S
soren1
Guest
For people who have not studied Mormonism in detail, I advise discussing with Mormons only two topics: the perpetuity of the priesthood and life issues. That is because these are the areas where the Catholic position is so clear and intelligible that virtually anyone can make the case with only a moderate amount of study. Moreover, neither topic depends on any difficult metaphysical precisions, but are rooted in concrete evidence and moral reasoning that basically anyone can understand.
Nevertheless, there are better and worse ways to take up these topics, and I am writing to point out just one of the better ways to talk about life issues. Most Catholics who respond to the Mormonism’s attempted pro-life teachings know how to point out the obvious problem: that the exception clauses allowing abortion for rape, incest, etc., are inconsistent with the fundamental principle of the sanctity of human life. In and of itself, this is a totally satisfactory, QED-quality argument that has a claim on the conscience of anyone who hears it. Yet it can be augmented by pointing out another inconsistency so glaring that for years I have not heard a marginally reasonable response to it from any Mormon at all. Here goes:
There is a formal contradiction between Mormon teaching on abortion and on euthanasia. One of the exceptions in which a Mormon woman who has sought counsel from her bishop on prayed on the matter can have an abortion is “when the fetus is known by competent medical authority to have severe defects that will not allow the baby to survive beyond birth.” That comes from the official website here, but if you look up the LDS teaching on euthanasia, we find something else:
Euthanasia is defined as deliberately putting to death a person who is suffering from an incurable condition or disease. Such a deliberate act ends life immediately through, for example, so-called assisted suicide. Ending a life in such a manner is a violation of the commandments of God.
Do I even need to explain the contradiction? Just in case, I will: since killing a fetus is “deliberately putting to death a person” and since terminal birth defects are “an incurable condition or disease,” the Church’s own definition of euthanasia, which they use in condemning it, elsewhere serves as the justification for some abortions. It is, therefore, an strictly accurate, non-satirical representation to Mormon teaching to say that “The Church counsels its members against euthanasia and against abortion, which are both grave sins, except in cases where to perform an abortion also constitutes euthanasia.”
It should also be noted that the LDS Church does not consider the performance of euthanasia to be a matter subject to individual discernment through prayer, as in the case of abortion. This can be seen in its contrasting teaching about ending life-support in the following paragraph. Here, the Church says that the restriction against euthanasia does not imply an imperative to preserve life through extreme, radical means, but that families may consider ending life support “after receiving wise and competent medical advice and seeking divine guidance through fasting and prayer.” Why do they extend this liberty in considering ending treatment except in contrast to the absolute prohibition of euthanasia given previously? Thus, even the standard Mormon defense of pointing out the role of prayer in discerning whether to euthanize and unborn child is at odds with LDS teaching as well.
Nevertheless, there are better and worse ways to take up these topics, and I am writing to point out just one of the better ways to talk about life issues. Most Catholics who respond to the Mormonism’s attempted pro-life teachings know how to point out the obvious problem: that the exception clauses allowing abortion for rape, incest, etc., are inconsistent with the fundamental principle of the sanctity of human life. In and of itself, this is a totally satisfactory, QED-quality argument that has a claim on the conscience of anyone who hears it. Yet it can be augmented by pointing out another inconsistency so glaring that for years I have not heard a marginally reasonable response to it from any Mormon at all. Here goes:
There is a formal contradiction between Mormon teaching on abortion and on euthanasia. One of the exceptions in which a Mormon woman who has sought counsel from her bishop on prayed on the matter can have an abortion is “when the fetus is known by competent medical authority to have severe defects that will not allow the baby to survive beyond birth.” That comes from the official website here, but if you look up the LDS teaching on euthanasia, we find something else:
Euthanasia is defined as deliberately putting to death a person who is suffering from an incurable condition or disease. Such a deliberate act ends life immediately through, for example, so-called assisted suicide. Ending a life in such a manner is a violation of the commandments of God.
Do I even need to explain the contradiction? Just in case, I will: since killing a fetus is “deliberately putting to death a person” and since terminal birth defects are “an incurable condition or disease,” the Church’s own definition of euthanasia, which they use in condemning it, elsewhere serves as the justification for some abortions. It is, therefore, an strictly accurate, non-satirical representation to Mormon teaching to say that “The Church counsels its members against euthanasia and against abortion, which are both grave sins, except in cases where to perform an abortion also constitutes euthanasia.”
It should also be noted that the LDS Church does not consider the performance of euthanasia to be a matter subject to individual discernment through prayer, as in the case of abortion. This can be seen in its contrasting teaching about ending life-support in the following paragraph. Here, the Church says that the restriction against euthanasia does not imply an imperative to preserve life through extreme, radical means, but that families may consider ending life support “after receiving wise and competent medical advice and seeking divine guidance through fasting and prayer.” Why do they extend this liberty in considering ending treatment except in contrast to the absolute prohibition of euthanasia given previously? Thus, even the standard Mormon defense of pointing out the role of prayer in discerning whether to euthanize and unborn child is at odds with LDS teaching as well.