Stephen168
New member
Wrong, as you have already been told.Peter, Catholic doctrine actually does allow for an abortion to save the life of the mother.
Wrong, as you have already been told.Peter, Catholic doctrine actually does allow for an abortion to save the life of the mother.
No, I thought it was acceptable to save the life of the mother, with the understanding it was not intended to take the life of the fetus, thought that may have been the predicted outcome.Wrong, as you have already been told.
However, if medical treatment or surgical operation, necessary to save a mother’s life, is applied to her organism (though the child’s death would, or at least might, follow as a regretted but unavoidable consequence), it should not be maintained that the fetal life is thereby directly attacked.
Abortion is murder. Murder is wrong every time unless you are a Mormon.No, I thought it was acceptable to save the life of the mother, with the understanding it was not intended to take the life of the fetus, thought that may have been the predicted outcome.
So your approach is to play the definitions game and not apply the term abortion?Abortion is murder. Murder is wrong every time unless you are a Mormon.
There are instances in which it is legitimate for an expectant mother to undergo certain medical or surgical procedures that will save her life, even if these procedures inevitably involve the death of her unborn child. In these cases it is not a question of intentionally aborting the child. They involve, rather, accepting the loss of the child as an unavoidable consequence of caring for the mother´s health.
catholic.net/index.php?option=dedestaca&id=177
Thanks HM. The longer I stay in the LDS church the more false it rings. All the dancing and obfuscation. It gets tiring. Luckily I have a calling (assignment/job) that keeps me from having to teach their false doctrine, ward chorister (music leader). The music is simple and uninspiring but mildly satisfying. I sit in the hallways for most of the second and third hours and read CAF, NOM or exmormon.orgInconsistencies is not really the word for mormonism. The whole construct is made up of lies, fantasies, wishes, lousy theology, control mechanisms, masonic flapdoodle and obfuscation. Not mention outright thimblerigging. The three levels of mormon “heaven” is just one of the items of mormon belief that was not really well thought out by Joseph and his henchmen, or maybe one of their “prophets.”
I know about your particular dilema, Exorcist, but man, you need to get as far away from that folderol as you can. I feel your pain and I will continue to pray that you can come to the true Church without too much loss.
Defining words is only a game in Mormonism. Defining words is how we reach understanding in Catholicism.So your approach is to play the definitions game and not apply the term abortion?
Tony, I don’t think you are reading this correctly. It does not say that one can perform an abortion. It is saying that you can go ahead with the operation. It there is any way to save the baby, that must be done (and with modern science, it may be more possible than ever before). However, if all reasonable efforts to save the baby fail – which by the way, not operating on the mother means she dies, and, guess what, the baby dies – the Church puts a requirement on that the baby’s soul be considered and it be baptised.No, I thought it was acceptable to save the life of the mother, with the understanding it was not intended to take the life of the fetus, thought that may have been the predicted outcome.
From New Advent
[/QUOTE]Tony, I don’t think you are reading this correctly. It does not say that one can perform an abortion. It is saying that you can go ahead with the operation. It there is any way to save the baby, that must be done (and with modern science, it may be more possible than ever before). However, if all reasonable efforts to save the baby fail – which by the way, not operating on the mother means she dies, and, guess what, the baby dies – the Church puts a requirement on that the baby’s soul be considered and it be baptised.
And thank God that it is “a mom thing.” Sadly though, we have moms today in this “Culture of Death” (that the mormon “church” has bought into) who think of themselves first and place their own well-being or pleasure ahead of their un-born child’s life and elect to kill that child rather than sacrifice themselves. Somehow they accept murder by engaging in that sort of justification. The “unintended consequence” on the other hand, brings no sin upon the mother.There is a difference between an intentional abortion and an unintentional abortion. A miscarriage is an unintentional abortion (the technical term for a miscarriage is spontaneous abortion). A doctor faced with such a situation would be remiss in his/her duties & oath if they didn’t do everything possible to save both. If they don’t operate, they kill both. If they operate, there is still a chance both will die, but there is also a chance that both will live.
Tony, I don’t think you are reading this correctly. It does not say that one can perform an abortion. It is saying that you can go ahead with the operation. It there is any way to save the baby, that must be done (and with modern science, it may be more possible than ever before). However, if all reasonable efforts to save the baby fail – which by the way, not operating on the mother means she dies, and, guess what, the baby dies – the Church puts a requirement on that the baby’s soul be considered and it be baptised.
There is a difference between an intentional abortion and an unintentional abortion. A miscarriage is an unintentional abortion (the technical term for a miscarriage is spontaneous abortion). A doctor faced with such a situation would be remiss in his/her duties & oath if they didn’t do everything possible to save both. If they don’t operate, they kill both. If they operate, there is still a chance both will die, but there is also a chance that both will live.
I also suspect, most women, if faced with such a situation, would tell their doctor to do everything possible to save their baby. Most of us would even delay the surgery if we thought our baby would have a better chance of living, even if it meant we might die (as I say to my kid’s it’s a mom thing)
from “Catholics United for the Faith” © 2004 Catholics United for the Faith 2004Sally,
I think the nuance is you don’t call said operation an abortion, such as removal of the fallopian tube for an ectopic pregnancy. I personally see this as an intentional operation that aborts the fetus.
That’s because a surgical removal of a fallopian tube is not an abortion it is removal of part of a woman’s body that is threatening her health or life. Abortion is simply the termination of a pregnancy. Sometimes ectopic pregnancy can be treated with methotrexate but this is not an acceptable option as it targets the fetus. But methotrexate could be used to treat cancer in a woman who is pregnant in spite of it’s danger to the fetus because the intention is to treat the cancer not to abort the fetus. I don’t see why the distinction between primary and secondary effects and the part that intention plays is so hard for people to understand.Sally,
I think the nuance is you don’t call said operation an abortion, such as removal of the fallopian tube for an ectopic pregnancy. I personally see this as an intentional operation that aborts the fetus.
Oh, they understand. They just don’t want to be wrong, so they try to convince themselves that others are doing the same thing in order to to justify their behavior. Sort of a well everyone else is doing 12 year old thing. We’ve all been there on some subject or other. Of course piercing the bellybutton is slightly different issueThat’s because a surgical removal of a fallopian tube is not an abortion it is removal of part of a woman’s body that is threatening her health or life. Abortion is simply the termination of a pregnancy. Sometimes ectopic pregnancy can be treated with methotrexate but this is not an acceptable option as it targets the fetus. But methotrexate could be used to treat cancer in a woman who is pregnant in spite of it’s danger to the fetus because the intention is to treat the cancer not to abort the fetus. I don’t see why the distinction between primary and secondary effects and the part that intention plays is so hard for people to understand.
It is also in the paper that keeps getting posted.It’s from The Gospel Principles Manual.
I agree serous thought and prayer has gone into the subject.from “Catholics United for the Faith” © 2004 Catholics United for the Faith 2004
If you read thru the whole article, I’m sure you will realize that a lot of thought and prayer has gone into the subject. Everything possible should be done to save both if it is determined that the fetus is still alive. However, there is a recognition that it may not be possible. And note, this is an extra-ordinary situation – not the same as ‘in the case of rape or after much prayer, just not ready for another baby and my bishop said it’s ok’
What about in the case of Down’s syndrome or other such genetic issues? Is it ok with the LDS church to abort in these cases? Or if the couple just feel that this is not the right time for them to have a child? Does the LDS church have a definite position or is it up to the couple with the blessing of their bishop?I agree serous thought and prayer has gone into the subject.
To use your terminology
LDS and RCC agree ellective abortion is a grave sin.
LDS and RCC do not agree under all the special circumstances though
LDS and RCC agree on surgery, such has removal of the fallopian tube, uterus for cancer, etc
LDS and RCC do not agree in cases of rape or incest
LDS and RCC do not agree in cases where the fetus will not live (not certain here)
Those are all good questions. As far as the definite church guidance, it’s hard to say because those guidelines are contained in the Church Handbook of Instructions, which is only available to those in leadership positions. Old ones have found their way on the Internet but they made a revision last year and I have not been able to find the new one online yet.What about in the case of Down’s syndrome or other such genetic issues? Is it ok with the LDS church to abort in these cases? Or if the couple just feel that this is not the right time for them to have a child? Does the LDS church have a definite position or is it up to the couple with the blessing of their bishop?
What about in the case of Down’s syndrome or other such genetic issues? Is it ok with the LDS church to abort in these cases? Or if the couple just feel that this is not the right time for them to have a child? Does the LDS church have a definite position or is it up to the couple with the blessing of their bishop?