Thank you jaimeleglise for chipping in here. I value your (name removed by moderator)ut. I also love the Church. I am proud to be Catholic. But that shouldn’t prevent us from using common sense, and compassion.
You write:
Abortion is never right, it is a grave evil. It is murder. The Catholic Church teaches this as it is revealed to us by God.
What about the Indian woman dying in Ireland, two years ago? She repeatedly asked for an abortion. Do you think she wanted to ‘murder’ her unborn child? She desperately wanted to live. Was this not her right as well?
Even if many people vote for an abortion in this case in a poll, that still wouldn’t make it right. Truth isn’t decided by popular vote. As my spiritual director, a good, holy priest once said, a hundred people could take a vote to determine the sex of a kitten. Ninety-nine people could swear he is a male. If the kitten is a female, one million people saying it is a male won’t change things.
What on earth is that supposed to mean?
Yes, I agree, a popular vote does not decide the truth. Thousand years ago a popular vote would have confirmed the common belief that the sun goes round the earth, which is wrong. In the present situation we are weighing the life of a mother against the life of her unborn baby.
(I still can’t get the story with the kittens

)
I agree, it is a complex issue. And it is so easy to say “abortion is always wrong - no exceptions”. It makes it very simple, just black and white. Very easy to police. If we allow exceptions, then we have all the trouble of checking, looking at all the surrounding factors and deciding if it is fair or not. And people will try to get around and find loopholes. Look at Brazil which allows women to have an abortion in the case of rape. Lots of women will try and claim to have been raped (am I right devonsams?). Very difficult to check and verify.
But there should be a fairly clear line when, say, three doctors decide that the mother’s life is at risk. In such an exceptional case it should be permitted.
That takes us back to the original case: a 9-year-old girl, weighing 36 kg, 15-weeks pregnant with twins, and doctors having decided that her life is in danger.
There really shouldn’t be any question in that case. I guess that 98% of Catholics would agree. Strange that I seem to be alone here with >400,000 members on this forum.