Abortion:
What the Church Teaches
by Helen Alvaré
If you asked an
average group of Catholics to identify the Church’s position on
abortion, they might give you a one-word answer: "NO."
What a shame. In
reality, the Church’s teaching on abortion really begins with a
great big "YES." It begins with a yes to all human life created
in God’s own image and likeness. As our Holy Father said in
poetic fashion in his most recent encyclical on human life: "All
human beings, from their mother’s womb, belong to God who
searches them and knows them, who forms them and knits them
together with his own hands, who gazes on them when they are
tiny shapeless embryos and already sees in them the adults of
tomorrow..." (The Gospel of Life, #61).
In other words,
human life is sacred, inviolable. It only makes sense, then, for
the Church to reject all that violates this sacred gift,
beginning with the direct destruction of innocent human life
which is abortion.
But the Catholic
Church’s pro-life teachings are based not only on sacred
Scripture about the divine creation and the divine destiny of
human life. They are also based upon what is commonly called
"natural law," the divine law written in our hearts and knowable
by human reason. You might say that because of natural law, a
person doesn’t have to be Catholic, Christian or even overtly
religious to understand that human life is special among all
creation and should not be violated by abortion. It is
self-evident.
A deeper
understanding of natural law and Scripture helps make sense of
all details of the Church’s pro-life teachings.
Respect human life
The most
comprehensive—and inspiring—summary of Catholic teaching on
abortion is the 1995 papal encyclical The Gospel of Life (Evangelium
Vitae). There, the Holy Father speaks specifically and at
great length about abortion, beginning first with the
natural-law argument against taking human life. He describes the
medical and scientific consensus on when human life begins:
"From the time that the ovum is fertilized, a life is begun
which is neither that of the father nor the mother; it is rather
the life of a new human being with his own growth...[M]odern
genetic science offers clear confirmation. It has demonstrated
that from the first instant there is established the programme
of what this living being will be" (#60).
Some people are
surprised to learn that the obstetrics textbooks used in the
leading medical schools in the country today assume that human
lives begin at conception! This is not a theological teaching
but a medical fact. The more that science studies the unborn,
and the more it develops ultrasound imaging of the unborn child,
the more confirming evidence emerges of the child’s humanity and
truly ingenious development.
The ensoulment
debate. Many people still believe that the Catholic Church
bases its pro-life stance on the religious belief that a human
being is ensouled at the moment of conception. But this is
wrong. The Gospel of Life and the earlier Declaration
on Procured Abortion (1974) acknowledge that you can’t
scientifically verify when a soul enters the human body. (You
sure can’t see it under a microscope!) Both documents note that
it is more likely than not that at the "first appearance of a
human life" there is a personal presence, a body/soul unity. But
even if this is doubted, they say, it remains wrong to kill what
is certainly human life from the moment of conception, whether
or not it is "ensouled."
If it’s human,
don’t kill it! From this scientific consensus about when and
how human life begins, it follows that we should all respect
human life from the moment of conception. And you might say that
a bottom-line minimum for respecting human life is not killing
it! As our Holy Father puts it, the first right that everybody
has is "the inviolable right of every innocent being to life"
(Donum Vitae). Everyone has, in other words, a right not to
be killed. This is a moral principle held, if not always
applied, through the ages and across the globe. When it is
violated, there is almost always an outcry.
Some 'hard
cases'
1. Rape and
incest. Many question why the Church won’t make specific
exceptions for abortion when unborn children are conceived in
rape or incest, or are disabled. They also feel that the Church
is being unduly hard when it makes no exceptions for situations
in which a mother will have her mental or physical health taxed
as a result of carrying a baby to term and/or rearing the child.
But consider the implications of making such exceptions. It
would send them the message that people’s value depends upon
their physical condition, the circumstances of their conception
or others’ perception of them.
2. Disabled
children. Human beings have value no matter what the
circumstances of their conception. They have value whether or
not they have physical or mental disabilities. But, goes the
usual argument, the mother or the child or both could suffer
terribly if the disabled child were allowed to be born. Yes, we
understand and have compassion for the anguish of these women.
We feel an obligation to assist them. But such suffering doesn’t
extinguish that unborn person’s right to life.
Furthermore, the
suffering such mothers or children experience will often come
not from their circumstances but from other people’s reaction to
their circumstances. The raped woman is made to feel "she asked
for it." The disabled child is made to feel less than her peers.
The more humane and more Christian response to a violated mother
or disabled child is more love—not death!
3. Abortion
doesn’t end with the baby. It should also be remembered that
no matter how many times abortion is proposed as a solution to a
difficult situation, abortion has a way of creating new,
long-lasting problems of its own. According to post-abortion
women, abortion taints the expected good result.
Even some
post-abortion women who became pregnant as a result of rape or
incest report that the abortion made them feel further violated.
Of the other 99% of post-abortion women, many report that
instead of feeling free or happy after the abortion, they feel
burdened with guilt and loss.
4. Medical
necessity. What about the argument that the Church must make
exceptions to its teaching when abortion is medically necessary
for the mother’s health or a child’s disability?
First, while the
Church opposes all direct abortions, it does not condemn
procedures which result, indirectly, in the loss of the unborn
child as a "secondary effect." For example, if a mother is
suffering an ectopic pregnancy (a baby is developing in her
fallopian tube, not the womb), a doctor may remove the fallopian
tube as therapeutic treatment to prevent the mother’s death. The
infant will not survive long after this, but the intention of
the procedure and its action is to preserve the mother’s life.
It is not a direct abortion.
There also occur,
very rarely, situations in which, in order to save the mother’s
life, the child needs to be delivered early. But this can be
done safely with a normal, induced delivery, or a caesarean
section.
The argument for
killing disabled unborn children is not a medical one either.
There are no disabilities which require directly killing the
child in order to save the mother. In fact, disabled children
can usually be delivered with no more complications than a child
without disabilities. The argument for abortion in these cases
is ideological, a belief that it is better—for the child, the
family and the whole society—for the child to die than to live
with a disability.
5. Culpability.
Here, a vitally important point must be made. While the Church
teaches that the act of killing an unborn child is intrinsically
bad, it does not teach that the mother who seeks an abortion is
also intrinsically bad. There is a difference between condemning
an act, and judging the guilt of the actor. Only God can judge
these women. To the woman who has had an abortion the Church
says instead: "How can we reconcile you? How can we help you,
first, to face honestly what happened, repent, and be reconciled
to the child, to yourself, to your family and to God?" Today,
most Catholic dioceses in the United States sponsor programs of
healing for post-abortion women.
'Choice':
A failed argument
But what about the
choice argument, that a woman simply must be allowed to make a
choice about the life of the baby inside? Some find this
argument compelling because pregnancy so intimately affects the
mother’s body and the course of her life; and because the baby
is carried literally inside of her, completely dependent upon
her for sustenance.
As a mother myself,
I can confirm that the baby’s presence affects almost every
aspect of a mother’s physical person. Pregnancy may force a
woman to leave school or a job. Women often serve as the single
parent. More often it is women who stay home with children—and
their schedules are thus altered.
Women in families
assume still the disproportionate share of daily household tasks
like cooking, cleaning, laundry and bills. Therefore, the
argument goes, women must be given the power to decide whether
to assume these burdens.
There isn’t just
one answer to the choice argument. Consider these four:
1. Abortion is a
bad choice. I ordinarily begin by saying that, of course,
it’s great to have choices about some things—where to go to
school, whom to marry, what kind of car to buy. But certain
other choices, though they may be available (to take harmful
drugs) and even legal (to kill the unborn), are intrinsically
bad. This is the case with the choice for abortion.
2. Don’t be
fooled by a goal that looks good. Abortion remains a bad
choice, even if someone is trying to use it as a means to
a good end. Leaders of most pro-abortion groups today usually
ignore this. They regularly admit that the abortion choice is
bad, even a form of killing. But they continue to insist that
abortion remains a morally legitimate choice because the killing
is merely the means to a good end—"freedom" or "relief from
suffering" for the mother. They call abortion a "tragic
necessity."
But this ignores
the basic moral argument that it is wrong to use bad means to
reach a good end. And it ignores the com-monsense truth that
"ends" get tainted when the means used to achieve them are evil.
Choosing an abortion to bring about short-term "relief"
regularly leads to unhappiness, depression, marital failure,
even suicidal behavior in post-abortion women for years,
sometimes decades, after the abortion. Really bad choices hurt
the one choosing them nearly as much as they hurt the intended
victim.
3. Different,
yes, worthless, no. Still drawing on the choice argument,
some abortion advocates will insist that even though abortion is
a form of killing, it’s not intrinsically bad because unborn
victims are different from born ones. Unlike a born child, for
example, an unborn child is nearly part of the mother—completely
dependent upon the mother, they say. I usually respond that
another’s dependency could never extinguish their individuality
or their dignity. The unborn child may be inside the mother, and
rely on the mother for life itself, but he or she is a
genetically distinct human being with his or her own development
and destiny.
If dependency is
the cutoff point for everybody’s "right not to be killed," you
and I are in a lot of trouble too! Every one of us relies on the
accomplishments of others, not only in the first and last
moments of our life, but every day: to eat, find shelter,
receive medical care, work and so forth.
Pro-abortion
arguments based on the child’s dependence also contradict both
American ideals and Christian teaching. In both traditions,
another’s neediness and relative weakness are a sign of our
obligation to provide greater care to the person. Recall the
words on the Statue of Liberty: "Give me your tired, your poor,
your huddled masses yearning to breathe free...." Recall Jesus’
special love for the poor and the outcast of his day.
4. If it’s for
women, it shouldn’t penalize children. Abortion advocates
might still insist on a woman’s choice to abort because they
feel so strongly that unplanned childbearing or child-rearing is
unfairly burdensome to a woman and too destructive of her life
plans. As a mother, I would again readily agree that children
require an enormous amount of effort. But that is no argument
for killing them! Mothers, rather, deserve particular help and
particular respect for their labors. Any feminism that tries to
advance women by demeaning other members of the human race is
under-mining its own major premise: that all human beings are
equal simply by virtue of being human beings!
Abortion
and authentic freedom
In recent years, a
new dimension has been added to the Catholic Church’s pro-life
teaching. It is an analysis of the meaning of authentic or
Christian freedom, as opposed to the false but seductive freedom
promoted by advocates of legal abortion. A brilliant description
of this freedom is laid out in The Gospel of Life in
three major points.
First, freedom is
never merely about the well-being of the individual. It is
always also a relational matter. Freedom necessarily involves
"solidarity,...openness to others and service of them." God
"entrusts us to one another" to care for and serve each other.
When people act as if freedom is just about "me," the results
are predictable: The strong people exercising their "freedom"
completely dominate the weak "who have no choice but to submit"
(#19). Christian freedom turns this on its head, saying that
there is no freedom in running away from responsibility for
others, but only in accepting a special obligation to care for
the weakest. The unborn—unseen, unheard, physically and legally
powerless—are among these.
Second, Christian
freedom sees "an essential link" between freedom and truth.
Jesus told us, "The truth will set you free" (Jn 8:32). Acting
against truth hurts not only the victim, but also the actor.
Finally, Christians
are most free when we act in accordance with who God wants us to
be. "[W]hen God is forgotten, the creature itself grows
unintelligible" (Gaudium et spes, #36, Gospel of Life,
#22). We become out of touch with our wonderful, divine origin
and our divine destiny. We no longer see ourselves as
"mysteriously different" from other creatures. Our life becomes
a "‘mere thing,’" which "man claims as his exclusive property,
completely subject to his control and manipulation" (Gospel
of Life, #22).
It is easy to see
how when a culture embraces the idea that "freedom" means "me"
and "my opinion," and leaves God out, abortion comes in with a
vengeance. The powerless child is killed. The truth about the
child’s humanity is simply denied in the face of all of the
evidence to the contrary. We become blind to God’s image and
likeness in the person of every single human being.
Christian freedom,
on the other hand, calls for a way of life in which the weakest
are not merely spared, but are looked after with greater care.
When the U.S. bishops responded to Evangelium Vitae with
their own reflection in 1995, Faithful for Life, they
summarized the soul of Christian freedom with the Good Samaritan
story: "We are all on the road from Jerusalem to Jericho and
this story haunts us, for it flatly contradicts the strong
presumption so widely held today that our loyalties and
obligations are owed only to those of our ‘choice.’ On the
contrary, it is we who have been chosen to go out of our way for
them.
Helen Alvaré
is director of planning and information for the U.S. Catholic
bishops’ Secretariat for Pro-Life Activities and a free-lance
writer. In addition to a B.S. in economics from Villanova, she
holds a law degree (J.D.) from Cornell University and an M.A. in
theology from Catholic University of America.
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