SemperUbiSubUbi:
Thank you for your thoughtful comments. Let me stress at the outset that this discussion is not principally - although inevitably it focuses on - condoms. Nor can an assumption be made that use of a condom is inherently evil. ‘The Bible forbids evil’: please state categorically what you believe to be the inherent evil in either use of a condom or the condom itself. Does this apply only to Catholics, or to humanity?
First, the “mission of Christ”. Christ did indeed cure the sick, but it was not His mission. He did so so that we would know “that the Son of Man has authority on earth to forgive sins.” (Matt 9:6) He came to give us eternal life (John 3:16) and to testify to the Truth (John 18:37).
Some of us believe that, in his dual nature, this was a principal purpose of Christ’s mission. By his example of compassion and healing, he exemplified what he expects us to do. Being a Christian is not all about MY eternal salvation; it is what I can do for the wretched of the earth, for The Other.
To say that AIDS/HIV is an “abominable plague” is quite true! But to say that we have not seen the like “for centuries” is disingenuous and alarmist. The human race is no stranger, even in modern times, to plague.
I agree that there have been plagues before, including the Spanish Flu epidemic 1918, and the series of Black Death (Buboic plague) that haunted the period around the fourteenth century in particular (see
Plagues and Peoples for example).
The number of people who have died in the past 30 years is certainly higher that the World Health Organisation figure you quote, and the number infected also. Infection rates (the number of people who are newly infected) are not coming down as quickly as anticipated, if at all in the case of some age groups.
One does not wish to be alarmist: yes this has happened before, it will happen again. But the fact that this number of people have died, are dying and will die, is a cause for extreme concern, no? And the fact that after 30 years of the pandemic manifesting itself we are not much further along the road of knowing how to staunch its devastation is in fact alarming. Even more alarming is the increase in the prevalence of opportunistic infections that accompany HIV and AIDS: hepatitis, TB, malaria, pneumonia. We have seen a great rise in TB - it is assumed that most people who have HIV also have TB. It is
really alarming to find that new forms of TB that are moderately or totally drug resistant, that is 100 per cent fatal, have been identified, particularly among HIV+ individuals.
The case is not just one of HIV infection and prevalence, but of those diseases that accompany it, and kill faster.
The entirety of this arguement rests on the assumption that condom use is morally neutral, and it is merely the purpose to the use which ascribes a negative moral value to it, which does not seem to be the position of the Church; and that the preservation of life is the ultimate, or near ultimate, good. I said I would not argue for or against the first, and I reject the second… Just as it would be gravely wrong to preserve one life at the cost of another, it would be gravely wrong to attempt to preserve one life at the cost of a soul. After all, “what does it profit a man if he gains the whole world, and suffers the loss of his own soul…” (Matt 16:26)
For those who are not Catholic, the condom is certainly morally neutral. Many Catholics are presumably choosing to regard it as morally neutral as well, if evidence is correct.
The attempt to ‘preserve on life at the cost of another, to preserve one life at the cost of a soul’ needs comment. We are in the midst of a very complex moral issue, clearly. It is not just one life or ‘soul’ (sometimes victim, sometimes sinner) that is affected by this disease. A husband dies, the wife often dies soon after. He has infected her. When she dies, there is no one to look after the children: most of the grannies in extended family systems who might have looked after numerous children of their offspring dead of HIV, are very old and many have died. As the next generation has been harvested by this plague there are few to model these children, to socialise them, to teach them life skills, to teach them morality and save them from amorality, to send them to church or school, to make sure that they are sufficiently clothed and fed.
Where do we go from here?