S
St_Francis
Guest
Suppose there is a woman in one room of the hospital who needs a heart tranplant, and in the very next room, there is a boy who is a perfect match. Can we take his heart, which would kill him, and transplant it to the woman? Of course everyone would say this is totally crazy. If however the boy is her unborn child and still residing in her womb, we say it is all right to kill him to save her life.
The problem is notthe number of lives saved or lost. People die every day. Tonight on my way home from Mass, I saw an accident which may well have rwsulted in a death. This past Wednesday, I attended a funeral. Death comes to all of us Later for many, but sooner for some.
The issue then is *sin. *The issue is the actions we chose to undertake. The balance is not between lives saved or lost; the balance is between committing sin or not. To save a soul from an eternity of fires in Hell and to save a physical life for a few years.
The problem is notthe number of lives saved or lost. People die every day. Tonight on my way home from Mass, I saw an accident which may well have rwsulted in a death. This past Wednesday, I attended a funeral. Death comes to all of us Later for many, but sooner for some.
The issue then is *sin. *The issue is the actions we chose to undertake. The balance is not between lives saved or lost; the balance is between committing sin or not. To save a soul from an eternity of fires in Hell and to save a physical life for a few years.