing, and praying. This large crowd was there not for themselves, but for someone else — the unborn and all the vulnerable in society. Their faces showed joy, their voices carried hope, and their message was one of love and life.  

That was the scene during the Illinois Pro-Life Rally and March, an annual gathering that attracts people from across the state who are a witness to life by rallying and marching around the Illinois Statehouse praying, carrying signs, and showing the public that life is beautiful.   

“I came out here because I think it’s important to give voice the voiceless, and I love seeing loads of people come together for a common cause,” said Oceana Huang, a freshman at Sacred Heart-Griffin High School (SHG) in Springfield. It was her first time going to this march, and she called it “exciting.” 

“I firmly believe that everyone should have a chance to grow up into their gifts and grow up into the blessings God has given us, and I believe God sets us out for a purpose into the world, and we can make a difference, and I am grateful to be a part of it and be with my school,” said Ella Timmermann, a junior at SHG.  

With Roe v. Wade having been overturned in 2022, the battle for protections for the unborn and the vulnerable is now centered on state capitals, with Illinois’ being one of the most important due to the state’s pro-abortion laws and a culture that generally approves of abortion.  

READ: Missouri Republicans consider amendment to repeal ‘right’ to abortion in state constitution

“It feels good to be a part of this because it shows that everyone cares, and we all feel the same way about being pro-life,” said Curtis Tingley, an eighth-grader at St. Anthony Grade School in Effingham. “It was fun to do this and learn new things.” 

For Faustina Hoerdeman, a postulant for the Sisters of St. Francis of the Martyr St. George based in Alton, this rally and march was personal. That’s because she was conceived when her mother was 50 years old. Doctors told her mother that it would be safer for her to get an abortion than to carry her baby to term. Doctors told her mother that her child would have a poor quality of life because she was 50 years old and had too many complications.  

“One day, after a really stressful appointment where the doctor was pushing abortion, she went into her car crying and then pulled the sun visor down. A Divine Mercy card fell into her lap, and she had just begun a devotion to St. Faustina,” Hoerdeman related.  

“She was overcome with peace, and she heard a voice from St. Faustina that said, ‘I will hold your child until you can.’ She knew at that moment that everything would be OK, and I was delivered with no complications and was very blessed.”  

Bishop Paprocki was with the marchers.

A powerful moment of good triumphing over evil 

Before the march began, a rally took place by the Abraham Lincoln statue outside the Statehouse. Bishop Thomas John Paprocki of the Diocese of Springfield in Illinois began the rally with a prayer followed by several speakers. While Bishop Paprocki prayed, the pro-abortion protesters shouted in their megaphones, trying their best to disrupt the prayer. That’s when Bishop Paprocki said this: 

Dear God, you are the giver of all life, our Creator, the giver of all grace. We thank you for your grace and the human life you have given us. We thank you for the freedom that lets us choose between good and evil, including those shouting at us on behalf of evil. We pray for them. We pray that God will touch their hearts and remove the hatred from their hearts so that they could come to love all human life from the moment of conception. 

Bishop Paprocki then asked the more than 2,000 pro-lifers to pray the St. Michael Prayer. In this powerful moment, the crowd turned into prayer warriors, calling on the intercession of St. Michael to protect all people from evil.   

Mass for Life fills Sangamon Auditorium  

Before the march and rally, more than 1,750 Catholics attended the Mass for Life at the Sangamon Auditorium on the University of Illinois Springfield campus. That was the maximum number allowed in. Bishop Paprocki was the main celebrant, and Bishop Michael McGovern of the Diocese of Belleville was the homilist. The large gathering was composed mainly of students from Catholic grade schools, high schools, and Newman Centers from across the state, as well as men and women religious and lay adults. Bishops from the Dioceses of Peoria and Joliet were also in attendance. This was the third year the Diocese of Springfield in Illinois hosted the Mass before the march. The altar used during the Mass was the same altar used by Pope St. John Paul II when he celebrated Mass in the dome at St. Louis in 1999.  

“Even though we are in the middle of Springfield, it feels like we are on cloud nine, and that’s why I love coming to this Mass,” said Amalia Dorgan, a junior at Father McGivney Catholic High School in Glen Carbon. “Being with people from different dioceses, it just reminds us we are all coming together to worship our Lord.” 

The Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in downtown Springfield was also open in the afternoon, hosting hundreds of Catholics who prayed before our Lord in adoration of the Blessed Sacrament. Confessions also took place for several hours.   

READ: Man convicted of brutally assaulting elderly pro-lifers in Baltimore to be retried

Andrew Hansen is the Director for Communication for the Diocese of Springfield in Illinois. Photographs © Diocese of Springfield in Illinois


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