K
KarenNC
Guest
When I read through the list, I saw one post that quoted the commandment as “thou shalt not kill.” Perhaps it was edited after I read it.I’m not sure what brought that up (perhaps I missed a post), but Catholic Catachism attempts to explain intent. For example, the Catholic Encyclopedia entry:
newadvent.org/cathen/04153a.htm
Making a distinction like you describe is essential to adopt, say, an Augustine concept of Just War, but the centrality of the human person and his (or her) fundemental rights from God is an extremely important concept in our Faith, not to be abridged lightly.
Yes, the distinction is incredibly important and not to be abridged lightly. In fact, I would say that it is so important that the use of euphemisms to pretend one is not, in fact, deliberately ending a life is to minimize the importance of it and the gravity of the decision.
That would be your post, number #38:Did anyone here imply otherwise?
"since the fetus’ prognosis is less than 6 months of life "
I appreciate that your daughter did what she believed was necessary and I am glad that it turned out well for her. Sometimes ectopic pregnancies do, indeed, self-resolve through spontaneous abortion. When one talks endlessly about “removing the tube but not intending the death of the fetus,” however, I find it hard to swallow. I find it very difficult to see how a policy that insists on a more invasive and more dangerous option than is absolutely necessary rather than following the ethic of doing the least harm possible is one that is truly honoring the sacredness of life rather than the sacredness of avoiding the use of a word. To my eyes, that is nothing more than absurd legalism.Yes, that sounds dangerously stupid. But I have not seen that proposed. My daughter elected to wait and see rather than accept, to her, the sin of direct abortion. There were no dillusions about the risks or the probable outcomes. It was an act of faith and she was willing to accept serious consequences.
Actually that is the entire basis of Christianity. If you did not believe that the moral decisions of Christians were inherently superior to the moral decisions of others, why in the world would you bother to differentiate between religions or between religion and non-religion?One can disagree, but to assert that one’s own moral decisions are inherently superior to anothers is a form of hubris normally rejected in Christianity.
Post #1I don’t recall anyone equating them, but if that is another straw man you feel compelled to knock down, be my guest.
“If a mother is four months into a pregnancy and complications arrise, may a child be killed so at least she survives rather than both people dying?”
Post #9
"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 remove the fallopian tube as therapeutic treatment to prevent the mother’s death. The infant will not survive long after this, but the intention of the procedure and its action is to preserve the mother’s life. It is not a direct abortion.
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. "
An “early delivery” that occurs before the possibility of viablity (and the very extreme edge of that is after 21 weeks) is simply another euphemism for abortion.
Alas, that is factually inaccurate. The majority of ectopic pregnancies in the US now occur in relationship to variations of PID and fertility treatments, both of which have their own moral implications. But without judgement, it does leave us with a situation where the NIH places the incidence now at somewhere between 1:40 and 1:100 pregnancies, and accounting for 9% of all pregnancy related maternal deaths in the US.
cmaj.ca/cgi/reprint/173/8/905.pdfThe overwhelming majority of those deaths (about 1 for every 100,000 live births) were unexpected pregnancies. Given that there is a possibility of death and sterility and the treatment is an abortion, it seems like it would be prudent to use family planning rather one is in the Sacrament of Marriage or not. In a family planning situation (natural or otherwise) pegnancies are generally looked for. Early detection of pregnancy also affords an opportunity for early detection of an ectopic pregnancy. This gives more time for consideration and more options than an emergency room.
“However, more than half of identified ectopic pregnancies are in women without known risk factors.”
emedicine.com/med/topic3212.htm
"…however, most patients presenting with an ectopic pregnancy have no identifiable risk factor. "
Ectopic pregnancies do not only occur in unplanned pregnancies or ones that are “inconvenient”. Certainly it is advisable to have earlier detection and more options, but, the fact of the matter is that none of those options involve the survival of the child, no matter how early the detection.
I am all for family planning and deliberate, intended procreation. I fimly believe that no-one has any business engaging in sexual intercourse until and unless they are both adults in a committed monogamous relationship and both financially and emotionally ready to accept the possible consequences of their actions (all birth control methods other than complete abstinence have a failure rate, even when used optimally).
Abortion is always and without exception a tragic decision that results in the loss of a human life. One of the consequences of engaging in sexual intercourse is, indeed, the possibility that one will have to face making the decision to have an abortion if one is faced with an ectopic pregnancy or a pregnancy that becomes deadly for the mother. It isn’t planned, desired, sought after or a matter of convenience, but it is there and one might as well face up to the responsibility of making the best choice possible in a tragic situation rather than use euphemisms or word games to pretend that one is not doing what one is doing.