C
camerong
Guest
I can’t decide with certainty how I feel about whether we should distribute condoms in Africa. On one hand, I subscribe to the Church’s teachings that condom use is a grave sin. On the hand, I also have found persuasive the research indicating that wider condom distribution could save hundreds of thousands or millions of lives, and most who would use condoms are not Catholic and have no religious belief against condom use.
I think the answer is probably that we do not commit a sin by letting a person get infected with HIV, even though we could have stopped it by giving her a condom. Alternately, we (very probably) do sin if we give out condoms, even if it saves a person’s life. We are called to be faithful and avoid sin, not to save lives. Is this the best way of approaching the issue?
I think the answer is probably that we do not commit a sin by letting a person get infected with HIV, even though we could have stopped it by giving her a condom. Alternately, we (very probably) do sin if we give out condoms, even if it saves a person’s life. We are called to be faithful and avoid sin, not to save lives. Is this the best way of approaching the issue?