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Eilish_Maura
Guest
Yet they can lead to situations where someone is forced into procedures they object to - like insertion of a food tube into the stomach. It sometimes comes across that it is ok per the Church to force feed someone who objects to invasive processes (part of what happened in the situation with my friends’ mother).Okay, let us first be clear on what these documents are talking about and what they are not talking about. The CDF doctinal note and commentary are talking about nutrition and hydration by artificial means. That is all. The only moral obligation it speaks of in those documents is the moral obligation to feed and give water to people, even by artificial means. Of course, there are exceptions, and it lists those in the second to last paragraph of the commentary.
Nothing in these documents in any way advocates forced surgeries or medical treatements. That is a completely different topic of conversation, and you would have to look to other documents to respond to them (such as the Declaration on Euthanasia). People do have a right to refuse certain medical treatments, but food and water are not a medical treatment. They will not cure someone from a terminal illness. All it does is prevent a person from starving to death.
Now, if by using these artificial means, it causes great problems or the body is too far gone to even process the food and water, then one is dispensed from the moral obligation. These are the exceptions that are mentioned in the second to last paragraph of the Commentary. The Church is not asking anyone to put someone through great physical pain to give food and water to someone whose body is already rejecting it.