S
SoCalRC
Guest
Forgive me for such a belated response. This is such an emotionally charged issue for some folks that I always try to give some serious prayer and thought before saying anything at all. Since you seemed to have missed my original point entirely, I really wanted to give some thought before responding.A distinction without a difference.
Taking your post a step at a time, starting with the first sentence. That was, ultimately, my point. A theological difference, even one involving access to an afterlife, is not going to change the emotional intensity one feels about abortion. However, it appears that you were not responding to my point, but challenging what is, and what is not Church teaching.
The Church has, with a couple of minor historical exceptions, always taught that most forms of abortion are mortal sins. By defination, a mortal sin is grave, but the Church has not always given the same weight to all mortal sins. Further, the weight of some sins has changed.The Church has ALWAYS taught that abortion was a mortal sin regardless of what stage of development.
Case in point, masterbation. It is also a long standing mortal sin, hence grave. At points in Church history some theologians even have referred to it, literally, as “murder”. However, if I were to write a post asserting that, based on shear numbers, masterbation is ‘worse’ than abortion I suspect that I would get a great number of very un-Christian responses (with good reason, I might add).
The question then becomes, ‘in the Church, has abortion always been treated as grieviously as murder’ and the answer is no. Primarily early abortions, but sometimes even later term abortions have, for much of church history, been treated as very serious forms of birth control, not murder. This can be very difficult for us to accept today, but it is far less shocking when you view it in the context of history, not by today’s standards.
I’m sorry, that is quite incorrect. The concept of delayed ensoulement dates from Aristotle and was always a presence in Pauline Christianity. It gained prominence with St. Augustine in the 4th century and St. Jerome in the 5th century. It is not just a matter of abortion, but also an attempt to reconcile a God of mercy and love with the realities of human reproduction. Even today, roughly 1/3 to 1/2 of all pregancies spontaneously abort before the mother is even aware she is pregnant. Of detected pregnancies, about 20% (varies wildly with were you live and your socio economic status) end in early miscarriage. In the ancient world, with even higher numbers, theologians asked, why would God create so many souls simply to destroy them?The disitinction made between animated or ensouled was for the purpose of determing the pennace and for a brief time whether the sin could only be forgiven by appeal to the Vatican.
Pope Innocent III applied the principle directly to a case of abortion (specifically ruling that early abortion was not murder) and, at the beginning of the 13th Century, changed the point of ensoulment from the traditional 80-90 days to a ‘quickening’ (mother feels movement) test. Later in the 13th century, St. Thomas Aquinas, Doctor of the Church, argued that the principle was sound and important.
Pope Gregory XIV reaffirmed the teaching in the 16th century, but set a hard limit of 116 days for the quickening test. And,of course, Pope Pius IX reaffirmed the theological concept even as he dropped the distinction for purposes of Church law in the 19th century and Rome has reaffirmed the concept several times during the 20th century (the last specific statement I am aware of is from 1989, though Pope John Paul II made passing references to delayed ensoulment when he gave a speech about our obligations to individuals in persistive/permanent vegative states after that).
cont.