R
Ron_Conte
Guest
Direct abortion is any intentionally-chosen act that is, by its very nature, independent of intention or circumstances, inherently ordered (directed toward) the death of the prenatal. Direct abortion is intrinsically evil and always gravely immoral.
Indirect abortion is sometimes moral. Like all acts, to be moral, indirect abortion must have three good fonts of morality: intention, moral object, circumstances. All that is intended must be good, so there can be no intention to kill the prenatal, nor any other bad intention. The act cannot be inherently directed at the death of the prenatal, but only at the health of the mother. The good consequences must outweigh the bad consequences.
The case of an abortion at a Phoenix hospital is very troubling. It shows that many Catholics, even members of an ethics committee and a nun who is a hospital administrator, do not understand basic Catholic moral teaching.
“doctors there terminated the pregnancy of a young mother. The medical staff said she was near death with from pulmonary hypertension, a condition that limits the ability of the heart and lungs to function. The condition is made worse by hormones produced by the uterus during pregnancy. The surgery was done last November with the approval of the hospital’s ethics committee including Sister Margaret McBride.”
usatoday.com/news/religion/2010-12-16-Catholic_hospital15_ST_N.htm?csp=34news
This abortion was direct, because the procedure was inherently directed toward the death of the prenatal. The intended end of saving the mother’s life is in the subject, the person who acts. The end called moral object is in the act itself; in this case, the end was the death of the innocent prenatal, making the act direct abortion.
The circumstance that both mother and prenatal will die if a direct abortion is not done can never justify that direct abortion. No intention or circumstance can justify an intrinsically evil act.
Indirect abortion is sometimes moral. Like all acts, to be moral, indirect abortion must have three good fonts of morality: intention, moral object, circumstances. All that is intended must be good, so there can be no intention to kill the prenatal, nor any other bad intention. The act cannot be inherently directed at the death of the prenatal, but only at the health of the mother. The good consequences must outweigh the bad consequences.
The case of an abortion at a Phoenix hospital is very troubling. It shows that many Catholics, even members of an ethics committee and a nun who is a hospital administrator, do not understand basic Catholic moral teaching.
“doctors there terminated the pregnancy of a young mother. The medical staff said she was near death with from pulmonary hypertension, a condition that limits the ability of the heart and lungs to function. The condition is made worse by hormones produced by the uterus during pregnancy. The surgery was done last November with the approval of the hospital’s ethics committee including Sister Margaret McBride.”
usatoday.com/news/religion/2010-12-16-Catholic_hospital15_ST_N.htm?csp=34news
This abortion was direct, because the procedure was inherently directed toward the death of the prenatal. The intended end of saving the mother’s life is in the subject, the person who acts. The end called moral object is in the act itself; in this case, the end was the death of the innocent prenatal, making the act direct abortion.
The circumstance that both mother and prenatal will die if a direct abortion is not done can never justify that direct abortion. No intention or circumstance can justify an intrinsically evil act.