S
stillsmallvoice
Guest
Hi all!
Good morning from the Holy Land!
Hmm…
Karin:
Mr. Ex Nihilo, your views about Rachel (DW & I prayed at her tomb rachelstomb.org/main.html once when we were plowing through fertility treatment) & Benjamin but have no basis in Jewish tradition and are no precedent vis-a-vis our view that it is permissible to abort a fetus in order to save the mother’s life.
) chocolate chip cookie!
I always think it a hoot when folks who are not of our faith take it upon themselves to tell us what our faith “really” means or “really” taught. I would never dream of presuming to lecture any of my Roman Catholic friends on what their faith means. That is up to them, solely.
Question: What does Roman Catholic doctrine say regarding ectopic, tubal or ovarian pregnancies?
Be well!
ssv
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Good morning from the Holy Land!
Hmm…
To update this, nowadays I don’t think that any orthodox rabbi worth his NaCl would sanction an abortion if the fetus were viable and could be delivered by c-section provided that the operation would not endanger the mother’s life. Our sources speak about the head emerging because up until quite recently, given the state of medical knowledge, it wasn’t known that fetuses were viable before birth and (successful) abdominal surgery (in which the patient/mother wasn’t killed due to sepsis, among other things) was unknown.The babies head has to emerge from the womb for it to be considered a human-being…from the jewish prespective.
Mr. Ex Nihilo, your views about Rachel (DW & I prayed at her tomb rachelstomb.org/main.html once when we were plowing through fertility treatment) & Benjamin but have no basis in Jewish tradition and are no precedent vis-a-vis our view that it is permissible to abort a fetus in order to save the mother’s life.
Rachel had already gone into labor, i.e. she had already begun to give birth, when she had “hard labor”. Once the birth process is underway, it is absolutely forbidden to abort the fetus in order to save the mother. At that point, her life no longer has precedence over his. It is permitted, required even, in our view to abort, say, an ectopic or tubal or ovarian pregnancy (or even a uterine one depending on the conditions) if the fact of the pregnancy endangers the mother’s life and there is no way to save both the fetus & the mother. In such a case, the fetus is considered a rodef, i.e. that is seeking the mother’s life. However, once the birth process has begun (or, to speak in more modern terms, see above, the fetus is viable & can be removed by c-section without endangering the mother), it no longer has this status. In such a case, in Rachel’s case, it is not the fetus who is seeking the mother’s life but God Himself and, of course, what He gives, He can take. In Genesis 35:16-18, Jacob & the mid-wife were exactly obeying Jewish law & are a great example that there is no divergence between “Ancient Judaism” and us today. Mr. Ex Nihilo, nice try. Take a (kosher, of course!And they journeyed from Beit El; and there was still some way to come to Ephrat; and Rachel travailed, and she had hard labour. And it came to pass, when she was in hard labour, that the mid-wife said unto her: ‘Fear not; for this also is a son for you.’ And it came to pass, as her soul was in departing–for she died–that she called his name Ben-oni; but his father called him Benjamin.
I always think it a hoot when folks who are not of our faith take it upon themselves to tell us what our faith “really” means or “really” taught. I would never dream of presuming to lecture any of my Roman Catholic friends on what their faith means. That is up to them, solely.
Question: What does Roman Catholic doctrine say regarding ectopic, tubal or ovarian pregnancies?
Be well!
ssv
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