I donāt think this is necessarily a conscience problem for Catholic lawyers. A Catholic lawyer friend of mine does write them for people. He only does them in connection with doing other tasks, like writing wills or trusts or POAs. He does inquire into the religion of the individual, and puts it in the Living Will that the personās pastor, minister or priest be included in the decisionmaking process and that whatever happens be according to the teachings of that religion. Even then, the āif this, then thatā part is really tight.
He says Catholics generally know what the Church teaches, and he has a āCatholic specificā one. He simply refuses to write one if the client wonāt tell him his religion or if a Catholic wants something contrary to the teachings of the Church.
Heās really good at what he does, very empathetic, and nobody has ever walked out on him because of his requirements. They do the other documents and go elsewhere for the Living Will if they want one.
He never charges for Living Wills because, he says, theyāre really not quite legal documents and not quite medical documents, because the terminology really canāt be precise in a legal sense or in a medical sense.
He also informed me that almost nobody really has any understanding of the documents put out by hospitals, physicians and governmental units.
One amusing thing. He tells people to entrust the Living Will with the most trusted person in their lives, and NEVER to simply hand them to physicians or hospitals. (they all want them, but canāt demand them) Because of the way medical records are kept and transferred, youāre potentially putting your life into the hands of āthe third shift charge nurseā if you get one into a physicianās or hospitalās chart.
Maybe Langdell or one of the other lawyers on here can comment further, but the above all made sense to me.