M
Mrs_V
Guest
My latest issue of From the Housetops arrived yesterday, and on the last page was a letter by Brother Thomas Augustine, M.I.C.M.
The letter doesn’t appear to be available online, and I don’t want to plagerize and type the whole thing up here, but it raised a lot of points about when it is and is not moral to accept an organ transplantation.
Br. writes that the Church is non-negotiable about the fact that all life must come to natural death, and medicine has tried to make organ harvesting as moral as possible by createing the Dead Donor Rule. However, most all organs need to be removed immediately from the body after death in order to be useable for transplantation. He then goes on to write about how the medical community has come up with multiple definitions of death to help with getting around the moral issue. And example being ‘brain death’.
Br. Thomas says that a Catholic can not accept a heart (or what have you) from a brain dead person because their body is still living. The removal of that organ is classified as murder. The doctors decided to end that life when they removed the heart, not God.
I had no idea about this position - and while it makes sense in my head, I can’t help but think about what I would do if one of my family members needed a heart, lung, etc… and a ‘brain dead’ person’s family was willing to donate it for us.
I just read this article yesterday so I am still mulling it over in my head. I may have to talk with my pastor about it to really understand. Have any of you heard about it? What do you think? Do you have any additional information to share?
The letter doesn’t appear to be available online, and I don’t want to plagerize and type the whole thing up here, but it raised a lot of points about when it is and is not moral to accept an organ transplantation.
Br. writes that the Church is non-negotiable about the fact that all life must come to natural death, and medicine has tried to make organ harvesting as moral as possible by createing the Dead Donor Rule. However, most all organs need to be removed immediately from the body after death in order to be useable for transplantation. He then goes on to write about how the medical community has come up with multiple definitions of death to help with getting around the moral issue. And example being ‘brain death’.
Br. Thomas says that a Catholic can not accept a heart (or what have you) from a brain dead person because their body is still living. The removal of that organ is classified as murder. The doctors decided to end that life when they removed the heart, not God.
I had no idea about this position - and while it makes sense in my head, I can’t help but think about what I would do if one of my family members needed a heart, lung, etc… and a ‘brain dead’ person’s family was willing to donate it for us.
I just read this article yesterday so I am still mulling it over in my head. I may have to talk with my pastor about it to really understand. Have any of you heard about it? What do you think? Do you have any additional information to share?