No, a child is a new life and that is a different issue. They have no right to be there. Once conception happens the moral dimension changes.
But a baby that is the result of rape, by your logic, IS equally an agressor invading the mother’s body, no? Just like its father the rapist (who, being a living person, surely has the same rights as the baby to invade - ie none)?
he act that introduced that baby into the mother’s body is disordered, and it’s the same act that introduced those sperm. The mother would thus have every bit as much right to ‘self-defend’ against a growing baby of a rapist as against the sperm or the rapist by your logic.
Take it up with the Church and moral theology. There is no slap in the face to God in repelling them as the act is disordered.
Then there is no harm in aborting a child conceived of rape either, since the act that produced it is disordered.
What does this have to do with rape? Please see post #9 which is consistent with other moral theology pieces I have read.
Written by who? You know most moral theologians prior to the release of Humanae Vitae were of the opinion that artificial contraception by married couples was OK - they were urging Paul VI to approve it. And they were flat out wrong.
Church law matters more than the opinion of moral theologians, and since Church law doesn’t distinguish AFTER conception between the right to life of offspring of rape, incest, adultery or marriage, then there’s no good reason to distinguish BEFORE conception between our attitude towards fertility - POTENTIAL children - whether these are the result of rape, incest, adultery or marriage.
By the way, the topic is AIDS and not conception. And didn’t Pope Benedict just last week say that condoms are not a solution to the problem of AIDS? Sounds like he’s very much of the opinion that they are NOT to be used in an attempt to prevent the disease - and he doesn’t distinguish between AIDS transmitted by rape and that transmitted by any other kind of sex. And if they are no solution to the problem of disease, then why the problem of conception?
There’s some moral theology for you, from the highest of all possible sources. Higher than your moral theologians, higher than the USCCB. God bless the Pope!