Wait, so, abortion is a mortal sin, I assume. Meaning, if you commit it with full knowledge and deliberate consent, you’re on your way to Hell. Of course, you can repent at a later time and go to Heaven yourself.
**You assume correctly that abortion, as murder, is a mortal sin, which does mean that if you commit it in full knowledge and with deliberate consent, you will, as far as the Church is concerned, be sent to Hell if you have not repented for it. However, while repenting for that sin will save you from punishment for that sin, it will not save you from punishment for other sins you have done, and, therefore, does not by any means guarantee your passage into Heaven.
Also, for a repentance to be effective, it must be genuine. That means that the person doing the repenting understands just how wrong their actions were and sincerely intends to atone for their sin as well as to avoid to the best of their abilities repeating that sin. Repentance is something that God in His mercy allows us sinful mortals, but God, being omniscient, is not a fool Who can be conned with impunity.God’s justice and mercy are perfect, and we cannot outsmart His system like we can mortal courts of law.Thinking we can is a grave error, and probably will not result in our entry to heaven. **
But on the other hand, if you get an abortion, you’ve just sent an eternal soul straight to Heaven.
**How do you know you sent that soul to heaven? How do you know that, as the OP fears, an unbapitzed child won’t be sent right to hell?You may strongly believe that aborted souls go to heaven (as I do), but do you know that? Only God can know for sure who will be saved and who will be damned. **
And you’ve kept that eternal soul from risking Hell by living a full life on Earth.
Or, possibly, you’ve denied that poor soul an opportunity to know, love, and serve God, and thus have damned them to eternal misery in hell. It sounds a lot less noble when you phrase it like that, doesn’t it?
A few questions arise from this:
- If you get an abortion is it a mortal sin if you believe that you’re doing the right thing by saving your child from the possibility of an eternity in a lake of fire being tortured forever and ever? Killing someone is usually wrong, but in this case it seems like it could possibly be justified. Similarly, breaking into someone’s house is usually wrong – but if you’re saving someone from a burning building, then it’s probably justified.
If you know that abortion is murdering your baby and one of the Ten Commandments is “Thou shalt not commit murder,” and you intentionally procure an abortion, you have committed a mortal sin. It doesn’t matter if you try to rationalize your decision as an attempt to save your baby from hellfire; it is as wrong-headed as the Nazi notion of purifying the human race by exterminating all the Jewish people. The ends do not justify the means when the ends are absolutely insane, especially when, as I pointed out earlier, you have no way of knowing that the child you murder will be sent to heaven.
- Even if you do risk your own eternal life by getting an abortion, wouldn’t the right thing be to get it any way? After all, you know the truth and can still be saved again. You understand that you can go to confession and return to the light of Christ. But your unborn child could grow up, totally reject the faith, and then voluntarily throw itself into eternal torment. Yes, there is a great deal of risk by committing a mortal sin – but at least you know you’ve saved your own child with absolute certainty.
**The OP was distressed precisely because he feared he was endangering the eternal life of his aborted child, not his own, so aborting your child, which could result in your baby being sent to hell, isn’t the right thing to do. Also, I would argue that if you knew the truth of the Church’s teachings you would not get an abortion especially for the reasons you outline here, and that nobody should have the flippant attitude towards faith of not worrying about sinning because you can be, to use your term, “saved again.” On a related note, an important part of Reconciliation is acknowledging how wrong you were and promising to do everything in your power to void falling into the sin again. If you attend Confession with the intent of committing the sin again, your Confession is not valid. As I said earlier, you can’t make a mockery of God’s justice. You can try, but, in the end, the joke will be upon you.
Additionally, by aborting your child, you are denying the child the chance to know, love, and serve God on earth, and possibly depriving them of an opportunity to go to heaven. That would be hard for any devout individual to justify.
Finally, I would emphasize again that you don’t have absolute certainty that your aborted baby will go to heaven. For all you know, your child could end up in hell because the baby wasn’t baptized. How would you like that on your conscience?**
- Wouldn’t it be noble for someone to get many hundreds of abortions? She would be sending hundreds of souls straight to God, saving many of them who would have otherwise been sent to eternal agony. Surely her own eternal life would be in jeopardy, but look at all the good she’s done! God might even smile upon her noble self sacrifice.
**It wouldn’t be noble for someone to get hundreds of abortions. The point of sexual intercourse is to create life for the glory of God, not to destroy it. If God wanted people to take the sort of shortcuts you outline, He would not have created our planet and placed us upon it. Instead, He would have placed us in heaven or hell at the beginning of time. Life is one of God’s greatest gifts to us, and by stealing it from your unborn child, you are showing very little reverence for it. Somehow, I don’t think God will be smiling at that **