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fix
Guest
Let me try to clarify my position:Thanks Fix, Mosher, & CatherineW
Fix, I was avoiding your post only in that you are saying the exact same thing I am, probably in a better communication. When you say “the fact that some doctors act incorrectly does not mean there are no objective standards. All types of unjust situations arise each day, but none of them make formal participation in evil acceptable.” You are exactly correct. So the student, the doctor, and the patient are equal in that regard. Which is why all three have to be capable of acting independently as their own moral compass. The responsibility can not be passed from one to the other -as that in itself would violate an objective moral standard. It is simply not possible all will always act the same, and agree the same. In this example the doctor and patient manifested an action based on their individual moral compass. The student has not yet done that.
Now please consider the possibility these three people met in the communion line at Sunday’s Mass. Now the Priest must apply his moral compass.
- We each have free will, yet that does not mean we may formally participate in another’s sin.
- If one says I think it is good to rob a bank I canot say well I am pro choice on robbing banks. I personally would not do it, but let me get my car and drive you to rob one.
- If a Catholic publicly declares robbing banks is acceptable if one claims it is so and says it over and over again and refuses correction from his priest and bishop, then denying him communion would seem to be just.
- I want to repeat again that one cannot bind another to do evil. If a patient asks me for poison to kill their child, even though the state says it is lawful, I am bound to say no. That does not violate their free will. They have no right to an evil act.