The
culture of death and a society dominated by the powerful
63.
Nowadays, in America as elsewhere in the world, a model of society appears to
be emerging in which the powerful predominate, setting aside and even
eliminating the powerless: I am thinking here of unborn children, helpless
victims of abortion; the elderly and incurably ill, subjected at times to
euthanasia; and the many other people relegated to the margins of society by
consumerism and materialism. Nor can I fail to mention the unnecessary recourse
to the death penalty when other “bloodless means are sufficient to defend human
lives against an aggressor and to protect public order and the safety of
persons. Today, given the means at the State's disposal to deal with crime and
control those who commit it, without abandoning all hope of their redemption,
the cases where it is absolutely necessary to do away with an offender 'are now
very rare, even non-existent practically'”. (229) This model of society
bears the stamp of the culture of death, and is therefore in opposition to the
Gospel message. Faced with this distressing reality, the Church community
intends to commit itself all the more to the defense of the culture of life.
In this
regard, the Synod Fathers, echoing recent documents of the Church's
Magisterium, forcefully restated their unconditional respect for and total
dedication to human life from the moment of conception to that of natural
death, and their condemnation of evils like abortion and euthanasia. If the
teachings of the divine and natural law are to be upheld, it is essential to
promote knowledge of the Church's social doctrine and to work so that the
values of life and family are recognized and defended in social customs and in
State ordinances. (230) As well as protecting life, greater efforts
should be made, through a variety of pastoral initiatives, to promote adoptions
and to provide continuing assistance to women with problem pregnancies, both
before and after the birth of the child. Special pastoral attention must also
be given to women who have undergone or actively procured an abortion.
(231)
How can
we fail to thank God and express genuine appreciation to our brothers and
sisters in the faith throughout America who are committed, along with other
Christians and countless individuals of good will, to defending life by every
legal means and to protecting the unborn, the incurably ill and the
handicapped? Their work is all the more praiseworthy if we consider the
indifference of so many people, the threats posed by eugenics and the assaults
on life and human dignity perpetrated everywhere each day. (232)
This same
concern must be shown to the elderly, who are often neglected and left to fend
for themselves. They must be respected as persons; it is important to care for
them and to help them in ways which will promote their rights and ensure their
greatest possible physical and spiritual well-being. The elderly must be
protected from situations or pressures which could drive them to suicide; in
particular they must be helped nowadays to resist the temptation of assisted
suicide and euthanasia.
Together
with the Pastors of the People of God in America, I appeal to “Catholics
working in the field of medicine and health care, to those holding public
office or engaged in teaching, to make every effort to defend those lives most
at risk, and to act with a conscience correctly formed in accordance with
Catholic doctrine. Here Bishops and priests have a special responsibility to
bear tireless witness to the Gospel of life and to exhort the faithful to act
accordingly”. (233) At the same time, it is essential for the Church in
America to take appropriate measures to influence the deliberations of
legislative assemblies, encouraging citizens, both Catholics and other people
of good will, to establish organizations to propose workable legislation and to
resist measures which endanger the two inseparable realities of life and the
family. Nowadays there is a special need to pay attention to questions related
to prenatal diagnosis, in order to avoid any violation of human dignity.
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