G
GodHeals
Guest
Hi,
It seems logical the mother would always want to save the child, but why wouldn’t it be a moral question if the mother has the cancer removed and thus indirectly saves the child?
Is there ever a situation where cancer would kill both the mother and the child and the mother has to choose to either have the uterus removed or not during a pregnancy or are there similar situations a mother might find her self involved in?
Or is it only in the 1960’s with less medical knowledge that a woman would have to choose life for a child and death for herself, knowing that both might die?
Any help would be great! Thanks!
Brian
It seems logical the mother would always want to save the child, but why wouldn’t it be a moral question if the mother has the cancer removed and thus indirectly saves the child?
Is there ever a situation where cancer would kill both the mother and the child and the mother has to choose to either have the uterus removed or not during a pregnancy or are there similar situations a mother might find her self involved in?
Or is it only in the 1960’s with less medical knowledge that a woman would have to choose life for a child and death for herself, knowing that both might die?
Any help would be great! Thanks!
Brian
"The clearest and surest example is the ectopic pregnancy. As everyone knows, should the fetus become lodged in the oviduct or fallopian tube, its continued growth will result in the death of both child and mother. A normal and proper procedure in this case is the removal of the fallopian tube, from which the death of the unborn child inevitably follows. In this case the death of the child is not sought, nor is the mother´s life saved by the child´s dying. …
A similar dilemma would arise in the case of an expectant mother diagnosed with uterine cancer. The death of the child obviously would result from the removal of the cancerous organ, but it is not the death of the child that is deliberately sought, nor is the mother´s life saved as a result of the child´s death. This is not an abortion in the sense used by moral theology; it is just a standard application of the ethical principle known as “double effect,” …
Unfortunately, however, given a chance to correct its earlier slip, the magazine compounded the difficulty by asserting that “the Church teaches that the mother must be saved.” No, strictly speaking, this is not true either; such a very tough medical decision is normally a matter of the mother´s choice, and I am familiar with no teaching of the Orthodox Church that would oblige a mother´s conscience to value her own life over her child´s. The mother´s life is not intrinsically of greater value than the child´s, and every mother known to me, if the choice were ineluctable, would value her child´s life above her own.
It is interesting to observe that the Roman Catholic Church recently honored with canonical beatification a woman who died in 1962 in consequence of choosing not to undergo the surgical procedure just mentioned. Even though she knew that it would result in her death, Gianna Molla carried her baby to term and then died a week later. Her little girl grew up and was on hand in St. Peter´s Square to see her mother raised to the dignity of the altar. "- catholic.net/index.php?option=dedestaca&id=177