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lpmulligan
Guest
It is the distinction which puzzles me. As I understand it, the distinction is not based on Scripture but on natural law as articulated in Evangelium Vitae: On the Value and Inviolability of Human Life*****. I have reread portions of it, the ones which seem critical to this discussion. I have also looked at other sources, not necessarily comparable, such as the 12-24-2010 NCBC Commentary on the “Phoenix Case”, the May 14, 2010 Statement of the Diocese of Phoenix re: Situation at St. Joseph Hospital, including the statement of Fr. John Ehrich, STL, Medical Ethics Director, Diocese of Phoenix, The Distinction between Direct Abortion and Legitimate Medical Procedures of the Committee on Doctrine of the USCCB (notable for its further distinction between a procedure which “directly” targets the life of the unborn child so as “to improve the function of the organ or organs, but only in an ‘indirect’ way, i.e., by lessening the overall demands placed upon the organ or organs, since the burden posed by the pregnancy will be removed” from a “second scenario”, “in which an urgently needed medical procedure indirectly and unintentionally (although foreseeably) results in the death of an unborn child”), the 4th edition of the ERDs, the 10-27-10 letter of M. Therese Lysaught, Ph.D. to Lloyd H. Dean of Catholic Healthcare West, with its enclosure entitled “Moral Analysis of an Intervention Performed at St. Joseph Hospital and Medical Center”. After prayerful consideration, I do not find your analysis and that of Bishop Olmstead, after doing my best to give to it the consideration which it deserves, pursuasive. I do not claim to stand in your shoes, or those of Bishop Olmstead, or of the other souls who were forced to deal with this situation. Putting myself in the position of the father of the five children who were involved, also the husband of the mother of those five children, it is my judgment that he, and those who supported him, made the correct moral decision, and that those now criticize that decision, implicitely or otherwise, are lacking in dicernment of the Gospel message of Jesus Christ, who was critical of the pharisaic rules of the leaders of His church, while supportive of those who, facing the daily struggles of life, did the best they could to love. What you and Bishop Olmstead say is the natural law written on our hearts is not, as I can best discern it, the law written on my heart. ( From media reports, it appears I am far from alone.)Those same two articles are what allows an ectopic pregnancy to be treated by salpingectomy, the removal of part or all of the affected tube, even though the embryo will certainly die, but doesn’t allow a salpingotomy, the removal of the embryo from the tube, or the use of various drugs, such as methotrexate, to stop the growth of the embryo – both of which are routinely done in non-Catholic hospitals.
Attributing my judgment, and that of others, to a “culture of death” is something I have considered, especially in light of Evangelium Vitae****. To me, the decision that two lives must be lost when one can be saved has little, if anything, to do with the distinction between a culture of life and a culture of death. It is more akin to that totally different circumstance, faced by our military in Viet Nam, in which the unfortunate decision was made that “to save the village, we have to destroy it”.*