H
Hellisreal
Guest
Do the words decapitation and dismemberment bother?
Need I ask if the Lord, the giver of Life, has a say in this?
Need I ask if the Lord, the giver of Life, has a say in this?
You know I love you Nepenthe, that being said, I thought this poster was catholic.Ask yourself, and your god. Oh yes, the horrors of it all make an impact with me, and particularly when there are conscious victims. There is more than one victim here, besides the mother, besides the eventual child, even besides the father (whether he gives the proverbial damn or not), and including the doctors and nurses (and please do not think they aren’t terribly aware of this).
I have proposed a few possible at-least-partial solutions to the Abortion Problem here before - I shan’t bring them up unless asked to do so, since such things are apparently too conservative by most modern lights.![]()
The world was rather harsh on Jesus no?And I have never been Catholic, or Christian, nor any form or kind of theist. And yet, I am hunan, and capable of charity and kindness and aspiration.
When some people gripe about public mores (the safest gripe possible) do they ever consider just how terribly harsh the world is, and I do mean here and now in the US of A?
Mm…I have more to bring here, but the relevant part is whether abortion can be ‘Okay’ whatever that might be. After observing conservative Catholics about ‘Okayness’ Ire: this forum for over a year, I am bemused and entertained, I’ll give you that.
It can be, perhaps, since if such were not possible, you wouldn’t have me to contend with. Like them bananas?
Not saying you did not value Jesus as exemplar.Oh yes surely. Yeshua Bin Yusuf was many things - political stalking-horse (whether he liked it or not), rabbi and physician, moralist and lawgiver (and law-eliminator) and all-around champ with bags of charisma.
Please never think that people of different religions think of Jesus in low regard - and non-theists are even more likely to consider him highly as an exemplar, since to many of us the field doesn’t look very weighted. and he didn’t give much time to tribal or cultural nitpicking. I don’t approve of Jesus in terms of any religion, whether Abrahamic, monotheist or whatever. I approve of him personally and his wisdom as a fellow human - though he could have been nicer to that poor figtree! We all have those off-days, those struggles, and I have heard many here say that serving soldiers are entitled to spiritual leniency for all manner of sins…those same conditions as expressed on this board and by the Vatican appear to me to be applicable to fertile or potentially-fertile women.
I’m sorry, but I do not think this is a very accurate depiction of either Church teaching or the current application of the directives by Catholic caregivers in the US.First, while the Church opposes all direct abortions, it does not condemn procedures which result, indirectly, in the loss of the unborn child as a “secondary effect.” For example, if a mother is suffering an ectopic pregnancy (a baby is developing in her fallopian tube, not the womb), a doctor may… It is not a direct abortion.
- Medical necessity…
There also occur, very rarely, situations in which, in order to save the mother’s life, the child needs to be delivered early. But this can be done safely with a normal, induced delivery, or a caesarean section.
Subsequent to this a single moralist theorized that one of the three common treatements for an ectopic pregnancy (tubal removal) was not a direct abortion because of the principle of double effect. Even at the time, it was described as a “thin distinction”, but it has been widely taught and accepted.Ethics, then, and the Church agree in teaching that no action is lawful which directly destroys fetal life. It is also clear that extracting the living fetus before it is viable, is destroying its life as directly as it would be killing a grown man directly to plunge him into a medium in which he cannot live, and hold him there till he expires.
There is a big difference in chosing to save one life by ending another, and not acting and having both die. You can’t save the baby unless you save the mother!!Is it alright to murder an person registered as an organ donor so that those people who could use those organs will survive?
I’m sorry, I’m not sure I see a distinction in the situations already cited. In ectopic pregnancy the prognosis for the fetus is eventual death, but the prognosis for the mother is not so clear.There is a big difference in chosing to save one life by ending another, and not acting and having both die. You can’t save the baby unless you save the mother!!
The problem with trying to distinguish between salpingostomy, salpingectomy, and a chemical abortificant is that the diagnosis and outcome are the same. In fact, it is the most intrussive (worse outcome) that has historically been defended.
- That we do not wish the evil effects, but make all reasonable efforts to avoid them;
- That the immediate effect be good in itself;
- That the evil is not made a means to obtain the good effect; for this would be to do evil that good might come of it – a procedure never allowed;
- That the good effect be as important at least as the evil effect.
Regarding harvesting and organ donation. It seems to me to be one final tremendous Christian act that each of us could potentially perform for our fellow human beings. I find it sad that there are myths you need to dispell.The plea cannot be made that the child is an unjust aggressor. It is simply where nature and its own parents have put it. Therefore, Natural Law forbids any attempt at destroying fetal life.
… However, arguments involving Just War theory or concepts of self defense are heretical. The Church has clearly stated:
The plea cannot be made that the child is an unjust aggressor. It is simply where nature and its own parents have put it. Therefore, Natural Law forbids any attempt at destroying fetal life.
…
\QUOTE]
Boy, what a hard pill to swallow.
I’m rather surprised at the number of people on this thread said “no” to the original post. (I not suggesting that you’re wrong - I really don’t know.)
But to put things into perspective… I understand that you are allowed to kill and intruder/attacker to save your own life. I’m not suggesting that the poor ole baby in the womb is an illegal intruder/attacker, but I thought the mother should be given some sort of defence.
SoCalRC;2852526:
The mother should be given a defense against what exactly?…However, arguments involving Just War theory or concepts of self defense are heretical. The Church has clearly stated:
QUOTE]
Boy, what a hard pill to swallow.
Death.… The mother should be given a defense against what exactly?
There is a big difference in chosing to save one life by ending another, and not acting and having both die. You can’t save the baby unless you save the mother!!
This is off topic, but I feel compelled to dispel a myth here.
As a critical care nurse who worked with brain dead patients whose organs were harvested, I can tell you that people registered organ donors are NOT murdered for their organs. (not legally, anyway.) Even if the patient was a registered organ donor, the harvesting will not happen unless the next of kin or health care proxy agrees.
The patient is declared brain dead by physical exam, brain flow studies, and apnea tests. If you remove the ventilator and the patient does not initiate any breaths for 2 minutes, the patient, if warm and off narcotics and paralytics, the patient will not survive without the ventilator. The church has never required this type of technology to be used just because it exists.
Firstly, just to dispel any myths, I was posing that as a rhetorical question…I’m rather surprised at the number of people on this thread said “no” to the original post. (I not suggesting that you’re wrong - I really don’t know.)
But to put things into perspective… I understand that you are allowed to kill and intruder/attacker to save your own life. I’m not suggesting that the poor ole baby in the womb is an illegal intruder/attacker, but I thought the mother should be given some sort of defence.
That is the most outrageous thing I’ve heard. You should feel awkward.… Secondly the mother did have a defense. She chose to have sex (whenever I say it, I feel so awkward…) and must be able to deal with the consequences.
That was never going to be my next line.Your next line is, “What about rape and incest?” Well, I’m not going talking about that until we discuss the instances where the woman already made a choice.:ehh: :dts:
Well if you read the information from the Church, you’ll see that if a pregnancy results in a death to the mother and child, ie ectopic pregnancy, that life-saving treatment can be done provided it isn’t done in order to procure the DIRECT death of the baby.Death.
I’m not sure what makes you so uncomfortable about talking about the obvious consequence of sex - a baby?That is the most outrageous thing I’ve heard. You should feel awkward.
That was never going to be my next line.
I shoudn’t have gotten involved in this thread. Unlike that poor ole mother with a deadly pregnancy - I’m leaving.