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Thursday, October 6, 2011

As many mourn the death of Steve Jobs, we reflect on his birth



The timing was impeccable: Deacon Greg Kandra's "Respect Life Sunday" homily, delivered this past weekend, which was about the birth of Steve Jobs. I linked to it the other day, here it is again.

Since this is Respect Life Sunday, and the beginning of Respect Life month, I wanted to talk about one woman who did respect life – and her choice has made a difference in the life of virtually every person in this church.


Her name is Joanne Schiebel. In 1954, she was a young unmarried college student who discovered that she was pregnant. In the 1950s, her options were limited. She could have had an abortion – but the procedure was both dangerous and illegal. She could have gotten married, but she wasn’t ready and didn’t want to interrupt her education. Joanne opted, instead, to give birth to the baby and put it up for adoption.


And so it was that in 1955, a California couple named Paul and Clara Jobs adopted a baby boy, born out of wedlock, that they named Steven.


We know him today…as Steve Jobs.

It would not be overstating things to say that Steve Jobs is my generation’s Thomas Edison. As one observer put it, he knew what the world wanted before the world knew that it wanted it.


If you have an iPhone or an iPad or an iPod, or anything remotely resembling them, you can thank Steve Jobs.


If your world has been transformed by the ability to hear a symphony, send a letter, pay a bill, deposit a check, read a book and then buy theater tickets on something roughly the size of a credit card…you can thank Steve Jobs.


And: you can thank Joanne Schiebel.

Go read the rest at the Deacon's Bench


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The obedient are not held captive by Holy Mother Church; it is the disobedient who are held captive by the world!
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