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If healthcare is a right, are Catholic doctors in violation of Church teaching when they charge for their services?
If a person was having a heart attack and needed treatment, would it be moral for a Catholic doctor to refuse to treat the patient if they could not pay?If healthcare is a right, are Catholic doctors in violation of Church teaching when they charge for their services?
Tradition isn’t dead, it’s living. I have no idea if healthcare as a right is new or based on an older tradition but it is now part of our tradition since Pope Francis is part of our tradition. Perhaps in 1000 years someone will ask when the tradition of considering healthcare a human right started and they’ll say about 1000 years ago.I may be opening a can of worms here, but, am I right on this? Our rights come from our Creator, not from the State. Where in scripture do we find the notion that health care is a right? Where in scripture do we see that the State must be responsible, must be benevolent? My reading of the Gospel is that the State has never been a trustworthy source for benevolence. If anything, the State – at least in the Bible – is inevitably a failure and is historically, something to be feared.Unless it is allied to the will of God (good luck with that!), the State is incapable of delivering the rights we receive from God. If we begin to believe that the State will supply us our needs and guarantee our rights, we are living in a fools paradise. We have to learn to live with it in humble obedience, Yes, but we must never accord it with the responsibility of guaranteeing our well-being. Indeed, as a people of God, we should have every reason to hold the State at a distance. “Put not your trust in princes, in mortal man in whom there is no salvation.” (Psalm 146). If Pope Francis claims that healthcare is a universal right (and not a consumer good), where does this notion come from? Is this something we find in the teachings of the Early Church Fathers? Augustine? Aquinas? Where does this “tradition” come from?
The 75% of Americans who are not Catholics would love that.
What kind of government do you think Christ will create when he returns? What will 75% of Americans think of a religious leader? What would some Catholics think of a religious leader?Not this catholic!
Health care isn’t free. Even if the doctor is willing to provide his service pro bono, drugs and other supplies aren’t free. How deeply must the doctor go into his own pocket to fulfill Catholic doctrine?If a person was having a heart attack and needed treatment, would it be moral for a Catholic doctor to refuse to treat the patient if they could not pay?
There won’t be any need for a government after the resurrection. We will see God and that will be enough.What kind of government do you think Christ will create when he returns? What will 75% of Americans think of a religious leader? What would some Catholics think of a religious leader?
If a religious person believes the tenets of their faith, and believes they are consistent with God’s will, then why wouldn’t they want those tenets to be embodied in all facets of life, including the government? Our goal should always be to conform our lives–all aspects of our lives–with the truth. And if one believes that Christ is the “way the truth and the life,” then the goal should be to conform our lives to Christ.
Frankly, I think people who out one side of their mouths say they are devout Christians and out the other side of their mouth say that they don’t want others to be Christians are being disingenuous either about their faith, their evangelization, or both. One is either all in for Christ, or not in at all.
You are not answering my question. Is it moral to refuse treatment and risk death if a patient cannot pay?Health care isn’t free. Even if the doctor is willing to provide his service pro bono, drugs and other supplies aren’t free. How deeply must the doctor go into his own pocket to fulfill Catholic doctrine?
Nothing in what you wrote indicates that tradition can’t be added to. Things we call tradition all had a start somewhere.The word “tradition” comes from the Latin meaning “handing over.” It is the teaching and practices handed down in oral or written form separately, but not independently, from scripture. Tradition comes from Sacred Scripture, the essential doctrines of the Church as specified historically through the Magisterium, the writings of the Fathers, the liturgical life of the Church and the living and lived faith of the Church over the centuries. Secondarily, it is the customs, institutions and practices which, over time have expressed the Faith (I’m taking and abridging this definition from the OSV Catholic Encyclopedia).
So, the kingdom that Christ has established in heaven and on earth is anarchy? And what is meant by subjection to Christ?There won’t be any need for a government after the resurrection. We will see God and that will be enough.
So it’s preferable to stand before St. Peter and say, “I could have helped, but I figured money was more important than my fellow man”?Health care isn’t free. Even if the doctor is willing to provide his service pro bono, drugs and other supplies aren’t free. How deeply must the doctor go into his own pocket to fulfill Catholic doctrine?
I posted this earlier on the thread. There are 2 sides. There is a duty of all to provide for the needs of others. And there is a duty to respect the property of others. How do we reconcile those?So it’s preferable to stand before St. Peter and say, “I could have helped, but I figured money was more important than my fellow man”?
So, you’ve given every dime you have beyond what is needed for bare subsistence to charity, or are you going to be in that situation yourself?So it’s preferable to stand before St. Peter and say, “I could have helped, but I figured money was more important than my fellow man”?
False comparison, as doctors are not living in bare subsistence (unless bare subsistence is not having another 1000 sq ft in the house and the latest BMW in the driveway).So, you’ve given every dime you have beyond what is needed for bare subsistence to charity, or are you going to be in that situation yourself?
Is it preferable to stand before St. Peter and said “in an attempt to make myself feel good about helping people, I wasted the limited money we had on horrendously stupid ideas that stood no chance of working, but it did make me feel better about myself!” ??So it’s preferable to stand before St. Peter and say, “I could have helped, but I figured money was more important than my fellow man”?
It is not up to the doctor. It is up to the health system. Our is broken and I do not know what the best fix is. If patients cannot pay for ER care it now gets subsidized through higher rates to other with insurance or private pay. But that is just for “emergencies”. Many health crises could be avoided if people went to their own physicians for primary care maintenance. If they do not have insurance and cannot afford it they do not go until their is a crisis.Health care isn’t free. Even if the doctor is willing to provide his service pro bono, drugs and other supplies aren’t free. How deeply must the doctor go into his own pocket to fulfill Catholic doctrine?
I have no idea what you’re talking about here…Is it preferable to stand before St. Peter and said “in an attempt to make myself feel good about helping people, I wasted the limited money we had on horrendously stupid ideas that stood no chance of working, but it did make me feel better about myself!” ??
I’ll take leading questions for $200, Alex.
No, I am saying you ask silly questions as though your portray the manner I which those who may oppose your brand of healthcase accurately.I have no idea what you’re talking about here…
Are you implying trying to get healthcare for everyone is horrendously stupid? Which would ride pretty close to calling Pope Francis horrendously stupid…
What is the horrendously stupid idea that you are talking about? If one is claiming that single payer is a horrendously stupid idea, that is not something that has been officially determined. Certainly, single payer has its issues and I personally don’t favor single payer, but when it comes to healthcare, there is no ideal solution. The real question is what set of problems do we want to live with. If we have our current system we have one set of problems. If we have single payer we have another set of problems. Reasonable people can differ as to which set of problems is preferable.Is it preferable to stand before St. Peter and said “in an attempt to make myself feel good about helping people, I wasted the limited money we had on horrendously stupid ideas that stood no chance of working, but it did make me feel better about myself!” ??
I’ll take leading questions for $200, Alex.